File layout and structure Sections Magic Number General layout Representation in a C-like programming language The constant pool
See also
References
Further reading
{{about|the data format|classes in Java|Class (computer programming)}}{{Infobox file format | name =Java class file | icon = | logo = | screenshot = | mime = | type code = | uniform type = | magic = | owner = Sun Microsystems | released = | latest release version = | latest release date = | container for = | contained by = | extended from = | extended to = | standard = | free = | url = }}
A Java class file is a file (with the .class filename extension) containing Java bytecode that can be executed on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). A Java class file is usually produced by a Java compiler from Java programming language source files (.java files) containing Java classes (alternatively, other JVM languages can also be used to create class files). If a source file has more than one class, each class is compiled into a separate class file.
JVMs are available for many platforms, and a class file compiled on one platform will execute on a JVM of another platform. This makes Java applications platform-independent.
History
On 11 December 2006, the class file format was modified under Java Specification Request (JSR) 202.[1]
File layout and structure
Sections
There are 10 basic sections to the Java Class File structure:
Magic Number: 0xCAFEBABE
Version of Class File Format: the minor and major versions of the class file
Constant Pool: Pool of constants for the class
Access Flags: for example whether the class is abstract, static, etc.
This Class: The name of the current class
Super Class: The name of the super class
Interfaces: Any interfaces in the class
Fields: Any fields in the class
Methods: Any methods in the class
Attributes: Any attributes of the class (for example the name of the sourcefile, etc.)
Magic Number
Class files are identified by the following 4 byte header (in hexadecimal): CA FE BA BE (the first 4 entries in the table below). The history of this magic number was explained by James Gosling referring to a restaurant in Palo Alto:[2]
"We used to go to lunch at a place called St Michael's Alley. According to local legend, in the deep dark past, the Grateful Dead used to perform there before they made it big. It was a pretty funky place that was definitely a Grateful Dead Kinda Place. When Jerry died, they even put up a little Buddhist-esque shrine. When we used to go there, we referred to the place as Cafe Dead. Somewhere along the line it was noticed that this was a HEX number. I was re-vamping some file format code and needed a couple of magic numbers: one for the persistent object file, and one for classes. I used CAFEDEAD for the object file format, and in grepping for 4 character hex words that fit after "CAFE" (it seemed to be a good theme) I hit on BABE and decided to use it.
At that time, it didn't seem terribly important or destined to go anywhere but the trash-can of history. So CAFEBABE became the class file format, and CAFEDEAD was the persistent object format. But the persistent object facility went away, and along with it went the use of CAFEDEAD - it was eventually replaced by RMI.
General layout
Because the class file contains variable-sized items and does not also contain embedded file offsets (or pointers), it is typically parsed sequentially, from the first byte toward the end. At the lowest level the file format is described in terms of a few fundamental data types:
u1: an unsigned 8-bit integer
u2: an unsigned 16-bit integer in big-endian byte order
u4: an unsigned 32-bit integer in big-endian byte order
table: an array of variable-length items of some type. The number of items in the table is identified by a preceding count number (the count is a u2), but the size in bytes of the table can only be determined by examining each of its items.
Some of these fundamental types are then re-interpreted as higher-level values (such as strings or floating-point numbers), depending on context.
There is no enforcement of word alignment, and so no padding bytes are ever used.
The overall layout of the class file is as shown in the following table.
byte offset
size
type or value
description
0
4 bytes
u1 = 0xCA hex
magic number (CAFEBABE) used to identify file as conforming to the class file format
1
u1 = 0xFE hex
2
u1 = 0xBA hex
3
u1 = 0xBE hex
4
2 bytes
u2
minor version number of the class file format being used
5
6
2 bytes
u2
major version number of the class file format being used.
