I am currently extracting the contents of a war file and then adding some new files to the directory structure and then creating a new war file.
This is all done programatically from Java - but I am wondering if it wouldn't be more efficient to copy the war file and then just append the files - then I wouldn't have to wait so long as the war expands and then has to be compressed again.
I can't seem to find a way to do this in the documentation though or any online examples.
Anyone can give some tips or pointers?
UPDATE:
TrueZip as mentioned in one of the answers seems to be a very good java library to append to a zip file (despite other answers that say it is not possible to do this).
Anyone have experience or feedback on TrueZip or can recommend other similar libaries?
In Java 7 we got Zip File System that allows adding and changing files in zip (jar, war) without manual repackaging.
We can directly write to files inside zip files as in the following example.
Map<String, String> env = new HashMap<>();
env.put("create", "true");
Path path = Paths.get("test.zip");
URI uri = URI.create("jar:" + path.toUri());
try (FileSystem fs = FileSystems.newFileSystem(uri, env))
{
Path nf = fs.getPath("new.txt");
try (Writer writer = Files.newBufferedWriter(nf, StandardCharsets.UTF_8, StandardOpenOption.CREATE)) {
writer.write("hello");
}
}
As others mentioned, it's not possible to append content to an existing zip (or war). However, it's possible to create a new zip on the fly without temporarily writing extracted content to disk. It's hard to guess how much faster this will be, but it's the fastest you can get (at least as far as I know) with standard Java. As mentioned by Carlos Tasada, SevenZipJBindings might squeeze out you some extra seconds, but porting this approach to SevenZipJBindings will still be faster than using temporary files with the same library.
Here's some code that writes the contents of an existing zip (war.zip) and appends an extra file (answer.txt) to a new zip (append.zip). All it takes is Java 5 or later, no extra libraries needed.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.OutputStream;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.zip.ZipEntry;
import java.util.zip.ZipFile;
import java.util.zip.ZipOutputStream;
public class Main {
// 4MB buffer
private static final byte[] BUFFER = new byte[4096 * 1024];
/**
* copy input to output stream - available in several StreamUtils or Streams classes
*/
public static void copy(InputStream input, OutputStream output) throws IOException {
int bytesRead;
while ((bytesRead = input.read(BUFFER))!= -1) {
output.write(BUFFER, 0, bytesRead);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
// read war.zip and write to append.zip
ZipFile war = new ZipFile("war.zip");
ZipOutputStream append = new ZipOutputStream(new FileOutputStream("append.zip"));
// first, copy contents from existing war
Enumeration<? extends ZipEntry> entries = war.entries();
while (entries.hasMoreElements()) {
ZipEntry e = entries.nextElement();
System.out.println("copy: " + e.getName());
append.putNextEntry(e);
if (!e.isDirectory()) {
copy(war.getInputStream(e), append);
}
append.closeEntry();
}
// now append some extra content
ZipEntry e = new ZipEntry("answer.txt");
System.out.println("append: " + e.getName());
append.putNextEntry(e);
append.write("42\n".getBytes());
append.closeEntry();
// close
war.close();
append.close();
}
}
I had a similar requirement sometime back - but it was for reading and writing zip archives (.war format should be similar). I tried doing it with the existing Java Zip streams but found the writing part cumbersome - especially when directories where involved.
I'll recommend you to try out the TrueZIP (open source - apache style licensed) library that exposes any archive as a virtual file system into which you can read and write like a normal filesystem. It worked like a charm for me and greatly simplified my development.
You could use this bit of code I wrote
public static void addFilesToZip(File source, File[] files)
{
try
{
File tmpZip = File.createTempFile(source.getName(), null);
tmpZip.delete();
if(!source.renameTo(tmpZip))
{
throw new Exception("Could not make temp file (" + source.getName() + ")");
}
byte[] buffer = new byte[1024];
ZipInputStream zin = new ZipInputStream(new FileInputStream(tmpZip));
ZipOutputStream out = new ZipOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(source));
for(int i = 0; i < files.length; i++)
{
InputStream in = new FileInputStream(files[i]);
out.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(files[i].getName()));
for(int read = in.read(buffer); read > -1; read = in.read(buffer))
{
out.write(buffer, 0, read);
}
out.closeEntry();
in.close();
}
for(ZipEntry ze = zin.getNextEntry(); ze != null; ze = zin.getNextEntry())
{
out.putNextEntry(ze);
for(int read = zin.read(buffer); read > -1; read = zin.read(buffer))
{
out.write(buffer, 0, read);
}
out.closeEntry();
}
out.close();
tmpZip.delete();
}
catch(Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
I don't know of a Java library that does what you describe. But what you described is practical. You can do it in .NET, using DotNetZip.
