How to prevent client from seeing internal private classes in Android library ?

I need to generate a library from this , but I do not want the Client to see b_class. The only solution I know of is to flatten my beautifully understandable packages to single package and to use default package access for b_class. Is there another way to do so ?

Yes, make b_class package-private (default access) and instantiate it via reflection for use in a_class.

Since you know the full class name, reflectively load the class:

Class<?> clz = Class.forName("b.b_class")

Find the constructor you want to invoke:

Constructor<?> con = clz.getDeclaredConstructor();

Allow yourself to invoke the constructor by making it accessible:

con.setAccessible(true);

Invoke the constructor to obtain your b_class instance:

Object o = con.newInstance();

Hurrah, now you have an instance of b_class. However, you can't call b_class's methods on an instance of Object, so you have two options:

  1. Use reflection to invoke b_class's methods (not much fun, but easy enough and may be ok if you only have a few methods with few parameters).
  2. Have b_class implement an interface that you don't mind the client seeing and cast your instance of b_class to that interface (reading between the lines I suspect you may already have such an interface?).

You'll definitely want to go with option 2 to minimise your pain unless it gets you back to square one again (polluting the namespace with types you don't want to expose the client to).

For full disclosure, two notes:

1) There is a (small) overhead to using reflection vs direct instantiation and invocation. If you cast to an interface you'll only pay the cost of reflection on the instantiation. In any case it likely isn't a problem unless you make hundreds of thousands of invocations in a tight loop.

2) There is nothing to stop a determined client from finding out the class name and doing the same thing, but if I understand your motivation correctly you just want expose a clean API, so this isn't really a worry.


If I understand correctly you are asking about publishing your library for 3rd party usage without disclosing part of your source? If that's the case you can use proguard, which can obfuscate your library. By default everything will be excluded/obfuscated, unless you specify things you want to exclude from being obfuscated/excluded.


If you reject to move the code to an individual, controlled server, all you can do is to hinder the client programmer when trying to use your APIs. Let's begin applying good practices to your design:

  1. Let your packages organized as they are now.
  2. For every class you want to "hide":

    • Make it non-public.
    • Extract its public API to a new, public interface:

    public interface MyInterface {...}

    • Create a public factory class to get an object of that interface type.

    public class MyFactory { public MyInterface createObject(); }

So far, you have now your packages loosely coupled, and the implementation classes are now private (as good practices preach, and you already said). Still, they are yet available through the interfaces and factories.

So, how can you avoid that "stranger" clients execute your private APIs? What comes next is a creative, a little complicated, yet valid solution, based on hindering the client programmers:

Modify your factory classes: Add to every factory method a new parameter:

public class MyFactory
{
    public MyInterface createObject(Macguffin parameter);
}

So, what is Macguffin? It is a new interface you must define in your application, with at least one method:

public interface Macguffin
{
    public String dummyMethod();
}

But do not provide any usable implementation of this interface. In every place of your code you need to provide a Macguffin object, create it through an anonymous class:

MyFactory.getObject(new Macguffin(){
    public String dummyMethod(){
        return "x";
    }
});

Or, even more advanced, through a dynamic proxy object, so no ".class" file of this implementation would be found even if the client programmer dares to decompile the code.

What do you get from this? Basically is to dissuade the programmer from using a factory which requires an unknown, undocumented, ununderstandable object. The factory classes should just care not to receive a null object, and to invoke the dummy method and check the return value it is not null either (or, if you want a higher security level, add an undocumented secret-key-rule).

So this solution relies upon a subtle obfuscation of your API, to discourage the client programmer to use it directly. The more obscure the names of the Macguffin interface and its methods, the better.