CustomloaderDep cannot be cast to CustomloaderDep? - java

I am getting java.lang.ClassCastException: CustomloaderDependency cannot be cast to CustomloaderDependency I know reason is two classes are loaded by different classloaders(one by customclassloader and another by default sun.misc.Launcher$AppClassLoader)
My custom class loader is not being used even after running the program with -Djava.system.class.loader=CustomClassLoader until and unless i am not explicitly doing Class.forName("CustomloaderDependency", true, ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader() ); but when i do new CustomloaderDependency() default sun.misc.Launcher$AppClassLoader is used
Here is my custom class loader
public class CustomClassLoader extends ClassLoader {
public CustomClassLoader() {
super();
}
/**
* This constructor is used to set the parent ClassLoader
*/
public CustomClassLoader(ClassLoader parent) {
super(parent);
}
/**
* Loads the class from the file system. The class file should be located in
* the file system. The name should be relative to get the file location
*
* #param name
* Fully Classified name of class, for example com.journaldev.Foo
*/
private Class getClass(String name) throws ClassNotFoundException {
String file = name + ".class";
byte[] b = null;
try {
// This loads the byte code data from the file
b = loadClassFileData(file);
// defineClass is inherited from the ClassLoader class
// that converts byte array into a Class. defineClass is Final
// so we cannot override it
Class c = defineClass(name, b, 0, b.length);
resolveClass(c);
return c;
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return null;
}
}
/**
* Every request for a class passes through this method. If the class is in
* com.journaldev package, we will use this classloader or else delegate the
* request to parent classloader.
*
*
* #param name
* Full class name
*/
#Override
public Class loadClass(String name) throws ClassNotFoundException {
System.out.println("Loading Class '" + name + "'" );
if (name.contains("CustomloaderDependency") || name.contains("TestCustomLoader")) {
System.out.println("Loading Class using CustomClassLoader");
return getClass(name);
}
return super.loadClass(name);
}
/**
* Reads the file (.class) into a byte array. The file should be
* accessible as a resource and make sure that its not in Classpath to avoid
* any confusion.
*
* #param name
* File name
* #return Byte array read from the file
* #throws IOException
* if any exception comes in reading the file
*/
private byte[] loadClassFileData(String name) throws IOException {
/*InputStream stream = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(
name);*/
// FileInputStream stream = new FileInputStream("F:\\workspaces\\test\\Test\\bin\\"+name);
FileInputStream stream = new FileInputStream("F:\\"+name);
int size = stream.available();
byte buff[] = new byte[size];
//DataInputStream in = new DataInputStream(stream);
stream.read(buff);
stream.close();
return buff;
}
}
Here is my testing class
I am running this program with -Djava.system.class.loader=CustomClassLoader but still looks like default class loader is used for classes with which i am trying to downcast with
public class TestCustomLoader {
public static void main(String[] args) throws ClassNotFoundException, InstantiationException, IllegalAccessException {
Class classObject = Class.forName("CustomloaderDependency", true, ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader() );
Object customloaderDependency = classObject.newInstance();
System.out.println("classloader from my custom is "+customloaderDependency.getClass().getClassLoader());
// above prints CustomClassLoader#15db9742
System.out.println("classloader for casting is "+CustomloaderDependency.class.getClassLoader());
// above prints sun.misc.Launcher$AppClassLoader#14dad5dc
CustomloaderDependency finalObject = (CustomloaderDependency)customloaderDependency;
//above line i am getting exception
}

I got it work by
#Override
public Class loadClass(String name) throws ClassNotFoundException {
System.out.println("Loading Class '" + name + "'" );
if (name.contains("CustomloaderDependency") || name.contains("TestCustomLoader")) {
System.out.println("Loading Class using CustomClassLoader");
return getClass(name);
}
return super.loadClass(name);
}
Before above fix, call was coming to my customclassloader to load TestCustomLoader but i was loading it through Launcher$AppClassLoader because of if (name.contains("CustomloaderDependency") ) {.
Hence all it dependents(like statically mentioned class i.e the word in the cast parentheses) were also being loaded by Launcher$AppClassLoader

Related

Avro: ClassCastException while serializing / deserializing a file that contains an Enum value

I'm getting the following error when I try to deserialize a previously serialized file:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.ClassCastException:
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$Zygosity cannot be cast to
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity
at com.ssgg.ZygosityTest.deserializeZygosityToAvroStructure(ZygosityTest.java:45)
at com.ssgg.ZygosityTest.main(ZygosityTest.java:30)
In order to reproduce the error, the main class is as follows:
public class ZygosityTest {
public static void main(String[] args) throws JsonParseException, JsonMappingException, IOException {
String filepath = "/home/XXXX/zygosity.avro";
/* Populate Zygosity*/
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity zygosity = com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity.HET;
/* Create file serialized */
createZygositySerialized(zygosity, filepath);
/* Deserializae file */
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity avroZygosityOutput = deserializeZygosityToAvroStructure(filepath);
}
private static com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity deserializeZygosityToAvroStructure(String filepath)
throws IOException {
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity zygosity = null;
File myFile = new File(filepath);
DatumReader<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity> reader = new SpecificDatumReader<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity>(
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity.class);
DataFileReader<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity> dataFileReader = new DataFileReader<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity>(
myFile, reader);
while (dataFileReader.hasNext()) {
zygosity = dataFileReader.next(zygosity);
}
dataFileReader.close();
return zygosity;
}
private static void createZygositySerialized(com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity zygosity, String filepath)
throws IOException {
DatumWriter<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity> datumWriter = new SpecificDatumWriter<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity>(
com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity.class);
DataFileWriter<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity> fileWriter = new DataFileWriter<com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity>(
datumWriter);
Schema schema = com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$.Zygosity.getClassSchema();
fileWriter.create(schema, new File(filepath));
fileWriter.append(zygosity);
fileWriter.close();
}
}
The avro generated enum for Zygosity is as follows:
/**
* Autogenerated by Avro
*
* DO NOT EDIT DIRECTLY
*/
package com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$;
#SuppressWarnings("all")
#org.apache.avro.specific.AvroGenerated
public enum Zygosity {
HOM_REF, HET, HOM_VAR, HEMI, UNK ;
public static final org.apache.avro.Schema SCHEMA$ = new org.apache.avro.Schema.Parser().parse("{\"type\":\"enum\",\"name\":\"Zygosity\",\"namespace\":\"com.ssgg.bioinfo.effect.Sample$\",\"symbols\":[\"HOM_REF\",\"HET\",\"HOM_VAR\",\"HEMI\",\"UNK\"]}");
public static org.apache.avro.Schema getClassSchema() { return SCHEMA$; }
}
I'm a newbie in Avro, can somebody plese help me to find the problem?
In my project I try to serialize and deserialize a bigger structure, but I have problems with the enums, so I isolated a smaller problem here.
If you need more info I can post it.
Thanks.
I believe the main issue here is that $ has a special meaning in Java classes, and less important is that package names are typically lowercased.
So, you should at least edit the namespaces to remove the $

Java - How to Load Classes your Main does'nt know the name from? [duplicate]

Is it possible to find all classes or interfaces in a given package? (Quickly looking at e.g. Package, it would seem like no.)
Due to the dynamic nature of class loaders, this is not possible. Class loaders are not required to tell the VM which classes it can provide, instead they are just handed requests for classes, and have to return a class or throw an exception.
However, if you write your own class loaders, or examine the classpaths and it's jars, it's possible to find this information. This will be via filesystem operations though, and not reflection. There might even be libraries that can help you do this.
If there are classes that get generated, or delivered remotely, you will not be able to discover those classes.
The normal method is instead to somewhere register the classes you need access to in a file, or reference them in a different class. Or just use convention when it comes to naming.
Addendum: The Reflections Library will allow you to look up classes in the current classpath. It can be used to get all classes in a package:
Reflections reflections = new Reflections("my.project.prefix");
Set<Class<? extends Object>> allClasses =
reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class);
You should probably take a look at the open source Reflections library. With it you can easily achieve what you want.
First, setup the reflections index (it's a bit messy since searching for all classes is disabled by default):
List<ClassLoader> classLoadersList = new LinkedList<ClassLoader>();
classLoadersList.add(ClasspathHelper.contextClassLoader());
classLoadersList.add(ClasspathHelper.staticClassLoader());
Reflections reflections = new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder()
.setScanners(new SubTypesScanner(false /* don't exclude Object.class */), new ResourcesScanner())
.setUrls(ClasspathHelper.forClassLoader(classLoadersList.toArray(new ClassLoader[0])))
.filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder().include(FilterBuilder.prefix("org.your.package"))));
Then you can query for all objects in a given package:
Set<Class<?>> classes = reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class);
Google Guava 14 includes a new class ClassPath with three methods to scan for top level classes:
getTopLevelClasses()
getTopLevelClasses(String packageName)
getTopLevelClassesRecursive(String packageName)
See the ClassPath javadocs for more info.
