Here is example to show what i mean: http://www.minecraft.net/download.jsp
If you open the Minecraft.exe with winrar you can see the jar manifest and classes and you can actually launch the jar like this java -jar Minecraft.exe
But when i tried to embed my jar to my own exe as resource (i can see the classes same way as in minecraft.exe with winrar) and launch it with java -jar it fails with message
invalid or corrupt jar file
How can i embed the jar to exe correctly? so it can be launched same way as minecraft.exe?
Use JSmooth. We use it with much success
There is a tool called Jar2Exe. I don't know if it's the same tool that Minecraft uses however.
Launch4j is another tool that supports this (with quite a few extra features such as auto-downloading a JRE if necessary).
Related
I've developped a game during a Game Jam and I'd like to create an executable to distribute it to the other team members.
The game uses the slick2d and lwjgl library. I've tried to use JExePack, but the .exe file I get isn't runnable, I get an error while launching it.
Even the jar file gets me errors.
I'm only able to launch the game on the IDE. When I launch it with the command line : java -jar "game.jar", it obviously tells me that there's missing libraries, even if I indicate the path to the lib folder.
Is there an easy way to create an executable ?
Thanks in advance.
I think using a jar was a good idea.
You need to add every required jar in the classpath one-by-one for the jar to run properly.
Launch4J (http://launch4j.sourceforge.net/) is my favorite tool for that. You can just export an executable jar from your IDE and create an exe out of it. Creating an executable jar in Eclipse gives you the option to include all required libraries in it, which saves you from adding them manually when create the exe file. The minimal settings you need are:
Input (your executable jar)
Output (the .exe you want to create)
Minimum Java version (i.e. 1.6.0)
Thats it (as far as I remember)
If you want the exe you can use exe4j, it's a very useful tool, but i think using jars is better since you can run them on every platform. Anyway, when you export the jar, check on your ide's preferences if it automatically imports the libs. (for example, on eclipse you can pack the required libs into the exported jar)
You can use Luncher4j to create an exe file and convert the jar libraries to dll files.
I have exe file called Myapp.exe. Now I want to convert .exe to jar file. That jar file should also work in NON JAVA system. I don't have any idea to implement it. Can anyone please suggest me how to do it?
Direct conversion not available !!!
because they are in entirely different platforms.
Meeting your requirements is impossible for two reasons.
1) You cannot change an EXE to a JAR file.
2) You cannot run a JAR file on a system that doesn't have Java installed.
If you want to run something on a (Windows) system with no Java installation, it needs to be an EXE ... or something else that doesn't require Java.
(It might help if you explained why you think you need to do this. Perhaps there is an alternative set of requirements that are not impossible to meet.)
why i am doing all those stubs is for making my jar has to work in java not installed system.
It needs to be an EXE then!
I have an jar.It is working fine in java installed system.My task is to Bundle jre inside jar(Not along with jar(i.e we can put jre and jar in same folder to run a jar as given in following url mindfiresolutions.com/… ))Because i have to give jar file only to client,in such a way that they can use this Myapp.jar in non java system also.But,i don't know how to bundle jre inside jar.I Don't how to run jre inside jar?
Ermm ...
Is it possible?
No. You cannot embed a JRE inside a JAR file in any way that would allow it (the JAR file) to run your Java code without first installing Java. (And installing Java would defeat the purpose of embedding the JRE ... of course.)
But what you can do is create an EXE file which has a JRE and a JAR embedded in it. And there are tools for doing this. Here's the canonical Question on how to do it:
How can I convert my Java program to an .exe file?
I think you need to read the Oracle documentation on what a JAR file really is, and how Java programs are normally executed. That will help you understand what is feasible ... and what is nonsensical.
I have to create a jar file wherein i need to add external jar files in the classpath, properties files, in such away as to run it on any other machine.
You could either use manifest.mf to define external class path or use script that composes classpath and runs your application.