Michael Krauklis is correct that you cannot simply "append" data to a war file or zip file, but it is not because there is an "end of file" indication, strictly speaking, in a war file. It is because the war (zip) format includes a directory, which is normally present at the end of the file, that contains metadata for the various entries in the war file. Naively appending to a war file results in no update to the directory, and so you just have a war file with junk appended to it.
What's necessary is an intelligent class that understands the format, and can read+update a war file or zip file, including the directory as appropriate. DotNetZip does this, without uncompressing/recompressing the unchanged entries, just as you described or desired.
As Cheeso says, there's no way of doing it. AFAIK the zip front-ends are doing exactly the same as you internally.
Anyway if you're worried about the speed of extracting/compressing everything, you may want to try the SevenZipJBindings library.
I covered this library in my blog some months ago (sorry for the auto-promotion). Just as an example, extracting a 104MB zip file using the java.util.zip took me 12 seconds, while using this library took 4 seconds.
In both links you can find examples about how to use it.
Hope it helps.
See this bug report.
Using append mode on any kind of
structured data like zip files or tar
files is not something you can really
expect to work. These file formats
have an intrinsic "end of file"
indication built into the data format.
If you really want to skip the intermediate step of un-waring/re-waring, you could read the war file file, get all the zip entries, then write to a new war file "appending" the new entries you wanted to add. Not perfect, but at least a more automated solution.
Yet Another Solution: You may find code below useful in other situations as well. I have used ant this way to compile Java directories, generating jar files, updating zip files,...
public static void antUpdateZip(String zipFilePath, String libsToAddDir) {
Project p = new Project();
p.init();
Target target = new Target();
target.setName("zip");
Zip task = new Zip();
task.init();
task.setDestFile(new File(zipFilePath));
ZipFileSet zipFileSet = new ZipFileSet();
zipFileSet.setPrefix("WEB-INF/lib");
zipFileSet.setDir(new File(libsToAddDir));
task.addFileset(zipFileSet);
task.setUpdate(true);
task.setProject(p);
task.init();
target.addTask(task);
target.setProject(p);
p.addTarget(target);
DefaultLogger consoleLogger = new DefaultLogger();
consoleLogger.setErrorPrintStream(System.err);
consoleLogger.setOutputPrintStream(System.out);
consoleLogger.setMessageOutputLevel(Project.MSG_DEBUG);
p.addBuildListener(consoleLogger);
try {
// p.fireBuildStarted();
// ProjectHelper helper = ProjectHelper.getProjectHelper();
// p.addReference("ant.projectHelper", helper);
// helper.parse(p, buildFile);
p.executeTarget(target.getName());
// p.fireBuildFinished(null);
} catch (BuildException e) {
p.fireBuildFinished(e);
throw new AssertionError(e);
}
}
this a simple code to get a response with using servlet and send a response
myZipPath = bla bla...
byte[] buf = new byte[8192];
String zipName = "myZip.zip";
String zipPath = myzippath+ File.separator+"pdf" + File.separator+ zipName;
File pdfFile = new File("myPdf.pdf");
ZipOutputStream out = new ZipOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(zipPath));
ZipEntry zipEntry = new ZipEntry(pdfFile.getName());
out.putNextEntry(zipEntry);
InputStream in = new FileInputStream(pdfFile);
int len;
while ((len = in.read(buf)) > 0) {
out.write(buf, 0, len);
}
out.closeEntry();
in.close();
out.close();
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(zipPath);
response.setContentType("application/zip");
response.addHeader("content-disposition", "attachment;filename=" + zipName);
OutputStream os = response.getOutputStream();
int length = is.read(buffer);
while (length != -1)
{
os.write(buffer, 0, length);
length = is.read(buffer);
}
Here are examples how easily files can be appended to existing zip using TrueVFS:
// append a file to archive under different name
TFile.cp(new File("existingFile.txt"), new TFile("archive.zip", "entry.txt"));
// recusively append a dir to the root of archive
TFile src = new TFile("dirPath", "dirName");
src.cp_r(new TFile("archive.zip", src.getName()));
TrueVFS, the successor of TrueZIP, uses Java 7 NIO 2 features under the hood when appropriate but offers much more features like thread-safe async parallel compression.
Beware also that Java 7 ZipFileSystem by default is vulnerable to OutOfMemoryError on huge inputs.