You could use this method1 that uses the ClassLoader.
/**
* Scans all classes accessible from the context class loader which belong to the given package and subpackages.
*
* #param packageName The base package
* #return The classes
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
* #throws IOException
*/
private static Class[] getClasses(String packageName)
throws ClassNotFoundException, IOException {
ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
assert classLoader != null;
String path = packageName.replace('.', '/');
Enumeration<URL> resources = classLoader.getResources(path);
List<File> dirs = new ArrayList<File>();
while (resources.hasMoreElements()) {
URL resource = resources.nextElement();
dirs.add(new File(resource.getFile()));
}
ArrayList<Class> classes = new ArrayList<Class>();
for (File directory : dirs) {
classes.addAll(findClasses(directory, packageName));
}
return classes.toArray(new Class[classes.size()]);
}
/**
* Recursive method used to find all classes in a given directory and subdirs.
*
* #param directory The base directory
* #param packageName The package name for classes found inside the base directory
* #return The classes
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
*/
private static List<Class> findClasses(File directory, String packageName) throws ClassNotFoundException {
List<Class> classes = new ArrayList<Class>();
if (!directory.exists()) {
return classes;
}
File[] files = directory.listFiles();
for (File file : files) {
if (file.isDirectory()) {
assert !file.getName().contains(".");
classes.addAll(findClasses(file, packageName + "." + file.getName()));
} else if (file.getName().endsWith(".class")) {
classes.add(Class.forName(packageName + '.' + file.getName().substring(0, file.getName().length() - 6)));
}
}
return classes;
}
__________
1 This method was taken originally from http://snippets.dzone.com/posts/show/4831, which was archived by the Internet Archive, as linked to now. The snippet is also available at https://dzone.com/articles/get-all-classes-within-package.
Spring
This example is for Spring 4, but you can find the classpath scanner in earlier versions as well.
// create scanner and disable default filters (that is the 'false' argument)
final ClassPathScanningCandidateComponentProvider provider = new ClassPathScanningCandidateComponentProvider(false);
// add include filters which matches all the classes (or use your own)
provider.addIncludeFilter(new RegexPatternTypeFilter(Pattern.compile(".*")));
// get matching classes defined in the package
final Set<BeanDefinition> classes = provider.findCandidateComponents("my.package.name");
// this is how you can load the class type from BeanDefinition instance
for (BeanDefinition bean: classes) {
Class<?> clazz = Class.forName(bean.getBeanClassName());
// ... do your magic with the class ...
}
Google Guava
Note: In version 14, the API is still marked as #Beta, so beware in production code.
final ClassLoader loader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
for (final ClassPath.ClassInfo info : ClassPath.from(loader).getTopLevelClasses()) {
if (info.getName().startsWith("my.package.")) {
final Class<?> clazz = info.load();
// do something with your clazz
}
}
Hello. I always have had some issues with the solutions above (and on other sites).
I, as a developer, am programming a addon for a API. The API prevents the use of any external libraries or 3rd party tools. The setup also consists of a mixture of code in jar or zip files and class files located directly in some directories. So my code had to be able to work arround every setup. After a lot of research I have come up with a method that will work in at least 95% of all possible setups.
The following code is basically the overkill method that will always work.
The code:
This code scans a given package for all classes that are included in it. It will only work for all classes in the current ClassLoader.
/**
* Private helper method
*
* #param directory
* The directory to start with
* #param pckgname
* The package name to search for. Will be needed for getting the
* Class object.
* #param classes
* if a file isn't loaded but still is in the directory
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
*/
private static void checkDirectory(File directory, String pckgname,
ArrayList<Class<?>> classes) throws ClassNotFoundException {
File tmpDirectory;
if (directory.exists() && directory.isDirectory()) {
final String[] files = directory.list();
for (final String file : files) {
if (file.endsWith(".class")) {
try {
classes.add(Class.forName(pckgname + '.'
+ file.substring(0, file.length() - 6)));
} catch (final NoClassDefFoundError e) {
// do nothing. this class hasn't been found by the
// loader, and we don't care.
}
} else if ((tmpDirectory = new File(directory, file))
.isDirectory()) {
checkDirectory(tmpDirectory, pckgname + "." + file, classes);
}
}
}
}
/**
* Private helper method.
*
* #param connection
* the connection to the jar
* #param pckgname
* the package name to search for
* #param classes
* the current ArrayList of all classes. This method will simply
* add new classes.
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
* if a file isn't loaded but still is in the jar file
* #throws IOException
* if it can't correctly read from the jar file.
*/
private static void checkJarFile(JarURLConnection connection,
String pckgname, ArrayList<Class<?>> classes)
throws ClassNotFoundException, IOException {
final JarFile jarFile = connection.getJarFile();
final Enumeration<JarEntry> entries = jarFile.entries();
String name;
for (JarEntry jarEntry = null; entries.hasMoreElements()
&& ((jarEntry = entries.nextElement()) != null);) {
name = jarEntry.getName();
if (name.contains(".class")) {
name = name.substring(0, name.length() - 6).replace('/', '.');
if (name.contains(pckgname)) {
classes.add(Class.forName(name));
}
}
}
}
/**
* Attempts to list all the classes in the specified package as determined
* by the context class loader
*
* #param pckgname
* the package name to search
* #return a list of classes that exist within that package
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
* if something went wrong
*/
public static ArrayList<Class<?>> getClassesForPackage(String pckgname)
throws ClassNotFoundException {
final ArrayList<Class<?>> classes = new ArrayList<Class<?>>();
try {
final ClassLoader cld = Thread.currentThread()
.getContextClassLoader();
if (cld == null)
throw new ClassNotFoundException("Can't get class loader.");
final Enumeration<URL> resources = cld.getResources(pckgname
.replace('.', '/'));
URLConnection connection;
for (URL url = null; resources.hasMoreElements()
&& ((url = resources.nextElement()) != null);) {
try {
connection = url.openConnection();
if (connection instanceof JarURLConnection) {
checkJarFile((JarURLConnection) connection, pckgname,
classes);
} else if (connection instanceof FileURLConnection) {
try {
checkDirectory(
new File(URLDecoder.decode(url.getPath(),
"UTF-8")), pckgname, classes);
} catch (final UnsupportedEncodingException ex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(
pckgname
+ " does not appear to be a valid package (Unsupported encoding)",
ex);
}
} else
throw new ClassNotFoundException(pckgname + " ("
+ url.getPath()
+ ") does not appear to be a valid package");
} catch (final IOException ioex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(
"IOException was thrown when trying to get all resources for "
+ pckgname, ioex);
}
}
} catch (final NullPointerException ex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(
pckgname
+ " does not appear to be a valid package (Null pointer exception)",
ex);
} catch (final IOException ioex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(
"IOException was thrown when trying to get all resources for "
+ pckgname, ioex);
}
return classes;
}
These three methods provide you with the ability to find all classes in a given package.
You use it like this:
getClassesForPackage("package.your.classes.are.in");
The explanation:
The method first gets the current ClassLoader. It then fetches all resources that contain said package and iterates of these URLs. It then creates a URLConnection and determines what type of URl we have. It can either be a directory (FileURLConnection) or a directory inside a jar or zip file (JarURLConnection). Depending on what type of connection we have two different methods will be called.
First lets see what happens if it is a FileURLConnection.
It first checks if the passed File exists and is a directory. If that's the case it checks if it is a class file. If so a Class object will be created and put in the ArrayList. If it is not a class file but is a directory, we simply iterate into it and do the same thing. All other cases/files will be ignored.
If the URLConnection is a JarURLConnection the other private helper method will be called. This method iterates over all Entries in the zip/jar archive. If one entry is a class file and is inside of the package a Class object will be created and stored in the ArrayList.
After all resources have been parsed it (the main method) returns the ArrayList containig all classes in the given package, that the current ClassLoader knows about.
If the process fails at any point a ClassNotFoundException will be thrown containg detailed information about the exact cause.
The most robust mechanism for listing all classes in a given package is currently ClassGraph, because it handles the widest possible array of classpath specification mechanisms, including the new JPMS module system. (I am the author.)
