You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 31 Next »

Never use deprecated or obsolete methods or classes in new code. The Java SE 6 documentation provides a complete list of deprecated APIs [[API 2006]]. The guideline THI01-J. Do not invoke ThreadGroup methods describes issues that can result from using deprecated and obsolete methods.

The Java SE 6 documentation further indicates certain classes that are obsolete [[API 2006]]. For example, the java.util.Dictionary class provides the same functionality as the Map interface.

The java.util.Calendar class suffers from multi-threading related issues; its subclasses, such as java.util.GregorianCalendar, share these problems. Similarly, all of the subclasses of the abstract class java.text.Format are thread-unsafe. These classes must be avoided in multi-threaded code.

Risk Assessment

Using deprecated or obsolete classes or methods in program code can lead to erroneous behavior.

Guideline

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MET15-J

high

likely

medium

P18

L1

Automated Detection

Detecting uses of deprecated methods is straightforward.

Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this guideline on the CERT website.

Bibliography

[[API 2006]] Deprecated API
[[SDN 2008]] Bug database, Bug ID 4264153
[[MITRE 2009]] CWE ID 589


MET14-J. Follow the general contract when implementing the compareTo() method      05. Methods (MET)      MET17-J. Do not increase the accessibility of overridden or hidden methods

  • No labels