/home/jenkins/.jenkins/workspace/dev-customizable-reports-draw-graph-from-data-output/lib-cache/build.gradle.kts:98: Warning: Not targeting the latest versions of Android; compatibility modes apply. Consider testing and updating this version. Consult the android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES javadoc for details. [OldTargetApi] targetSdk = 34 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Explanation for issues of type "OldTargetApi": When your application or sdk runs on a version of Android that is more recent than your targetSdkVersion specifies that it has been tested with, various compatibility modes kick in. This ensures that your application continues to work, but it may look out of place. For example, if the targetSdkVersion is less than 14, your app may get an option button in the UI. To fix this issue, set the targetSdkVersion to the highest available value. Then test your app to make sure everything works correctly. You may want to consult the compatibility notes to see what changes apply to each version you are adding support for: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.VERSION_CODES.html as well as follow this guide: https://developer.android.com/distribute/best-practices/develop/target-sdk. html https://developer.android.com/distribute/best-practices/develop/target-sdk.html /home/jenkins/.jenkins/workspace/dev-customizable-reports-draw-graph-from-data-output/lib-cache/build.gradle.kts:89: Warning: A newer version of compileSdkVersion than 34 is available: 35 [GradleDependency] compileSdk = 34 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Explanation for issues of type "GradleDependency": This detector looks for usages of libraries where the version you are using is not the current stable release. Using older versions is fine, and there are cases where you deliberately want to stick with an older version. However, you may simply not be aware that a more recent version is available, and that is what this lint check helps find. 0 errors, 2 warnings