List<String> classNames = new ArrayList<>();
try (ScanResult scanResult = new ClassGraph().acceptPackages("my.package")
.enableClassInfo().scan()) {
classNames.addAll(scanResult.getAllClasses().getNames());
}
Without using any extra libraries:
package test;
import java.io.DataInputStream;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception{
List<Class> classes = getClasses(Test.class.getClassLoader(),"test");
for(Class c:classes){
System.out.println("Class: "+c);
}
}
public static List<Class> getClasses(ClassLoader cl,String pack) throws Exception{
String dottedPackage = pack.replaceAll("[/]", ".");
List<Class> classes = new ArrayList<Class>();
URL upackage = cl.getResource(pack);
DataInputStream dis = new DataInputStream((InputStream) upackage.getContent());
String line = null;
while ((line = dis.readLine()) != null) {
if(line.endsWith(".class")) {
classes.add(Class.forName(dottedPackage+"."+line.substring(0,line.lastIndexOf('.'))));
}
}
return classes;
}
}
In general class loaders do not allow for scanning through all the classes on the classpath. But usually the only used class loader is UrlClassLoader from which we can retrieve the list of directories and jar files (see getURLs) and open them one by one to list available classes. This approach, called class path scanning, is implemented in Scannotation and Reflections.
Reflections reflections = new Reflections("my.package");
Set<Class<? extends Object>> classes = reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class);
Another approach is to use Java Pluggable Annotation Processing API to write annotation processor which will collect all annotated classes at compile time and build the index file for runtime use. This mechanism is implemented in ClassIndex library:
// package-info.java
#IndexSubclasses
package my.package;
// your code
Iterable<Class> classes = ClassIndex.getPackageClasses("my.package");
Notice that no additional setup is needed as the scanning is fully automated thanks to Java compiler automatically discovering any processors found on the classpath.
What about this:
public static List<Class<?>> getClassesForPackage(final String pkgName) throws IOException, URISyntaxException {
final String pkgPath = pkgName.replace('.', '/');
final URI pkg = Objects.requireNonNull(ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResource(pkgPath)).toURI();
final ArrayList<Class<?>> allClasses = new ArrayList<Class<?>>();
Path root;
if (pkg.toString().startsWith("jar:")) {
try {
root = FileSystems.getFileSystem(pkg).getPath(pkgPath);
} catch (final FileSystemNotFoundException e) {
root = FileSystems.newFileSystem(pkg, Collections.emptyMap()).getPath(pkgPath);
}
} else {
root = Paths.get(pkg);
}
final String extension = ".class";
try (final Stream<Path> allPaths = Files.walk(root)) {
allPaths.filter(Files::isRegularFile).forEach(file -> {
try {
final String path = file.toString().replace('/', '.');
final String name = path.substring(path.indexOf(pkgName), path.length() - extension.length());
allClasses.add(Class.forName(name));
} catch (final ClassNotFoundException | StringIndexOutOfBoundsException ignored) {
}
});
}
return allClasses;
}
You can then overload the function:
public static List<Class<?>> getClassesForPackage(final Package pkg) throws IOException, URISyntaxException {
return getClassesForPackage(pkg.getName());
}
If you need to test it:
public static void main(final String[] argv) throws IOException, URISyntaxException {
for (final Class<?> cls : getClassesForPackage("my.package")) {
System.out.println(cls);
}
for (final Class<?> cls : getClassesForPackage(MyClass.class.getPackage())) {
System.out.println(cls);
}
}
If your IDE does not have import helper:
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;
import java.nio.file.FileSystemNotFoundException;
import java.nio.file.FileSystems;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Objects;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
It works:
from your IDE
for a JAR file
without external dependencies
Here's how I do it. I scan all the subfolders (sub-packages) and I don't try to load anonymous classes:
/**
* Attempts to list all the classes in the specified package as determined
* by the context class loader, recursively, avoiding anonymous classes
*
* #param pckgname
* the package name to search
* #return a list of classes that exist within that package
* #throws ClassNotFoundException
* if something went wrong
*/
private static List<Class> getClassesForPackage(String pckgname) throws ClassNotFoundException {
// This will hold a list of directories matching the pckgname. There may be more than one if a package is split over multiple jars/paths
ArrayList<File> directories = new ArrayList<File>();
String packageToPath = pckgname.replace('.', '/');
try {
ClassLoader cld = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
if (cld == null) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException("Can't get class loader.");
}
// Ask for all resources for the packageToPath
Enumeration<URL> resources = cld.getResources(packageToPath);
while (resources.hasMoreElements()) {
directories.add(new File(URLDecoder.decode(resources.nextElement().getPath(), "UTF-8")));
}
} catch (NullPointerException x) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(pckgname + " does not appear to be a valid package (Null pointer exception)");
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException encex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(pckgname + " does not appear to be a valid package (Unsupported encoding)");
} catch (IOException ioex) {
throw new ClassNotFoundException("IOException was thrown when trying to get all resources for " + pckgname);
}
ArrayList<Class> classes = new ArrayList<Class>();
// For every directoryFile identified capture all the .class files
while (!directories.isEmpty()){
File directoryFile = directories.remove(0);
if (directoryFile.exists()) {
// Get the list of the files contained in the package
File[] files = directoryFile.listFiles();
for (File file : files) {
// we are only interested in .class files
if ((file.getName().endsWith(".class")) && (!file.getName().contains("$"))) {
// removes the .class extension
int index = directoryFile.getPath().indexOf(packageToPath);
String packagePrefix = directoryFile.getPath().substring(index).replace('/', '.');;
try {
String className = packagePrefix + '.' + file.getName().substring(0, file.getName().length() - 6);
classes.add(Class.forName(className));
} catch (NoClassDefFoundError e)
{
// do nothing. this class hasn't been found by the loader, and we don't care.
}
} else if (file.isDirectory()){ // If we got to a subdirectory
directories.add(new File(file.getPath()));
}
}
} else {
throw new ClassNotFoundException(pckgname + " (" + directoryFile.getPath() + ") does not appear to be a valid package");
}
}
return classes;
}
I put together a simple github project that solves this problem:
https://github.com/ddopson/java-class-enumerator
It should work for BOTH file-based classpaths AND for jar files.
If you run 'make' after checking out the project it will print this out:
Cleaning...
rm -rf build/
Building...
javac -d build/classes src/pro/ddopson/ClassEnumerator.java src/test/ClassIShouldFindOne.java src/test/ClassIShouldFindTwo.java src/test/subpkg/ClassIShouldFindThree.java src/test/TestClassEnumeration.java
Making JAR Files...
jar cf build/ClassEnumerator_test.jar -C build/classes/ .
jar cf build/ClassEnumerator.jar -C build/classes/ pro
Running Filesystem Classpath Test...
java -classpath build/classes test.TestClassEnumeration
ClassDiscovery: Package: 'test' becomes Resource: 'file:/Users/Dopson/work/other/java-class-enumeration/build/classes/test'
ClassDiscovery: Reading Directory '/Users/Dopson/work/other/java-class-enumeration/build/classes/test'
ClassDiscovery: FileName 'ClassIShouldFindOne.class' => class 'test.ClassIShouldFindOne'
ClassDiscovery: FileName 'ClassIShouldFindTwo.class' => class 'test.ClassIShouldFindTwo'
ClassDiscovery: FileName 'subpkg' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: Reading Directory '/Users/Dopson/work/other/java-class-enumeration/build/classes/test/subpkg'
ClassDiscovery: FileName 'ClassIShouldFindThree.class' => class 'test.subpkg.ClassIShouldFindThree'
ClassDiscovery: FileName 'TestClassEnumeration.class' => class 'test.TestClassEnumeration'
Running JAR Classpath Test...
java -classpath build/ClassEnumerator_test.jar test.TestClassEnumeration
ClassDiscovery: Package: 'test' becomes Resource: 'jar:file:/Users/Dopson/work/other/java-class-enumeration/build/ClassEnumerator_test.jar!/test'
ClassDiscovery: Reading JAR file: '/Users/Dopson/work/other/java-class-enumeration/build/ClassEnumerator_test.jar'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'META-INF/' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'META-INF/MANIFEST.MF' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'pro/' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'pro/ddopson/' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'pro/ddopson/ClassEnumerator.class' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/ClassIShouldFindOne.class' => class 'test.ClassIShouldFindOne'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/ClassIShouldFindTwo.class' => class 'test.ClassIShouldFindTwo'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/subpkg/' => class 'null'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/subpkg/ClassIShouldFindThree.class' => class 'test.subpkg.ClassIShouldFindThree'
ClassDiscovery: JarEntry 'test/TestClassEnumeration.class' => class 'test.TestClassEnumeration'
Tests Passed.
See also my other answer
Yeah using few API's you can, here is how I like doing it, faced this problem which I was using hibernate core & had to find classes which where annotated with a certain annotation.
Make these an custom annotation using which you will mark which classes you want to be picked up.
import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;
#Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
#Target(ElementType.TYPE)
public #interface EntityToBeScanned {
}
Then mark your class with it like
#EntityToBeScanned
public MyClass{
}
Make this utility class which has the following method
public class ClassScanner {
public static Set<Class<?>> allFoundClassesAnnotatedWithEntityToBeScanned(){
Reflections reflections = new Reflections(".*");
Set<Class<?>> annotated = reflections.getTypesAnnotatedWith(EntityToBeScanned.class);
return annotated;
}
}
Call the allFoundClassesAnnotatedWithEntityToBeScanned() method to get a Set of Classes found.
