I've been using BCEL for several years. It's certainly not buggy and the API
is very simple. BCEL source code is also very easy to understand, so you can
easily create patches.

However there is not a lot of activity in the project to support newer java
spec versions. I've tried up to JDK 1.5 features and BCEL works pretty well.

ASM is a good alternative if you need a faster byte code manipulation tool.

-----Message d'origine-----
De : uprime uprime812 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Envoyé : lundi 31 décembre 2007 14:19
À : BCEL Users List
Objet : is BCEL a good choice?

Hello again,

I'm working on a commercial tool where I have to build some byte code
modification capability. I
need a byte code engineering library with features like:

   * offer a reasonable set of utilities
   * not buggy
   * allows byte code to be manipulated abstractly
   * free, even for commercial use :) (me being a poor starting enterpreneur
:)

Is BCEL a good choice? Or does someone has other suggestions?

Thanks,

W.P.



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