A serialVersionUID field is strongly recommended in all Serializable classes. If you do not provide one, one will be
calculated for you by the compiler. The danger in not explicitly choosing the value is that when the class changes, the compiler will generate an
entirely new id, and you will be suddenly unable to deserialize (read from file) objects that were serialized with the previous version of the
class.
serialVersionUID's should be declared with all of these modifiers: static final long.
Noncompliant code example
public class Raspberry extends Fruit // Noncompliant; no serialVersionUID.
implements Serializable {
private String variety;
public Raspberry(Season ripe, String variety) { ...}
public void setVariety(String variety) {...}
public String getVarity() {...}
}
public class Raspberry extends Fruit
implements Serializable {
private final int serialVersionUID = 1; // Noncompliant; not static & int rather than long
Compliant solution
public class Raspberry extends Fruit
implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1;
private String variety;
public Raspberry(Season ripe, String variety) { ...}
public void setVariety(String variety) {...}
public String getVarity() {...}
}
Exceptions
Records, Swing and AWT classes, abstract classes, Throwable and its subclasses (Exceptions and
Errors), and classes marked with @SuppressWarnings("serial") are ignored.