You will need libs given below
<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.google.guava/guava -->
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<version>21.0</version>
</dependency>
<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.javassist/javassist -->
<dependency>
<groupId>org.javassist</groupId>
<artifactId>javassist</artifactId>
<version>3.22.0-CR1</version>
</dependency>
<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.reflections/reflections -->
<dependency>
<groupId>org.reflections</groupId>
<artifactId>reflections</artifactId>
<version>0.9.10</version>
</dependency>
If you're in Spring-land you can use PathMatchingResourcePatternResolver;
PathMatchingResourcePatternResolver resolver = new PathMatchingResourcePatternResolver();
Resource[] resources = resolver.getResources("classpath*:some/package/name/*.class");
Arrays.asList(resources).forEach(r->{
...
});
You need to look up every class loader entry in the class path:
String pkg = "org/apache/commons/lang";
ClassLoader cl = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader();
URL[] urls = ((URLClassLoader) cl).getURLs();
for (URL url : urls) {
System.out.println(url.getFile());
File jar = new File(url.getFile());
// ....
}
If entry is directory, just look up in the right subdirectory:
if (jar.isDirectory()) {
File subdir = new File(jar, pkg);
if (!subdir.exists())
continue;
File[] files = subdir.listFiles();
for (File file : files) {
if (!file.isFile())
continue;
if (file.getName().endsWith(".class"))
System.out.println("Found class: "
+ file.getName().substring(0,
file.getName().length() - 6));
}
}
If the entry is the file, and it's jar, inspect the ZIP entries of it:
else {
// try to open as ZIP
try {
ZipFile zip = new ZipFile(jar);
for (Enumeration<? extends ZipEntry> entries = zip
.entries(); entries.hasMoreElements();) {
ZipEntry entry = entries.nextElement();
String name = entry.getName();
if (!name.startsWith(pkg))
continue;
name = name.substring(pkg.length() + 1);
if (name.indexOf('/') < 0 && name.endsWith(".class"))
System.out.println("Found class: "
+ name.substring(0, name.length() - 6));
}
} catch (ZipException e) {
System.out.println("Not a ZIP: " + e.getMessage());
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println(e.getMessage());
}
}
Now once you have all class names withing package, you can try loading them with reflection and analyze if they are classes or interfaces, etc.
I've been trying to use the Reflections library, but had some problems using it, and there were too many jars I should include just to simply obtain the classes on a package.
I'll post a solution I've found in this duplicate question: How to get all classes names in a package?
The answer was written by sp00m; I've added some corrections to make it work:
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.LinkedList;
import java.util.List;
public final class ClassFinder {
private final static char DOT = '.';
private final static char SLASH = '/';
private final static String CLASS_SUFFIX = ".class";
private final static String BAD_PACKAGE_ERROR = "Unable to get resources from path '%s'. Are you sure the given '%s' package exists?";
public final static List<Class<?>> find(final String scannedPackage) {
final ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
final String scannedPath = scannedPackage.replace(DOT, SLASH);
final Enumeration<URL> resources;
try {
resources = classLoader.getResources(scannedPath);
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(String.format(BAD_PACKAGE_ERROR, scannedPath, scannedPackage), e);
}
final List<Class<?>> classes = new LinkedList<Class<?>>();
while (resources.hasMoreElements()) {
final File file = new File(resources.nextElement().getFile());
classes.addAll(find(file, scannedPackage));
}
return classes;
}
private final static List<Class<?>> find(final File file, final String scannedPackage) {
final List<Class<?>> classes = new LinkedList<Class<?>>();
if (file.isDirectory()) {
for (File nestedFile : file.listFiles()) {
classes.addAll(find(nestedFile, scannedPackage));
}
//File names with the $1, $2 holds the anonymous inner classes, we are not interested on them.
} else if (file.getName().endsWith(CLASS_SUFFIX) && !file.getName().contains("$")) {
final int beginIndex = 0;
final int endIndex = file.getName().length() - CLASS_SUFFIX.length();
final String className = file.getName().substring(beginIndex, endIndex);
try {
final String resource = scannedPackage + DOT + className;
classes.add(Class.forName(resource));
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ignore) {
}
}
return classes;
}
}
To use it just call the find method as sp00n mentioned in this example:
I've added the creation of instances of the classes if needed.
List<Class<?>> classes = ClassFinder.find("com.package");
ExcelReporting excelReporting;
for (Class<?> aClass : classes) {
Constructor constructor = aClass.getConstructor();
//Create an object of the class type
constructor.newInstance();
//...
}
I just wrote a util class, it include test methods, you can have a check ~
IteratePackageUtil.java:
package eric.j2se.reflect;
import java.util.Set;
import org.reflections.Reflections;
import org.reflections.scanners.ResourcesScanner;
import org.reflections.scanners.SubTypesScanner;
import org.reflections.util.ClasspathHelper;
import org.reflections.util.ConfigurationBuilder;
import org.reflections.util.FilterBuilder;
/**
* an util to iterate class in a package,
*
* #author eric
* #date Dec 10, 2013 12:36:46 AM
*/
public class IteratePackageUtil {
/**
* <p>
* Get set of all class in a specified package recursively. this only support lib
* </p>
* <p>
* class of sub package will be included, inner class will be included,
* </p>
* <p>
* could load class that use the same classloader of current class, can't load system packages,
* </p>
*
* #param pkg
* path of a package
* #return
*/
public static Set<Class<? extends Object>> getClazzSet(String pkg) {
// prepare reflection, include direct subclass of Object.class
Reflections reflections = new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder().setScanners(new SubTypesScanner(false), new ResourcesScanner())
.setUrls(ClasspathHelper.forClassLoader(ClasspathHelper.classLoaders(new ClassLoader[0])))
.filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder().includePackage(pkg)));
return reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class);
}
public static void test() {
String pkg = "org.apache.tomcat.util";
Set<Class<? extends Object>> clazzSet = getClazzSet(pkg);
for (Class<? extends Object> clazz : clazzSet) {
System.out.println(clazz.getName());
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
test();
}
}
Almost all the answers either uses Reflections or reads class files from file system. If you try to read classes from file system, you may get errors when you package your application as JAR or other. Also you may not want to use a separate library for that purpose.
Here is another approach which is pure java and not depends on file system.
import javax.tools.JavaFileObject;
import javax.tools.StandardJavaFileManager;
import javax.tools.StandardLocation;
import javax.tools.ToolProvider;
import java.io.File;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;
import java.util.stream.StreamSupport;
public class PackageUtil {
public static Collection<Class> getClasses(final String pack) throws Exception {
final StandardJavaFileManager fileManager = ToolProvider.getSystemJavaCompiler().getStandardFileManager(null, null, null);
return StreamSupport.stream(fileManager.list(StandardLocation.CLASS_PATH, pack, Collections.singleton(JavaFileObject.Kind.CLASS), false).spliterator(), false)
.map(javaFileObject -> {
try {
final String[] split = javaFileObject.getName()
.replace(".class", "")
.replace(")", "")
.split(Pattern.quote(File.separator));
final String fullClassName = pack + "." + split[split.length - 1];
return Class.forName(fullClassName);
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
})
.collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));
}
}
Java 8 is not a must. You can use for loops instead of streams.
And you can test it like this
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
final String pack = "java.nio.file"; // Or any other package
PackageUtil.getClasses(pack).stream().forEach(System.out::println);
}
Aleksander Blomskøld's solution did not work for me for parameterized tests #RunWith(Parameterized.class) when using Maven. The tests were named correctly and also where found but not executed:
-------------------------------------------------------
T E S T S
-------------------------------------------------------
Running some.properly.named.test.run.with.maven.SomeTest
Tests run: 0, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 0.123 sec
A similar issue has been reported here.
In my case #Parameters is creating instances of each class in a package. The tests worked well when run locally in the IDE. However, when running Maven no classes where found with Aleksander Blomskøld's solution.
I did make it work with the following snipped which was inspired by David Pärsson's comment on Aleksander Blomskøld's answer:
Reflections reflections = new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder()
.setScanners(new SubTypesScanner(false /* don't exclude Object.class */), new ResourcesScanner())
.addUrls(ClasspathHelper.forJavaClassPath())
.filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder()
.include(FilterBuilder.prefix(basePackage))));
Set<Class<?>> subTypesOf = reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class);
I couldn't find a short working snippet for something so simple. So here it is, I made it myself after screwing around for a while:
Reflections reflections =
new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder()
.filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder().includePackage(packagePath))
.setUrls(ClasspathHelper.forPackage(packagePath))
.setScanners(new SubTypesScanner(false)));
Set<String> typeList = reflections.getAllTypes();
It uses org.reflections.
