I am currently working on a mantenance project that is written in Java. We are currently working to clean up the code some and try to provide a little more organization to the project overall.
The list of libraries that are included in the build have grown long, and honestly no one remains that knows/remembers what each library is used for or why? So I am looking for a tool that would be able to essentially find where the library is used in the code. Essentially like a find usage function in an IDE has for functions.
Does such a tool exist? I am curently using Netbeans and as mentioned our code is in java.
I know I could remove each library and compile the project for each library to find the usages, but it just seems there should be a better way. Any ideas?
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Since you're using NetBeans, I suggest the SQE plugin, which includes Dependency Finder. (And if you weren't already using FindBugs, this is a good time to start.)
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Try using jarjar. It has a command line interface that will analyze your dependency tree.
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I haven't used it for a few years but I remember that JDepend was useful when I was in a similar situation.
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You could let Eclipse remove unnecessary imports for you. Then simply search through the code for imports relating to a specific library's package name.
jschoen : That was what I was trying to avoid having to do though. I was kinda looking for something a little quicker.
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