I really recommend you to use a build tool such as Maven for these things:
http://maven.apache.org/
How can I create an executable JAR with dependencies using Maven?
Regards,
Boskop
You can make the jar in almost any IDE. I agree with Michael SchmeiBer, be a bit more specific please.
I use eclipse as my IDE (because you can both use it in windows and Ubuntu Linux) to make a jar (you can define the startup class in the jar).
I use different methods for starting up of different machines.
I use nsis to create a nice windows executable (.exe) You can include your own icon.
In nsis script you actually use the same command you would use in a batch command.
nsis has some nice features, like search for a java jre.
For Linux and Mac I use a .sh file with this command.
I have a Swing desktop application and have created a jar file which depends on library (which is kept in ./lib/) and a .txt file in the same folder. Now to execute the jar I have written a .bat file which checks if Java is installed or not. If installed then I run the jar file with command:
javaw -jar TagEdit.jar
Now there are two problems I am facing with this:
I would rather prefer a single executable, if possible.
As using bat file, the console is visible in back (looks kind of weird). Is it possible to turn it off?
Java is everywhere, and there are lots of applications that are built in Java and packaged in a setup, or given as exe. I Googled a lot but could not find a way to create a setup for the software or an exe. How are those software packaged?
Have tried jlaunch, but could not get that to work correctly.
Himz, Eclipse can automatically build a so-called "fat-jar" for you. It is a jar that contains all the dependencies you need.
If you are a happy Maven user, then you have two brilliant alternatives - the shade plugin, and the assembly plugin. They both can produce a "fat-jar" for you. :)
There are various answers to this.
javaws.exe will execute the jar without the console appearing behind
But I feel this isn't really the best way.
I think should investigate using Java Web Start, So you create a JNLP file and have it jar downloaded from the web, I think, you can also have a desktop icon.
If you don't want that
I think you can get/buy binary wrappers for the jar.
You could convert it to an executable. Try Googling java to exe.
Once that is done, you could package it up as an installer using NSIS.
I have the following jar files for my app:
DesktopApplication1.jar
Plus , i have used the some extra API's for my app , like jsoup, jexcelapi etc. There are about 7 api's in the lib folder.
How to make a EXE file & RPM file out of all these jar files?
P.S. I am a first timer. So take that into consideration.also, I have used Netbeans 6.8. So the main API is in \dist folder. And the API used is in \dist\lib folder.
thanks in Advance
use jsmooth to make exe from jar
Build your JAR with fatJar to include all the dependencies in it, and then make it executable with your favorite tool (I use Launch4j)
RPM is little bit different, since it is not executable, but package format. There are lots of tutorials, how you build it up.
You could make a BAT file a file with .bat(For windows) extension
Just open notepad and write the following text
java -jar DesktopApplication1.jar
Save the file as filename.bat(the .bat extension is important)
Place the .jar and .bat files together and just double click the .bat file every time you need to run the jar...
If you don't want to keep both together then give the absolute path of the jar in the .bat file
java -jar AbsolutePath/DesktopApplication1.jar
For a linux machine make a file with (.sh) extension rest of the procedure is same...
Try InstallJammer. It provides what you want.
Deploy the app. with Java Web Start. JWS Can make it easy to add other Jars to the apps. run-time class-path, avoiding the common problem with fat jar of violating the API's distribution license (when it says WTE 'you are allowed to distribute this in unaltered form..') and can provide the further benefit of only downloading the parts that the user requires (when the user requires them).
JWS has many other cool features like desktop integration (menu bars, start menu item), splash screens, automatic updates, support by the owners of Java, and compatibility with any platform for which Java is available.
For creating .exe to run on Windows:
Download launch4j from http://launch4j.sourceforge.net.
build wrapper .exe through launch4j.
Download innoSetup from http://www.jrsoftware.org/isdl.php.
Build .exe as installer, the setup file, for user to download and install.
Install rpm for linux:
If your application used other native libraries, you need to download and install Linux native libraries. This is how we build rpm for our app.