Define classes to be scanning in the package test
package test;
public class A {
private class B {}
enum C {}
record D() {}
}
For org.reflections:reflections:0.10.2, it works for me as follows:
Use reflection lib to scan classes in package test
#Test
void t() {
final String packagePath = "test";
final Reflections reflections =
new Reflections(packagePath, Scanners.SubTypes.filterResultsBy(v -> true));
reflections.getAll(Scanners.SubTypes).forEach(System.out::println);
}
Output
java.lang.constant.Constable
java.lang.Enum
java.lang.Comparable
java.lang.Record
java.lang.Object
java.io.Serializable
test.A$C
test.A$D
test.A$B
test.A
For io.github.classgraph:classgraph:4.8.146, it works for me as follows:
#Test
void t() {
final String packagePath = "test";
try (ScanResult scanResult = new ClassGraph()
.enableClassInfo()
.ignoreClassVisibility()
.acceptPackages(packagePath)
.scan()) {
scanResult.getAllClasses()
.forEach(v -> {
System.out.println(v.getName());
});
}
}
Output
test.A
test.A$B
test.A$C
test.A$D
Provided you are not using any dynamic class loaders you can search the classpath and for each entry search the directory or JAR file.
Worth mentioning
If you want to have a list of all classes under some package, you can use Reflection the following way:
List<Class> myTypes = new ArrayList<>();
Reflections reflections = new Reflections("com.package");
for (String s : reflections.getStore().get(SubTypesScanner.class).values()) {
myTypes.add(Class.forName(s));
}
This will create a list of classes that later you can use them as you wish.
It is very possible, but without additional libraries like Reflections it is hard...
It is hard because you haven't full instrument for get class name.
And, I take the code of my ClassFinder class:
package play.util;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.jar.JarEntry;
import java.util.jar.JarFile;
/**
* Created by LINKOR on 26.05.2017 in 15:12.
* Date: 2017.05.26
*/
public class FileClassFinder {
private JarFile file;
private boolean trouble;
public FileClassFinder(String filePath) {
try {
file = new JarFile(filePath);
} catch (IOException e) {
trouble = true;
}
}
public List<String> findClasses(String pkg) {
ArrayList<String> classes = new ArrayList<>();
Enumeration<JarEntry> entries = file.entries();
while (entries.hasMoreElements()) {
JarEntry cls = entries.nextElement();
if (!cls.isDirectory()) {
String fileName = cls.getName();
String className = fileName.replaceAll("/", ".").replaceAll(File.pathSeparator, ".").substring(0, fileName.lastIndexOf('.'));
if (className.startsWith(pkg)) classes.add(className.substring(pkg.length() + 1));
}
}
return classes;
}
}
this scans the class loaders and all parent loaders for jar files and directories.
the jar files and directories referred by the Class-Path of the jars are also loaded.
this code is testet with Java 8,11,18.
on 8 everything works perfectly using the URLClassLoader and the getURLs() method.
on 11 it works fine using reflections, but the JVM prints a warning on the stderr stream (not redirectible with System.setErr() with my JVM)
on 18 the reflections are useless (throws NoSuchMethod/Field), and the only thing (where I know that it works) is to use the getResource() method. When the class loader loades the resources of the given package from the file system a simple path url is returned. When the class loader loades the resources from a jar a url like 'jar:file:[jar-path]!/[in-jar-path]' is returned.
I have used the answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/1157352/18252455 (from a duplicate question) and added the functionality to read the Class-Path and also search for directory URLs.
/**
* orig description:<br>
* Scans all classloaders for the current thread for loaded jars, and then scans
* each jar for the package name in question, listing all classes directly under
* the package name in question. Assumes directory structure in jar file and class
* package naming follow java conventions (i.e. com.example.test.MyTest would be in
* /com/example/test/MyTest.class)
* <p>
* in addition this method also scans for directories, where also is assumed, that the classes are
* placed followed by the java conventions. (i.e. <code>com.example.test.MyTest</code> would be in
* <code>directory/com/example/test/MyTest.class</code>)
* <p>
* this method also reads the jars Class-Path for other jars and directories. for the jars and
* directories referred in the jars are scanned with the same rules as defined here.<br>
* it is ensured that no jar/directory is scanned exactly one time.
* <p>
* if {#code bailError} is <code>true</code> all errors will be wrapped in a
* {#link RuntimeException}
* and then thrown.<br>
* a {#link RuntimeException} will also be thrown if something unexpected happens.<br>
*
* #param packageName
* the name of the package for which the classes should be searched
* #param allowSubPackages
* <code>true</code> is also classes in sub packages should be found
* #param loader
* the {#link ClassLoader} which should be used to find the URLs and to load classes
* #param bailError
* if all {#link Exception} should be re-thrown wrapped in {#link RuntimeException} and
* if a {#link RuntimeException} should be thrown, when something is not as expected.
* #see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1156552/java-package-introspection
* #see https://stackoverflow.com/a/1157352/18252455
* #see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/
* #see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/legalcode
*/
public static Set <Class <?>> tryGetClassesForPackage(String packageName, boolean allowSubPackages, ClassLoader loader, boolean bailError) {
Set <URL> jarUrls = new HashSet <URL>();
Set <Path> directorys = new HashSet <Path>();
findClassPools(loader, jarUrls, directorys, bailError, packageName);
Set <Class <?>> jarClasses = findJarClasses(allowSubPackages, packageName, jarUrls, directorys, loader, bailError);
Set <Class <?>> dirClasses = findDirClasses(allowSubPackages, packageName, directorys, loader, bailError);
jarClasses.addAll(dirClasses);
return jarClasses;
}
private static Set <Class <?>> findDirClasses(boolean subPackages, String packageName, Set <Path> directorys, ClassLoader loader, boolean bailError) {
Filter <Path> filter;
Set <Class <?>> result = new HashSet <>();
for (Path startPath : directorys) {
String packagePath = packageName.replace(".", startPath.getFileSystem().getSeparator());
final Path searchPath = startPath.resolve(packagePath).toAbsolutePath();
if (subPackages) {
filter = p -> {
p = p.toAbsolutePath();
Path other;
if (p.getNameCount() >= searchPath.getNameCount()) {
other = searchPath;
} else {
other = searchPath.subpath(0, p.getNameCount());
}
if (p.startsWith(other)) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
};
} else {
filter = p -> {
p = p.toAbsolutePath();
if (p.getNameCount() > searchPath.getNameCount() + 1) {
return false;
} else if (p.toAbsolutePath().startsWith(searchPath)) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
};
}
if (Files.exists(searchPath)) {
findDirClassFilesRecursive(filter, searchPath, startPath, result, loader, bailError);
} // the package does not have to exist in every directory
}
return result;
}
private static void findDirClassFilesRecursive(Filter <Path> filter, Path path, Path start, Set <Class <?>> classes, ClassLoader loader, boolean bailError) {
try (DirectoryStream <Path> dirStream = Files.newDirectoryStream(path, filter)) {
for (Path p : dirStream) {
if (Files.isDirectory(p)) {
findDirClassFilesRecursive(filter, p, start, classes, loader, bailError);
} else {
Path subp = p.subpath(start.getNameCount(), p.getNameCount());
String str = subp.toString();
if (str.endsWith(".class")) {
str = str.substring(0, str.length() - 6);
String sep = p.getFileSystem().getSeparator();
if (str.startsWith(sep)) {
str = str.substring(sep.length());
}
if (str.endsWith(sep)) {
str = str.substring(0, str.length() - sep.length());
}
String fullClassName = str.replace(sep, ".");
try {
Class <?> cls = Class.forName(fullClassName, false, loader);
classes.add(cls);
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
}
}
} catch (IOException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
private static Set <Class <?>> findJarClasses(boolean subPackages, String packageName, Set <URL> nextJarUrls, Set <Path> directories, ClassLoader loader, boolean bailError) {
String packagePath = packageName.replace('.', '/');
Set <Class <?>> result = new HashSet <>();
Set <URL> allJarUrls = new HashSet <>();
while (true) {