Here is Java 1.7 version of Liam answer which uses try with resources and Apache Commons IO.
The output is written to a new zip file but it can be easily modified to write to the original file.
/**
* Modifies, adds or deletes file(s) from a existing zip file.
*
* #param zipFile the original zip file
* #param newZipFile the destination zip file
* #param filesToAddOrOverwrite the names of the files to add or modify from the original file
* #param filesToAddOrOverwriteInputStreams the input streams containing the content of the files
* to add or modify from the original file
* #param filesToDelete the names of the files to delete from the original file
* #throws IOException if the new file could not be written
*/
public static void modifyZipFile(File zipFile,
File newZipFile,
String[] filesToAddOrOverwrite,
InputStream[] filesToAddOrOverwriteInputStreams,
String[] filesToDelete) throws IOException {
try (ZipOutputStream out = new ZipOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(newZipFile))) {
// add existing ZIP entry to output stream
try (ZipInputStream zin = new ZipInputStream(new FileInputStream(zipFile))) {
ZipEntry entry = null;
while ((entry = zin.getNextEntry()) != null) {
String name = entry.getName();
// check if the file should be deleted
if (filesToDelete != null) {
boolean ignoreFile = false;
for (String fileToDelete : filesToDelete) {
if (name.equalsIgnoreCase(fileToDelete)) {
ignoreFile = true;
break;
}
}
if (ignoreFile) {
continue;
}
}
// check if the file should be kept as it is
boolean keepFileUnchanged = true;
if (filesToAddOrOverwrite != null) {
for (String fileToAddOrOverwrite : filesToAddOrOverwrite) {
if (name.equalsIgnoreCase(fileToAddOrOverwrite)) {
keepFileUnchanged = false;
}
}
}
if (keepFileUnchanged) {
// copy the file as it is
out.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(name));
IOUtils.copy(zin, out);
}
}
}
// add the modified or added files to the zip file
if (filesToAddOrOverwrite != null) {
for (int i = 0; i < filesToAddOrOverwrite.length; i++) {
String fileToAddOrOverwrite = filesToAddOrOverwrite[i];
try (InputStream in = filesToAddOrOverwriteInputStreams[i]) {
out.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(fileToAddOrOverwrite));
IOUtils.copy(in, out);
out.closeEntry();
}
}
}
}
}
this works 100% , if you dont want to use extra libs ..
1) first, the class that append files to the zip ..
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import java.util.zip.ZipEntry;
import java.util.zip.ZipOutputStream;
public class AddZip {
public void AddZip() {
}
public void addToZipFile(ZipOutputStream zos, String nombreFileAnadir, String nombreDentroZip) {
FileInputStream fis = null;
try {
if (!new File(nombreFileAnadir).exists()) {//NO EXISTE
System.out.println(" No existe el archivo : " + nombreFileAnadir);return;
}
File file = new File(nombreFileAnadir);
System.out.println(" Generando el archivo '" + nombreFileAnadir + "' al ZIP ");
fis = new FileInputStream(file);
ZipEntry zipEntry = new ZipEntry(nombreDentroZip);
zos.putNextEntry(zipEntry);
byte[] bytes = new byte[1024];
int length;
while ((length = fis.read(bytes)) >= 0) {zos.write(bytes, 0, length);}
zos.closeEntry();
fis.close();
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex ) {
Logger.getLogger(AddZip.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
} catch (IOException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(AddZip.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
2) you can call it in your controller ..
//in the top
try {
fos = new FileOutputStream(rutaZip);
zos = new ZipOutputStream(fos);
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(UtilZip.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
...
//inside your method
addZip.addToZipFile(zos, pathFolderFileSystemHD() + itemFoto.getNombre(), "foto/" + itemFoto.getNombre());
Based on the answer given by #sfussenegger above, following code is used to append to a jar file and download it:
public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
Resource resourceFile = resourceLoader.getResource("WEB-INF/lib/custom.jar");
ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
try (ZipOutputStream zos = new ZipOutputStream(baos, StandardCharsets.ISO_8859_1);) {
try (ZipFile zin = new ZipFile(resourceFile.getFile(), StandardCharsets.ISO_8859_1);) {
zin.stream().forEach((entry) -> {
try {
zos.putNextEntry(entry);
if (!entry.isDirectory()) {
zin.getInputStream(entry).transferTo(zos);
}
zos.closeEntry();
} catch (Exception ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
});
}
/* build file records to be appended */
....
for (FileContents record : records) {
zos.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(record.getFileName()));
zos.write(record.getBytes());
zos.closeEntry();
}
zos.flush();
}
response.setContentType("application/java-archive");
response.setContentLength(baos.size());
response.setHeader(HttpHeaders.CONTENT_DISPOSITION, "attachment; filename=\"custom.jar\"");
try (BufferedOutputStream out = new BufferedOutputStream(response.getOutputStream())) {
baos.writeTo(out);
}
}
I have a list of files that I need to zip and I am using ZipOutputStream.
