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I have seen many apps that take instrument classes and take -javaagent as a param when loading also put a '-noverify' to the commad line.
The java doc says that noverify turns off the class verification.
However why would anyone want to turn off verification even if they are instrumenting classes?

+6  A: 

Start-up time, I'd say. Verification that classes are correct takes some time when the class is loaded. Since classes might be loaded in a lazy fashion (not on app start, but when being used for the first time), this might cause unexpected and undesired runtime delays.

Actually the class does not need to be checked in general. The compiler will not emit any invalid bytecode or class construct. The reason for verification is that the class may be build on one system, get hosted online and is transmitted to you through the unprotected internet. On this path, a malicious attacker might modify the bytecode and create something the compiler might never create; something that can crash the JVM or possibly circumvents security restrictions. Thus the class is verified before it is used. If this is a local application, there is usually no need to check the bytecode again.

Mecki
+1  A: 

Start up time used to be a bit of an issue. However, verifiers are now faster, as are processors. Code compiled with JDK6 javac will by default include extra information to make the verifier step faster. Apache Harmony just uses a much faster verification algorithm.

Some very old versions of javac produced incorrect bytecode. Indeed the Sun PlugIn still includes fix-up code to make some broken class files verify.

Tom Hawtin - tackline
+1  A: 

Debugging! In fact that's what I'm doing now, and how I stumbled across this question. At Terracotta we do a lot of bytecode instrumentation, and sometimes it helps to turn off the verifier as we debug our class adapters, so we can see where exactly they fail at runtime.

You're right, we want the verifier to remain on in production.

Scott Bale