Set <URL> thisJarUrls = new HashSet <>(nextJarUrls);
thisJarUrls.removeAll(allJarUrls);
if (thisJarUrls.isEmpty()) {
break;
}
allJarUrls.addAll(thisJarUrls);
for (URL url : thisJarUrls) {
try (JarInputStream stream = new JarInputStream(url.openStream())) {
// may want better way to open url connections
readJarClassPath(stream, nextJarUrls, directories, bailError);
JarEntry entry = stream.getNextJarEntry();
while (entry != null) {
String name = entry.getName();
int i = name.lastIndexOf("/");
if (i > 0 && name.endsWith(".class")) {
try {
if (subPackages) {
if (name.substring(0, i).startsWith(packagePath)) {
Class <?> cls = Class.forName(name.substring(0, name.length() - 6).replace("/", "."), false, loader);
result.add(cls);
}
} else {
if (name.substring(0, i).equals(packagePath)) {
Class <?> cls = Class.forName(name.substring(0, name.length() - 6).replace("/", "."), false, loader);
result.add(cls);
}
}
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
entry = stream.getNextJarEntry();
}
stream.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
return result;
}
private static void readJarClassPath(JarInputStream stream, Set <URL> jarUrls, Set <Path> directories, boolean bailError) {
Object classPathObj = stream.getManifest().getMainAttributes().get(new Name("Class-Path"));
if (classPathObj == null) {
return;
}
if (classPathObj instanceof String) {
String[] entries = ((String) classPathObj).split("\\s+");// should also work with a single space (" ")
for (String entry : entries) {
try {
URL url = new URL(entry);
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directories, url, bailError);
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
} else if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException("the Class-Path attribute is no String: " + classPathObj.getClass().getName() + " tos='" + classPathObj + "'");
}
}
private static void findClassPools(ClassLoader classLoader, Set <URL> jarUrls, Set <Path> directoryPaths, boolean bailError, String packageName) {
packageName = packageName.replace('.', '/');
while (classLoader != null) {
if (classLoader instanceof URLClassLoader) {
for (URL url : ((URLClassLoader) classLoader).getURLs()) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, url, bailError);
System.out.println("rurl-class-loade.url[n]r->'" + url + "'");
}
} else {
URL res = classLoader.getResource("");
if (res != null) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, res, bailError);
}
res = classLoader.getResource("/");
if (res != null) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, res, bailError);
}
res = classLoader.getResource("/" + packageName);
if (res != null) {
res = removePackageFromUrl(res, packageName, bailError);
if (res != null) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, res, bailError);
}
}
res = classLoader.getResource(packageName);
if (res != null) {
res = removePackageFromUrl(res, packageName, bailError);
if (res != null) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, res, bailError);
}
}
addFromUnknownClass(classLoader, jarUrls, directoryPaths, bailError, 8);
}
classLoader = classLoader.getParent();
}
}
private static URL removePackageFromUrl(URL res, String packagePath, boolean bailError) {
packagePath = "/" + packagePath;
String urlStr = res.toString();
if ( !urlStr.endsWith(packagePath)) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException("the url string does not end with the packagepath! packagePath='" + packagePath + "' urlStr='" + urlStr + "'");
} else {
return null;
}
}
urlStr = urlStr.substring(0, urlStr.length() - packagePath.length());
if (urlStr.endsWith("!")) {
urlStr = urlStr.substring(0, urlStr.length() - 1);
}
if (urlStr.startsWith("jar:")) {
urlStr = urlStr.substring(4);
}
try {
return new URL(urlStr);
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
} else {
return null;
}
}
}
private static void addFromUnknownClass(Object instance, Set <URL> jarUrls, Set <Path> directoryPaths, boolean bailError, int maxDeep) {
Class <?> cls = instance.getClass();
while (cls != null) {
Field[] fields = cls.getDeclaredFields();
for (Field field : fields) {
Class <?> type = field.getType();
Object value;
try {
value = getValue(instance, field);
if (value != null) {
addFromUnknownValue(value, jarUrls, directoryPaths, bailError, type, field.getName(), maxDeep - 1);
}
} catch (IllegalArgumentException | IllegalAccessException | SecurityException e) {
if (bailError) {
final String version = System.getProperty("java.version");
String vers = version;
if (vers.startsWith("1.")) {
vers = vers.substring(2);
}
int dotindex = vers.indexOf('.');
if (dotindex != -1) {
vers = vers.substring(0, dotindex);
}
int versNum;
try {
versNum = Integer.parseInt(vers);
} catch (NumberFormatException e1) {
throw new RuntimeException("illegal version: '" + version + "' lastError: " + e.getMessage(), e);
}
if (versNum <= 11) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
}
cls = cls.getSuperclass();
}
}
private static Object getValue(Object instance, Field field) throws IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException, SecurityException {
try {
boolean flag = field.isAccessible();
boolean newflag = flag;
try {
field.setAccessible(true);
newflag = true;
} catch (Exception e) {}
try {
return field.get(instance);
} finally {
if (flag != newflag) {
field.setAccessible(flag);
}
}
} catch (IllegalArgumentException | IllegalAccessException | SecurityException e) {
try {
Field override = AccessibleObject.class.getDeclaredField("override");
boolean flag = override.isAccessible();
boolean newFlag = flag;
try {
override.setAccessible(true);
flag = true;
} catch (Exception s) {}
override.setBoolean(field, true);
if (flag != newFlag) {
override.setAccessible(flag);
}
return field.get(instance);
} catch (IllegalArgumentException | IllegalAccessException | NoSuchFieldException | SecurityException e1) {
e.addSuppressed(e1);
throw e;
}
}
}
private static void addFromUnknownValue(Object value, Set <URL> jarUrls, Set <Path> directoryPaths, boolean bailError, Class <?> type, String fieldName, int maxDeep) {
if (Collection.class.isAssignableFrom(type)) {
for (Object obj : (Collection <?>) value) {
URL url = null;
try {
if (obj instanceof URL) {
url = (URL) obj;
} else if (obj instanceof Path) {
url = ((Path) obj).toUri().toURL();
} else if (obj instanceof File) {
url = ((File) obj).toURI().toURL();
}
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
if (url != null) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, url, bailError);
}
}
} else if (URL[].class.isAssignableFrom(type)) {
for (URL url : (URL[]) value) {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, url, bailError);
}
} else if (Path[].class.isAssignableFrom(type)) {
for (Path path : (Path[]) value) {
try {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, path.toUri().toURL(), bailError);
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
} else if (File[].class.isAssignableFrom(type)) {
for (File file : (File[]) value) {
try {
addFromUrl(jarUrls, directoryPaths, file.toURI().toURL(), bailError);
} catch (MalformedURLException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
} else if (maxDeep > 0) {
addFromUnknownClass(value, jarUrls, directoryPaths, bailError, maxDeep - 1);
}
}
private static void addFromUrl(Set <URL> jarUrls, Set <Path> directoryPaths, URL url, boolean bailError) {
if (url.getFile().endsWith(".jar") || url.getFile().endsWith(".zip")) {
// may want better way to detect jar files
jarUrls.add(url);
} else {
try {
Path path = Paths.get(url.toURI());
if (Files.isDirectory(path)) {
directoryPaths.add(path);
} else if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException("unknown url for class loading: " + url);
}
} catch (URISyntaxException e) {
if (bailError) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
}
imports:
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.lang.reflect.AccessibleObject;
import java.lang.reflect.Field;
import java.net.MalformedURLException;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;
import java.net.URL;
import java.net.URLClassLoader;
import java.nio.file.DirectoryStream;
import java.nio.file.DirectoryStream.Filter;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.jar.Attributes.Name;
import java.util.jar.JarEntry;
import java.util.jar.JarInputStream;
Based on #Staale's answer, and in an attempt not to rely on third party libraries, I would implement the File System approach by inspecting first package physical location with:
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileFilter;
import java.util.ArrayList;
...