Java SE 13 = 57 (0x39 hex),
Java SE 12 = 56 (0x38 hex),
Java SE 11 = 55 (0x37 hex),
Java SE 10 = 54 (0x36 hex),[3]
Java SE 9 = 53 (0x35 hex),[4]
Java SE 8 = 52 (0x34 hex), Java SE 7 = 51 (0x33 hex), Java SE 6.0 = 50 (0x32 hex), Java SE 5.0 = 49 (0x31 hex), JDK 1.4 = 48 (0x30 hex), JDK 1.3 = 47 (0x2F hex), JDK 1.2 = 46 (0x2E hex), JDK 1.1 = 45 (0x2D hex). For details of earlier version numbers see footnote 1 at [https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se6/html/ClassFile.doc.html The JavaTM Virtual Machine Specification 2nd edition]
7
8
2 bytes
u2
constant pool count, number of entries in the following constant pool table. This count is at least one greater than the actual number of entries; see following discussion.
9
10
cpsize (variable)
table
constant pool table, an array of variable-sized constant pool entries, containing items such as literal numbers, strings, and references to classes or methods. Indexed starting at 1, containing (constant pool count - 1) number of entries in total (see note).
...
...
...
10+cpsize
2 bytes
u2
access flags, a bitmask
11+cpsize
12+cpsize
2 bytes
u2
identifies this class, index into the constant pool to a "Class"-type entry
13+cpsize
14+cpsize
2 bytes
u2
identifies super class, index into the constant pool to a "Class"-type entry
15+cpsize
16+cpsize
2 bytes
u2
interface count, number of entries in the following interface table
17+cpsize
18+cpsize
isize (variable)
table
interface table: a variable-length array of constant pool indexes describing the interfaces implemented by this class
...
...
...
18+cpsize+isize
2 bytes
u2
field count, number of entries in the following field table
19+cpsize+isize
20+cpsize+isize
fsize (variable)
table
field table, variable length array of fields
each element is a field_info structure defined in https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se8/html/jvms-4.html#jvms-4.5
...
...
...
20+cpsize+isize+fsize
2 bytes
u2
method count, number of entries in the following method table
21+cpsize+isize+fsize
22+cpsize+isize+fsize
msize (variable)
table
method table, variable length array of methods
each element is a method_info structure defined in https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se8/html/jvms-4.html#jvms-4.6
...
...
...
22+cpsize+isize+fsize+msize
2 bytes
u2
attribute count, number of entries in the following attribute table
23+cpsize+isize+fsize+msize
24+cpsize+isize+fsize+msize
asize (variable)
table
attribute table, variable length array of attributes
each element is an attribute_info structure defined in https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se8/html/jvms-4.html#jvms-4.7
...
...
...
Representation in a C-like programming language
Since C doesn't support multiple variable length arrays within a struct, the code below won't compile and only serves as a demonstration.
The constant pool
The constant pool table is where most of the literal constant values are stored. This includes values such as numbers of all sorts, strings, identifier names, references to classes and methods, and type descriptors. All indexes, or references, to specific constants in the constant pool table are given by 16-bit (type u2) numbers, where index value 1 refers to the first constant in the table (index value 0 is invalid).
Due to historic choices made during the file format development, the number of constants in the constant pool table is not actually the same as the constant pool count which precedes the table. First, the table is indexed starting at 1 (rather than 0), but the count should actually be interpreted as the maximum index plus one.[5] Additionally, two types of constants (longs and doubles) take up two consecutive slots in the table, although the second such slot is a phantom index that is never directly used.
The type of each item (constant) in the constant pool is identified by an initial byte tag. The number of bytes following this tag and their interpretation are then dependent upon the tag value. The valid constant types and their tag values are:
Tag byte
Additional bytes
Description of constant
Version introduced
1
2+x bytes (variable)
UTF-8 (Unicode) string: a character string prefixed by a 16-bit number (type u2) indicating the number of bytes in the encoded string which immediately follows (which may be different than the number of characters). Note that the encoding used is not actually UTF-8, but involves a slight modification of the Unicode standard encoding form.