When I get the files I set each to read only. (I have tried with file.setWritable(false) and file.setReadOnly())
The original file gets changed but the one that get saved inside the zip is not ready only. I'm guessing this is because I have to use FileInputStream to add each file into the zip.
For testing I am using example code I found online.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.zip.ZipEntry;
import java.util.zip.ZipOutputStream;
public class TestZip {
public static void main(String[] args) {
byte[] buffer = new byte[1024];
try {
File zipFile = new File("C:\\Users\\thop\\Desktop\\Test\\test.txt");
zipFile.setWritable(false);
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream("C:\\Users\\thop\\Desktop\\Test\\MyFile.zip");
ZipOutputStream zos = new ZipOutputStream(fos);
ZipEntry ze = new ZipEntry(zipFile.getAbsolutePath());
zos.putNextEntry(ze);
FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream(zipFile.getAbsolutePath());
int len;
while ((len = in.read(buffer)) > 0) {
zos.write(buffer, 0, len);
}
in.close();
zos.closeEntry();
zos.close();
System.out.println("Done");
} catch (IOException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Is there a way to make the file that gets zipped read only?
Example:
The file I am saving gets set to read only.
When I save the test.txt in a zip file and extract it in the MyFile folder it isn't read only anymore.
ZipOutputStream doesn't use the files that are saved but it reads them and then zips them.
If you want to use the files you have access to and to keep them the same as they are you can use zip4j
I've written a JAVA source to zip the files in Oracle DB 11g. The program is working as expected, i.e. it is creating the zip file in the /home/oracle/ directory. But when I download the files to my hard-disk via FTP or email them using the SMTP server, 7Zip refuses to read the contents of the archive and throws the error:-
"Unsupported compression method for DAR.xls"
Am I doing something wrong here? Please help.
Code of the JAVA Source is attached:
CREATE OR REPLACE AND RESOLVE JAVA SOURCE NAMED "UTLZip" AS
import java.util.zip.*;
import java.io.*;
public class UTLZip
{
public static void compressFile(String infilename, String outfilename)
{
String zipFile = "/home/oracle/DAR.zip";
String[] srcFiles = {"/home/oracle/DAR.xls"};
try {
// create byte buffer
byte[] buffer = new byte[1024];
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(zipFile);
ZipOutputStream zos = new ZipOutputStream(fos);
for (int i=0; i < srcFiles.length; i++) {
File srcFile = new File(srcFiles[i]);
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(srcFile);
zos.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(srcFile.getName()));
int length;
while ((length = fis.read(buffer)) > 0) {
zos.write(buffer, 0, length);
}
zos.closeEntry();
// close the InputStream
fis.close();
}
// close the ZipOutputStream
zos.close();
}
catch (IOException ioe) {
System.out.println("Error creating zip file: " + ioe);
}
}
}
As #peter-lawrey wrote, first check if the zip archive is valid if you uncompress it from the /home/oracle/.
If it is, maybe you have to check if the transfert between your server and your PC didn't corrupt the file (For example, if you tranfered the zip file using ftp protocole, be aware of the data-type used while transfering)
I am reading a data from .wav file and then converting it into binary format. and then I write those binaries and create a new .wav file. I want that after getting binary format of .wav file I should do little modifications in its LSB's and then write the file from those modified bits.
How should i implement this? I am not getting any way. Please help me as I want to perform stenography through audio file.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
public class FiletoArrayofBytes
{
public static void main( String[] args )
{
FileInputStream fileInputStream=null;
FileOutputStream fop = null;
File file = new File("C:\\file.wav");
byte[] bFile = new byte[(int) file.length()];
try {
File fileo = new File("c:/newfile.wav");
fop = new FileOutputStream(fileo);
// if file doesnt exists, then create it
if (!fileo.exists()) {
fileo.createNewFile();
}
//convert file into array of bytes
fileInputStream = new FileInputStream(file);
fileInputStream.read(bFile);
fileInputStream.close();
for (int i = 0; i < bFile.length; i++) {
System.out.println(Integer.toBinaryString(0x100 + (bFile[i])).substring(1));
//String a =(Integer.toBinaryString(0x100 + (bFile[i])).substring(1));
int a=bFile[i];
fop.write(a);
System.out.println("\t i am a: " +a);
}
fop.flush();
fop.close();
System.out.println("Done");
}catch(Exception e){
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
WAV-files have at least a header. You can't just read/modify/write it byte-by-byte.