Class<?>[] foundClasses = new Class<?>[0];
final ArrayList<Class<?>> foundClassesDyn = new ArrayList<Class<?>>();
new java.io.File(
klass.getResource(
"/" + curPackage.replace( "." , "/")
).getFile()
).listFiles(
new java.io.FileFilter() {
public boolean accept(java.io.File file) {
final String classExtension = ".class";
if ( file.isFile()
&& file.getName().endsWith(classExtension)
// avoid inner classes
&& ! file.getName().contains("$") )
{
try {
String className = file.getName();
className = className.substring(0, className.length() - classExtension.length());
foundClassesDyn.add( Class.forName( curPackage + "." + className ) );
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace(System.out);
}
}
return false;
}
}
);
foundClasses = foundClassesDyn.toArray(foundClasses);
plain java: FindAllClassesUsingPlainJavaReflectionTest.java
#Slf4j
class FindAllClassesUsingPlainJavaReflectionTest {
private static final Function<Throwable, RuntimeException> asRuntimeException = throwable -> {
log.error(throwable.getLocalizedMessage());
return new RuntimeException(throwable);
};
private static final Function<String, Collection<Class<?>>> findAllPackageClasses = basePackageName -> {
Locale locale = Locale.getDefault();
Charset charset = StandardCharsets.UTF_8;
val fileManager = ToolProvider.getSystemJavaCompiler()
.getStandardFileManager(/* diagnosticListener */ null, locale, charset);
StandardLocation location = StandardLocation.CLASS_PATH;
JavaFileObject.Kind kind = JavaFileObject.Kind.CLASS;
Set<JavaFileObject.Kind> kinds = Collections.singleton(kind);
val javaFileObjects = Try.of(() -> fileManager.list(location, basePackageName, kinds, /* recurse */ true))
.getOrElseThrow(asRuntimeException);
String pathToPackageAndClass = basePackageName.replace(".", File.separator);
Function<String, String> mapToClassName = s -> {
String prefix = Arrays.stream(s.split(pathToPackageAndClass))
.findFirst()
.orElse("");
return s.replaceFirst(prefix, "")
.replaceAll(File.separator, ".");
};
return StreamSupport.stream(javaFileObjects.spliterator(), /* parallel */ true)
.filter(javaFileObject -> javaFileObject.getKind().equals(kind))
.map(FileObject::getName)
.map(fileObjectName -> fileObjectName.replace(".class", ""))
.map(mapToClassName)
.map(className -> Try.of(() -> Class.forName(className))
.getOrElseThrow(asRuntimeException))
.collect(Collectors.toList());
};
#Test
#DisplayName("should get classes recursively in given package")
void test() {
Collection<Class<?>> classes = findAllPackageClasses.apply(getClass().getPackage().getName());
assertThat(classes).hasSizeGreaterThan(4);
classes.stream().map(String::valueOf).forEach(log::info);
}
}
PS: to simplify boilerplates for handling errors, etc, I'm using here vavr and lombok libraries
other implementations could be found in my GitHub daggerok/java-reflection-find-annotated-classes-or-methods repo
As of org.reflections version 0.10 :
org.reflections.scanners.SubTypesScanner
and
org.reflections.Reflections.getAllTypes()
are deprecated. I userd:
public Set<String> getEntityNamesInPackage(String packagePath) {
Reflections reflections = new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder()
.filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder().includePackage(packagePath))
.setUrls(ClasspathHelper.forPackage(packagePath))
.setScanners(SubTypes.filterResultsBy(s -> true)));
return reflections.getAll(SubTypes).stream()
.filter(s -> s.startsWith(packagePath))
.collect(Collectors.toSet());
}
If you are merely looking to load a group of related classes, then Spring can help you.
Spring can instantiate a list or map of all classes that implement a given interface in one line of code. The list or map will contain instances of all the classes that implement that interface.
That being said, as an alternative to loading the list of classes out of the file system, instead just implement the same interface in all the classes you want to load, regardless of package and use Spring to provide you instances of all of them. That way, you can load (and instantiate) all the classes you desire regardless of what package they are in.
On the other hand, if having them all in a package is what you want, then simply have all the classes in that package implement a given interface.
Note that the interface itself doesn't have to declare any methods - it can be completely empty.
To inject a list of classes implementing a given interface, use the following lines of code...
#Autowired
private List<ISomeInterface> implementationList;
It is also possible to inject a Map of classes using Spring. Read the docs if interested to see how.
Finally, I will offer one other solution that is a bit more elegant than searching the entire file system tree.
Create a custom annotation that builds a catalog of the classes to which it is applied - something like #ClassCatalog.
It is not possible, since all classes in the package might not be loaded, while you always knows package of a class.

Making connection to oracle database using properties file

The program two.java is compiling but no output is being produced ,no exception occuring .
(Executing in cmd)
//db.properties
driverclass = oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
url = jdbc:oracle:thin:#loacalhost:1521:xe
user = system
password = kapil
//ConnectionProvider.java
class ConnectionProvider
{
static Properties prop;
static
{
prop = new Properties();
String path = File.separator + "db.properties";
InputStream in = prop.getClass().getResourceAsStream(path);
try
{
prop.load(in);
}
catch(Exception e)
{
}
}
public static Connection getConnection() throws Exception
{
Class.forName(prop.getProperty("driverclass"));
Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection(
prop.getProperty("url"),
prop.getProperty("user"),
prop.getProperty("password"));
return con;
}
}
// two.java
class Two
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
try
{
Connection con = ConnectionProvider.getConnection();
Statement stmt = con.createStatement();
ResultSet rset = stmt.executeQuery("Select * from Emp ");
while(rset.next())
{
System.out.println(rset.getInt(1) + "\t"
+ rset.getString(2) + "\t"
+ rset.getString(3) + "\t"
+ rset.getInt(4));
}
con.close();
}
catch(Exception e){}
}
}
First thing dont consume the exception by doing this catch(Exception e){} Its not a good practice always print the stacktrace like the catch(Exception e){ e.printStacktrace();}
now the problem in ur code is the url change it to-
url = jdbc:oracle:thin:#localhost:1521:xe
there is a typo in url's localhost.
Edit :As you are executing the class through cmd I expect that the classes and the db.properties are in same folder try something like this
try {
prop.load(new FileInputStream("db.properties"));
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
so the full ConnectionProvider class looks something like this
class ConnectionProvider
{
static Properties prop;
static
{
prop = new Properties();
try {
prop.load(new FileInputStream("db.properties"));
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
public static Connection getConnection() throws Exception
{
Class.forName(prop.getProperty("driverclass"));
Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection(prop.getProperty("url"), prop.getProperty("user"), prop.getProperty("password"));
return con;
}
}
Now while executing the class dont forget to include the ojdbc6.jar in your classpath.You can get it from here.
Exception is not occurred because you are catching it but not printing it. In other words, exception might occur but you are not printing it.
add this to your catch block e.printStackTrace();
Also this code:
String path = File.separator + "db.properties"; doesn't seem correct.
First print out the path to make sure you are pointing at correct file.
You can use .getCanonicalPath() to get absolute path.
Do something like this:
String filePath = new File("./yourfile.properties").getCanonicalPath();
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(filePath);
props.load(fis);
You can use BalusC's great dao layer tutorial. There is an properties file loader that will fit your needs. Summary of the code is below.
This is how the file dao.properties will look like (change jdbc.url and jdbc.driver for Oracle Db):
javabase.jdbc.url = jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/javabase
javabase.jdbc.driver = com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
javabase.jdbc.username = java
javabase.jdbc.password = d$7hF_r!9Y
Properties file loader (as noted you may change it depending on your needs, Note: it depends on how often you think that this file changes in your environment, if it changes only once per year, then it is really not worth that to load it from disk everytime, but if it changes for example every day, then it might be worth to add a static method which reloads the properties file and execute it by some (scheduled) background job.)
package com.example.dao;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.Properties;
/**
* This class immediately loads the DAO properties file 'dao.properties' once in memory and provides
* a constructor which takes the specific key which is to be used as property key prefix of the DAO
* properties file. There is a property getter which only returns the property prefixed with
* 'specificKey.' and provides the option to indicate whether the property is mandatory or not.
*
* #author BalusC
* #link http://balusc.blogspot.com/2008/07/dao-tutorial-data-layer.html
*/
public class DAOProperties {
// Constants ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
private static final String PROPERTIES_FILE = "dao.properties";
private static final Properties PROPERTIES = new Properties();
static {
ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
InputStream propertiesFile = classLoader.getResourceAsStream(PROPERTIES_FILE);
if (propertiesFile == null) {
throw new DAOConfigurationException(
"Properties file '" + PROPERTIES_FILE + "' is missing in classpath.");
}
try {
PROPERTIES.load(propertiesFile);
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new DAOConfigurationException(
"Cannot load properties file '" + PROPERTIES_FILE + "'.", e);
}
}
// Vars ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
private String specificKey;
// Constructors -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Construct a DAOProperties instance for the given specific key which is to be used as property
* key prefix of the DAO properties file.
* #param specificKey The specific key which is to be used as property key prefix.
* #throws DAOConfigurationException During class initialization if the DAO properties file is
* missing in the classpath or cannot be loaded.
*/
public DAOProperties(String specificKey) throws DAOConfigurationException {
this.specificKey = specificKey;
}
// Actions ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Returns the DAOProperties instance specific property value associated with the given key with
* the option to indicate whether the property is mandatory or not.
* #param key The key to be associated with a DAOProperties instance specific value.
* #param mandatory Sets whether the returned property value should not be null nor empty.
* #return The DAOProperties instance specific property value associated with the given key.
* #throws DAOConfigurationException If the returned property value is null or empty while
* it is mandatory.
*/
public String getProperty(String key, boolean mandatory) throws DAOConfigurationException {
String fullKey = specificKey + "." + key;
String property = PROPERTIES.getProperty(fullKey);
if (property == null || property.trim().length() == 0) {
if (mandatory) {
throw new DAOConfigurationException("Required property '" + fullKey + "'"
+ " is missing in properties file '" + PROPERTIES_FILE + "'.");
} else {
// Make empty value null. Empty Strings are evil.
property = null;
}
}
return property;
}
}

How to get a package name of .class file?