1.0.2
3
4 bytes
Integer: a signed 32-bit two's complement number in big-endian format
1.0.2
4
4 bytes
Float: a 32-bit single-precision IEEE 754 floating-point number
1.0.2
5
8 bytes
Long: a signed 64-bit two's complement number in big-endian format (takes two slots in the constant pool table)
1.0.2
6
8 bytes
Double: a 64-bit double-precision IEEE 754 floating-point number (takes two slots in the constant pool table)
1.0.2
7
2 bytes
Class reference: an index within the constant pool to a UTF-8 string containing the fully qualified class name (in internal format) (big-endian)
1.0.2
8
2 bytes
String reference: an index within the constant pool to a UTF-8 string (big-endian too)
1.0.2
9
4 bytes
Field reference: two indexes within the constant pool, the first pointing to a Class reference, the second to a Name and Type descriptor. (big-endian)
1.0.2
10
4 bytes
Method reference: two indexes within the constant pool, the first pointing to a Class reference, the second to a Name and Type descriptor. (big-endian)
1.0.2
11
4 bytes
Interface method reference: two indexes within the constant pool, the first pointing to a Class reference, the second to a Name and Type descriptor. (big-endian)
1.0.2
12
4 bytes
Name and type descriptor: two indexes to UTF-8 strings within the constant pool, the first representing a name (identifier) and the second a specially encoded type descriptor.
1.0.2
15
3 bytes
Method handle: this structure is used to represent a method handle and consists of one byte of type descriptor, followed by an index within the constant pool.[5]
7
16
2 bytes
Method type: this structure is used to represent a method type, and consists of an index within the constant pool.[5]
7
17
4 bytes
Dynamic: this is used to specify a dynamically computed constant produced by invocation of a bootstrap method.[5]
11
18
4 bytes
InvokeDynamic: this is used by an invokedynamic instruction to specify a bootstrap method, the dynamic invocation name, the argument and return types of the call, and optionally, a sequence of additional constants called static arguments to the bootstrap method.[5]
7
19
2 bytes
Module: this is used to identify a module.[5]
9
20
2 bytes
Package: this is used to identify a package exported or opened by a module.[5]
9
There are only two integral constant types, integer and long. Other integral types appearing in the high-level language, such as boolean, byte, and short must be represented as an integer constant.
Class names in Java, when fully qualified, are traditionally dot-separated, such as "java.lang.Object". However within the low-level Class reference constants, an internal form appears which uses slashes instead, such as "java/lang/Object".
The Unicode strings, despite the moniker "UTF-8 string", are not actually encoded according to the Unicode standard, although it is similar. There are two differences (see UTF-8 for a complete discussion). The first is that the code point U+0000 is encoded as the two-byte sequence C0 80 (in hex) instead of the standard single-byte encoding 00. The second difference is that supplementary characters (those outside the BMP at U+10000 and above) are encoded using a surrogate-pair construction similar to UTF-16 rather than being directly encoded using UTF-8. In this case each of the two surrogates is encoded separately in UTF-8. For example, U+1D11E is encoded as the 6-byte sequence ED A0 B4 ED B4 9E, rather than the correct 4-byte UTF-8 encoding of F0 9D 84 9E.
See also
{{Portal|Java (programming language)}}
Java bytecode
References
1. ^JSR 202 Java Class File Specification Update 2. ^James Gosling private communication to Bill Bumgarner 3. ^http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/10-relnote-issues-4108729.html#Remaining 4. ^https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8148785 5. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se11/html/jvms-4.html#jvms-4.4
Further reading
{{cite book
| author = Tim Lindholm, Frank Yellin | title = The Java Virtual Machine Specification | edition = Second | publisher = Prentice Hall | year = 1999 | isbn = 0-201-43294-3 | url = https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jvms/se6/html/ClassFile.doc.html | accessdate = 2008-10-13
}} The official defining document of the Java Virtual Machine, which includes the class file format. Both the first and second editions of the book are freely available [https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/ online for viewing and/or download].