I am working on a program that will allow for modular addons to be installed by simply dropping the correct .jar file into a folder. I was not quite sure how to add a file like this to the build path and use a method from that file. I know how to do this if I know exactly what file I will be using, but in this case I do not. I will need to be able to run a method from the external jar without telling eclipse ahead of time that this is the file I will be using.
You can load the jar using method described on this answer: How to load a jar file at runtime
I would assume you also need an interface to act as a binding contract so you know what to cast your class to
Related
I have a Jar file that has the a few packages.
I want to import the commons library and within Eclipse that's pretty simple.
However when I export the jar file, and run it, it is not able to find the commons library and therefore unable to run. I want to know if I have to move the commons jar files to the exact same directory (within the package)? Or if there is something I can add to the import lines to make it work?
I also want to make this jar file able to be sent to people and used by anyone without having to get them to modify anything on their computer
you need to include jars in your classpath if you are running on command line (Here is an example of this)
if you want it to all be neatly wrapped in one jar consider looking at OneJar. (oneJar example) or JarJar.
This is the directory structure I want to create when I finally deploy my software. It is a Java chat client with a webcam feature and for the webcam I am using LTI-CIVIL.
I was told that I can not use DLLs right from the JAR and I will have to extract them somewhere. All cool. However, what I cannot get my head around is how can I make it work ?
LTI comes with a large number of files in the zip that they provide on their site. If you are using Eclipse, you need to set the path to appropriate folder for the native library. However, this limits me to Eclipse and prevents me from distributing the JAR to my friends. Apparently, I will now have to point to that folder, and maybe load the files, programatiaclly
I am a beginner so if someone can download LTI-CIVIL, have a look at the directory structure and let me know how to achieve what I am trying to do then that would be highly appreciated.
AFAIK, for my 32 bit Windows, I need to point to native/win32-x86 folder.
What I am trying to do is to load the appropriate files in memory so that I can provide webcam facility. I want to avoid installers and simply give a zip file with a directory structure mentioned above so that people can extract, run the jar file from the folder and start chatting.
Clarification: I am trying to send a library with jar file and not in jar. I know extracting and using dlls from jar is tough
I'm assuming that it is not your own code which loads the native libraries (System.load), and they are loaded by a third-party jar (lti-civil).
In this case you have to set the enviroment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH appropiately before lti-civil attempts to load the native libraries.
Either:
With a launcher script (e.g .bat), set the variable before running java, or set the system property, something like:
java -jar your.jar -Djava.library.path=/path/to/native/folder
At runtime. In the entry point of your program.
This is a bit "hackish", but it works.
Check this link for example:
http://nicklothian.com/blog/2008/11/19/modify-javalibrarypath-at-runtime/
Since you do not know the exact path beforehand, in both cases you will have to also find the correct path where the native libraries are located.
If the path to the libraries is relative to the path of the jar/launcher, then find the current path of the executable:
in a .bat launcher:
Get Directory Path of an executing Batch file
in java:
How to get the path of a running JAR file?
And then that, you can assume the libraries are located in path relative to this (../native), just calculate the path (and maybe expand it to an absolute path).
After you have calculated the absolute path, set the enviroment/system property as described in the first part of the answer.
I have a Java application that was converted to an .exe with launch4j. For several reasons I need to get access to the class files of the application.
The first thing I tried was unpacking the exe with 7zip. That way I get a handful of class files, but definately not the whole application packed in the exe (the class files seem to belong to launch4j).
What other options are there?
You can use something like this to extract the JAR from the Launch4j executable:
http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/resources_extract.html
Typically the executable packages necessary JAR's as executable resources and then looks for a JDK on the path to execute.
Once you get the JAR file you should be able to decompile it.
You cannot get access to class files. Exes are created, So that nobody can get access to your code.
If somehow , you are able to get access to jar files then you can decompile them to get the code and make changes.
My application relies on two external libraries, I have both in jar format and have added them to my classpath, making it possible to run my application within NetBeans.
However, I would like to package my application in an easy to use jar file. When I tried the automatic method of jar creation provided by NetBeans (where it auto generates a jarfile in dist/) and ran it on another computer, I got lots of ClassNotFound (or similar) exceptions for classes that I could tell were supposed to be provided by my other libraries.
Is there a way I can include the other jarfiles I have into my own jar? I've never created an application which relies on other libraries before so this is a first for me.
You can add a "Class-path" line to your jar's manifest. The drawback is that you have to hard code the paths to a file system (not jar) location in the manifest. If you put them all in the same directory or a consistent relative directory, it should be manageable.
See: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar/downman.html
Alternately you can try something line One-JAR: http://one-jar.sourceforge.net/
If there's one thing that annoys me about Java it's that you can't double-click a class file so as to run. I assuming there's an entry in the registry that has to be edited to do this but I haven't a clue.
So, as it says on the tin. Does anyone know how to associate Java class files to run on double-click on Windows (I aiming for Windows 7 here but I'm sure there'd be no difference in the three most latest releases)? It would make my life (and I'm sure many other people's) much easier!
Udpate: I've seen answers relating to making a JAR out of the class in question and running it that way. However useful, that is not exactly what I'm looking for here. I'm effectively looking for Windows itself to invoke java with the class on double-click, with the correct arguments.
if classpath doesnt matter too much, easily done with a simple batch file runjava.bat or so that is associated with .class files in the explorer (via right click >> open with..)
#echo off
REM change to folder where the class file resides
cd %~d1%~p1
REM execute the class by calling its name without file extension
start java %~n1
The double-clickable JAR solution is the most common plain Java distribution method. There'd be a number of issues with trying to execute .class files directly, with the classpath the one that pops first to mind.
That said, if you wanted to support the very simplest possibilities in your development environment, you could conceivably implement a script that
inspected the .class file for the full class name (including package and inner class name)
walked up the directory tree to the root of the file's class path
(optionally included any common lib directories in the classpath)
invoked Java for the determined class
Then you could register your shiny script as a handler for .class files. But since you're in the development environment, aren't you happier with your IDE doing that?
For a .class file to run, needs in first place to have "something" to do, that is, that .class should contain a main method. Not all the .class do have one.
One thing you can do, is to wrap your app ( a number of .class files ) inside a jar file.
For short, you just need in addition to your classes a manifest file that says, where the main method is:
jar -cmf yourmanifestfile.mf doubleClickApp.jar *.class
And that's it, the doubleClickApp.jar is now executable with a "doubleClick" gesture.
When you install the Java Runtime Environment, it registers .jar files as an association in Windows. If you double-click on a .jar file, it will open it using Java. For this to work, you need to make sure you have a manifest defined that points to the class to run. Your class file to be run must have a main method that will be called.
Let's assume you have a class named 'com.TheClass.class' on disk. If you want to have this able to run with double click, create a file in a new directory called META-INF/manifest.mf. Put this into it:
Manifest-Version: 1.2
Main-Class: com.TheClass
Zip (or use the jar command) both your class up with this manifest directory and file. Rename it to mine.jar. Double click on it and it should launch your class with the Java runtime.
http://justaddhotwater.webs.com/javaexec.htm
This software makes it possible to run your Java classes by double-clicking them.(Windows ONLY).
The easiest way that I have found was creating a shortcut on the same folder than the .class file. Then right click on it and go to properties. Change the field Target to java NameOfClass, finally double click the shortcut :)