I have an unusual problem which is concerned to dynamic loading java .class file at run-time. All I want to do is to load a .class file and basing on it create a Class object.
Input: an absolute path of .class file.
Basing on it i want to load class by ClassLoader, so I need a path of root directory where file is located and full class name e.g com.test.MyClass. Basing on mentioned absolute path I can only get a class name but I can't get a package name which is "hiden" in this file.
Here is code of my "loading class method":
public static void loadClass(String directory){
// Get file root directory
String rootDirectory = new File(directory).getParent();
// Get rid of file extension
String className = getFileNameWithoutExtension(directory);
URL[] urls = null;
ClassLoader cl = null;
try {
// Convert File to a URL and save them
urls = new URL[]{new File(rootDirectory).toURI().toURL()};
// Create a new class loader with the directory
cl = new URLClassLoader(urls);
// Load in the class
dynamicClass = cl.loadClass(className);
}
catch (MalformedURLException e)
{
}
catch (ClassNotFoundException e)
{
}
catch (NoClassDefFoundError e)
{
// Basing on error message get the class package name
String classPackage = getClassPackage(e.getMessage());
try {
// Load the class once more!
dynamicClass = cl.loadClass(classPackage);
}
catch (ClassNotFoundException ex)
{
}
}
}
Second method is used to get package name from exception message:
private static String getClassPackage(String errorMsg){
// Start and end index of cutting
int startIndex = errorMsg.lastIndexOf(" ") + 1;
int endIndex = errorMsg.length() - 1;
// Let's save a substring
String classPackage = errorMsg.substring(startIndex, endIndex);
// Replace char '/' to '.'
classPackage = classPackage.replace('/', '.');
return classPackage;
}
Code of method getFileNameWithoutExtension:
private static String getFileNameWithoutExtension(String path){
int start = path.lastIndexOf(File.separator) + 1;
int end = path.lastIndexOf(DOT);
end = start < end ? end : path.length();
String name = path.substring(start, end);
return name;
}
Where the static final variable is:
private static final String DOT = ".";
And here is my question: is it possible to get package name from .class file without using this kind of trick?
You can use the Foo.class.getPackage().getName() method to determine this.
public Package getPackage()
Returns:
the package of the class, or null if no package information is available from the archive or codebase.
Using getName() :
public String getName()
Returns:
The fully-qualified name of this package as defined in section 6.5.3 of The Java™ Language Specification, for example, java.lang
Since you already have the required data in className, just use it again. You don't need the getClassPackage method.
catch (NoClassDefFoundError e)
{
// Basing on error message get the class package name
//But we already have the class name in className variable!
//String classPackage = getClassPackage(e.getMessage());
try {
// Load the class once more!
dynamicClass = cl.loadClass(className);
}
catch (ClassNotFoundException ex)
{
}
}
And if you want to get the package name only (not sure why), you can just get it from the class name:
String packageName = className.substring(0, className.lastIndexOf('.'));
dynamicClass = cl.loadClass(packageName);
You can do like this-
String packName = new Object(){}.getClass().getPackage().getName();
System.out.println(packName);

How can I change the running directory of a program - by setting it in the exe shortcut?

I have an exe process that is running with a shortcut.
In the "Start in" property of the shortcut I set it to the folder where all app resources are. The process still looks for files at the location of the exe and not the location written in the shortcut.
I can also see it in Process Explorer - the "current directory" is the location of the exe.
Is there a way to change it?
(If I wasn't clear enough -
I want to put my app in a central network location and not in each user folder - but I want it to run - above each user folder by putting a shortcut in each user folder.)
BTW : Why don't I solve it with code writing? Because of third party jars I have in my exe (I am using exe4j to make an exe)
From exe4-j documentation.., it seems this can be configured in exe4j project.
Working directory
For some applications (especially GUI applications) you might want to change the working directory
to a specific directory relative to the executable, for example to read config files that are in a fixed
location. To do so, please select the Change working directory to: checkbox and enter a
directory relative to the executable in the adjacent text field. To change the current directory to the
same directory where the executable is located, please enter a single dot.
One alternative is to use a System Property. Just create a shortcut like this:
java -Dmyproperty="\\myserver\myfolder" -jar yourjar.jar
And get this property on your program:
System.getProperty("myproperty");
You can also set multiple System Properties.
I would start the java application via a cmd or bat file, then change to the work dir before you call javaw. If you don't do any thing special in your java application code all the paths in it will be relative to the place where you started java.
Jess
You can hack the classpath programatically which would allow you to specify a specific folder or series of folders to access the data.
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.File;
import java.net.URLClassLoader;
import java.net.URL;
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
public class ClassPathHacker {
private static final Class[] parameters = new Class[]{URL.class};
public static void addFile(String s) throws IOException {
File f = new File(s);
addFile(f);
}//end method
public static void addFile(File f) throws IOException {
addURL(f.toURI().toURL());
}//end method
public static void addURL(URL u) throws IOException {
URLClassLoader sysloader = (URLClassLoader) ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader();
Class sysclass = URLClassLoader.class;
try {
Method method = sysclass.getDeclaredMethod("addURL", parameters);
method.setAccessible(true);
method.invoke(sysloader, new Object[]{u});
} catch (Throwable t) {
t.printStackTrace();
throw new IOException("Error, could not add URL to system classloader");
}//end try catch
}//end method
}//end class
with the property loader file of
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.Locale;
import java.util.Properties;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
public abstract class PropertyLoader
{
/**
* Looks up a resource named 'name' in the classpath. The resource must map
* to a file with .properties extention. The name is assumed to be absolute
* and can use either "/" or "." for package segment separation with an
* optional leading "/" and optional ".properties" suffix. Thus, the
* following names refer to the same resource:
* <pre>
* some.pkg.Resource
* some.pkg.Resource.properties
* some/pkg/Resource
* some/pkg/Resource.properties
* /some/pkg/Resource
* /some/pkg/Resource.properties
* </pre>
*
* #param name classpath resource name [may not be null]
* #param loader classloader through which to load the resource [null
* is equivalent to the application loader]
*
* #return resource converted to java.util.Properties [may be null if the
* resource was not found and THROW_ON_LOAD_FAILURE is false]
* #throws IllegalArgumentException if the resource was not found and
* THROW_ON_LOAD_FAILURE is true
*/
public static Properties loadProperties (String name, ClassLoader loader)
{
if (name == null)
throw new IllegalArgumentException ("null input: name");
if (name.startsWith ("/"))
name = name.substring (1);
if (name.endsWith (SUFFIX))
name = name.substring (0, name.length () - SUFFIX.length ());
Properties result = null;
InputStream in = null;
try
{
if (loader == null) loader = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader ();
if (LOAD_AS_RESOURCE_BUNDLE)
{
name = name.replace ('/', '.');
// Throws MissingResourceException on lookup failures:
final ResourceBundle rb = ResourceBundle.getBundle (name,
Locale.getDefault (), loader);
result = new Properties ();
for (Enumeration keys = rb.getKeys (); keys.hasMoreElements ();)
{
final String key = (String) keys.nextElement ();
final String value = rb.getString (key);
result.put (key, value);
}
}
else
{
name = name.replace ('.', '/');
if (! name.endsWith (SUFFIX))
name = name.concat (SUFFIX);
// Returns null on lookup failures:
in = loader.getResourceAsStream(name);
if (in != null)
{
result = new Properties ();
result.load (in); // Can throw IOException
}
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
result = null;
}
finally
{
if (in != null) try { in.close (); } catch (Throwable ignore) {}
}
if (THROW_ON_LOAD_FAILURE && (result == null))
{
throw new IllegalArgumentException ("could not load [" + name + "]"+
" as " + (LOAD_AS_RESOURCE_BUNDLE
? "a resource bundle"
: "a classloader resource"));
}
return result;
}
/**
* A convenience overload of {#link #loadProperties(String, ClassLoader)}
* that uses the current thread's context classloader.
*/
public static Properties loadProperties (final String name)
{
return loadProperties (name,
Thread.currentThread ().getContextClassLoader ());
}
private static final boolean THROW_ON_LOAD_FAILURE = true;
private static final boolean LOAD_AS_RESOURCE_BUNDLE = false;
private static final String SUFFIX = ".properties";
} // End of class
then you can add a path as follows
try {
//First Load up the properties and populate the config
ClassPathHacker.addFile("/pathtomyapp");
} catch (IOException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
properties = PropertyLoader.loadProperties("myapp");
or you can also use getResourceBundle to get your resources, this is just one example of hacking the classpath to allow files to be available, you can always just add the classpath programatically and let the jar files you need to be available to reside there, so if you always ensure that the app network path is Q: you can add Q:\ to the classpath.

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