I would use some sort of Java-WAV library. For instance this one: Java File IO
WavFile class is really nice and useful. They do have nice read/modify/write examples.
Using that you can implement LSB (...google helped me finding this link...).
I want to put some compressed data into a remote repository.
To put data on this repository I can only use a method that take the name of the resource and its content as a String. (like data.txt + "hello world").
The repository is moking a filesystem but is not, so I can not use File directly.
I want to be able to do the following:
client send to server a file 'data.txt'
server compress 'data.txt' into a compressed file 'data.zip'
server send a string representation of data.zip to the repository
repository store data.zip
client download from repository data.zip and his able to open it with its favorite zip tool
The problem arise at step 3 when I try to get a string representation of my compressed file.
Here is a sample class, using the zip*stream and that emulate the repository showcasing my problem.
The created zip file is working, but after its 'serialization' it's get corrupted.
(the sample class use jakarta commons.io )
Many thanks for your help.
package zip;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.zip.ZipEntry;
import java.util.zip.ZipInputStream;
import java.util.zip.ZipOutputStream;
import org.apache.commons.io.FileUtils;
/**
* Date: May 19, 2010 - 6:13:07 PM
*
* #author Guillaume AME.
*/
public class ZipMe {
public static void addOrUpdate(File zipFile, File ... files) throws IOException {
File tempFile = File.createTempFile(zipFile.getName(), null);
// delete it, otherwise you cannot rename your existing zip to it.
tempFile.delete();
boolean renameOk = zipFile.renameTo(tempFile);
if (!renameOk) {
throw new RuntimeException("could not rename the file " + zipFile.getAbsolutePath() + " to " + tempFile.getAbsolutePath());
}
byte[] buf = new byte[1024];
ZipInputStream zin = new ZipInputStream(new FileInputStream(tempFile));
ZipOutputStream out = new ZipOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(zipFile));
ZipEntry entry = zin.getNextEntry();
while (entry != null) {
String name = entry.getName();
boolean notInFiles = true;
for (File f : files) {
if (f.getName().equals(name)) {
notInFiles = false;
break;
}
}
if (notInFiles) {
// Add ZIP entry to output stream.
out.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(name));
// Transfer bytes from the ZIP file to the output file
int len;
while ((len = zin.read(buf)) > 0) {
out.write(buf, 0, len);
}
}
entry = zin.getNextEntry();
}
// Close the streams
zin.close();
// Compress the files
if (files != null) {
for (File file : files) {
InputStream in = new FileInputStream(file);
// Add ZIP entry to output stream.
out.putNextEntry(new ZipEntry(file.getName()));
// Transfer bytes from the file to the ZIP file
int len;
while ((len = in.read(buf)) > 0) {
out.write(buf, 0, len);
}
// Complete the entry
out.closeEntry();
in.close();
}
// Complete the ZIP file
}
tempFile.delete();
out.close();
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
final String zipArchivePath = "c:/temp/archive.zip";
final String tempFilePath = "c:/temp/data.txt";
final String resultZipFile = "c:/temp/resultingArchive.zip";
File zipArchive = new File(zipArchivePath);
FileUtils.touch(zipArchive);
File tempFile = new File(tempFilePath);
FileUtils.writeStringToFile(tempFile, "hello world");
addOrUpdate(zipArchive, tempFile);
//archive.zip exists and contains a compressed data.txt that can be read using winrar
//now simulate writing of the zip into a in memory cache
String archiveText = FileUtils.readFileToString(zipArchive);
FileUtils.writeStringToFile(new File(resultZipFile), archiveText);
//resultingArchive.zip exists, contains a compressed data.txt, but it can not
//be read using winrar: CRC failed in data.txt. The file is corrupt
}
}
Zip files are binary. String handling in Java is textual and might be mangling what it sees as CRLFs, zero bytes and EOF markers. When it comes to reading and rewriting the zipfile, I suggest you try with readFileToByteArray and writeByteArrayToFile as an experiment. If that works then I'd suspect the String handling is to blame.
server send a string representation of
data.zip to the repository
So you want to get a string (i.e. textual) representation of a zip (i.e. binary) stream.
Base64 is the most popular way to do this.
One popular Java implementation is from Apache commons (codec component)