Reputation: 267257
I have a list of key/value pairs of configuration values I want to store as Java property files, and later load and iterate through.
Questions:
.txt
OK?Upvotes: 228
Views: 323279
Reputation: 1460
in my opinion other ways are deprecated when we can do it very simple as below:
@PropertySource("classpath:application.properties")
public class SomeClass{
@Autowired
private Environment env;
public void readProperty() {
env.getProperty("language");
}
}
it is so simple but i think that's the best way!! Enjoy
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11
You can load the property file suing the following way:
InputStream is = new Test().getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("app.properties");
Properties props = new Properties();
props.load(is);
And then you can iterate over the map using a lambda expression like:
props.stringPropertyNames().forEach(key -> {
System.out.println("Key is :"+key + " and Value is :"+props.getProperty(key));
});
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 493
Here ready static class
import java.io.*;
import java.util.Properties;
public class Settings {
public static String Get(String name,String defVal){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
Properties props = new Properties();
props.load(reader);
reader.close();
return props.getProperty(name);
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
}
}
public static Integer Get(String name,Integer defVal){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
Properties props = new Properties();
props.load(reader);
reader.close();
return Integer.valueOf(props.getProperty(name));
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
}
}
public static Boolean Get(String name,Boolean defVal){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
Properties props = new Properties();
props.load(reader);
reader.close();
return Boolean.valueOf(props.getProperty(name));
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
return defVal;
}
}
public static void Set(String name, String value){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
Properties props = new Properties();
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
props.load(reader);
props.setProperty(name, value.toString());
FileWriter writer = new FileWriter(configFile);
props.store(writer, Variables.SETTINGS_COMMENT);
writer.close();
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
}
}
public static void Set(String name, Integer value){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
Properties props = new Properties();
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
props.load(reader);
props.setProperty(name, value.toString());
FileWriter writer = new FileWriter(configFile);
props.store(writer,Variables.SETTINGS_COMMENT);
writer.close();
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
}
}
public static void Set(String name, Boolean value){
File configFile = new File(Variables.SETTINGS_FILE);
try {
Properties props = new Properties();
FileReader reader = new FileReader(configFile);
props.load(reader);
props.setProperty(name, value.toString());
FileWriter writer = new FileWriter(configFile);
props.store(writer,Variables.SETTINGS_COMMENT);
writer.close();
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
// file does not exist
logger.error(ex);
} catch (IOException ex) {
// I/O error
logger.error(ex);
} catch (Exception ex){
logger.error(ex);
}
}
}
Here sample:
Settings.Set("valueName1","value");
String val1=Settings.Get("valueName1","value");
Settings.Set("valueName2",true);
Boolean val2=Settings.Get("valueName2",true);
Settings.Set("valueName3",100);
Integer val3=Settings.Get("valueName3",100);
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 59
Example:
Properties pro = new Properties();
FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream("D:/prop/prop.properties");
pro.load(in);
String temp1[];
String temp2[];
// getting values from property file
String username = pro.getProperty("usernamev3");//key value in prop file
String password = pro.getProperty("passwordv3");//eg. username="zub"
String delimiter = ","; //password="abc"
temp1=username.split(delimiter);
temp2=password.split(delimiter);
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 10833
In Java 8 to get all your properties
public static Map<String, String> readPropertiesFile(String location) throws Exception {
Map<String, String> properties = new HashMap<>();
Properties props = new Properties();
props.load(new FileInputStream(new File(location)));
props.forEach((key, value) -> {
properties.put(key.toString(), value.toString());
});
return properties;
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 5871
Reading a properties file and loading its contents to Properties
String filename = "sample.properties";
Properties properties = new Properties();
input = this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(filename);
properties.load(input);
The following is the efficient way to iterate over a Properties
for (Entry<Object, Object> entry : properties.entrySet()) {
System.out.println(entry.getKey() + " => " + entry.getValue());
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 38950
Properties has become legacy. Preferences class is preferred to Properties.
A node in a hierarchical collection of preference data. This class allows applications to store and retrieve user and system preference and configuration data. This data is stored persistently in an implementation-dependent backing store. Typical implementations include flat files, OS-specific registries, directory servers and SQL databases. The user of this class needn't be concerned with details of the backing store.
Unlike properties which are String based key-value pairs, The Preferences
class has several methods used to get and put primitive data in the Preferences data store. We can use only the following types of data:
To load the the properties file, either you can provide absolute path Or use getResourceAsStream()
if the properties file is present in your classpath.
package com.mypack.test;
import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;
import java.util.prefs.Preferences;
public class PreferencesExample {
public static void main(String args[]) throws FileNotFoundException {
Preferences ps = Preferences.userNodeForPackage(PreferencesExample.class);
// Load file object
File fileObj = new File("d:\\data.xml");
try {
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(fileObj);
ps.importPreferences(fis);
System.out.println("Prefereces:"+ps);
System.out.println("Get property1:"+ps.getInt("property1",10));
} catch (Exception err) {
err.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
xml file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE preferences SYSTEM 'http://java.sun.com/dtd/preferences.dtd'>
<preferences EXTERNAL_XML_VERSION="1.0">
<root type="user">
<map />
<node name="com">
<map />
<node name="mypack">
<map />
<node name="test">
<map>
<entry key="property1" value="80" />
<entry key="property2" value="Red" />
</map>
</node>
</node>
</node>
</root>
</preferences>
Have a look at this article on internals of preferences store
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 204
1) It is good to have your property file in classpath but you can place it anywhere in project.
Below is how you load property file from classpath and read all properties.
Properties prop = new Properties();
InputStream input = null;
try {
String filename = "path to property file";
input = getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(filename);
if (input == null) {
System.out.println("Sorry, unable to find " + filename);
return;
}
prop.load(input);
Enumeration<?> e = prop.propertyNames();
while (e.hasMoreElements()) {
String key = (String) e.nextElement();
String value = prop.getProperty(key);
System.out.println("Key : " + key + ", Value : " + value);
}
} catch (IOException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
} finally {
if (input != null) {
try {
input.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
2) Property files have the extension as .properties
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 139
I have written on this property framework for the last year. It will provide of multiple ways to load properties, and have them strongly typed as well.
Have a look at http://sourceforge.net/projects/jhpropertiestyp/
JHPropertiesTyped will give the developer strongly typed properties. Easy to integrate in existing projects. Handled by a large series for property types. Gives the ability to one-line initialize properties via property IO implementations. Gives the developer the ability to create own property types and property io's. Web demo is also available, screenshots shown above. Also have a standard implementation for a web front end to manage properties, if you choose to use it.
Complete documentation, tutorial, javadoc, faq etc is a available on the project webpage.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 94653
There are many ways to create and read properties
files:
.properties
extension however you can choose your own.java.util
package => Properties
, ListResourceBundle
, ResourceBundle
classes.Properties
or java.lang.System
class.ResourceBundle
class:
ResourceBundle rb = ResourceBundle.getBundle("prop"); // prop.properties
System.out.println(rb.getString("key"));
Properties
class:
Properties ps = new Properties();
ps.Load(new java.io.FileInputStream("my.properties"));
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 8512
By default, Java opens it in the working directory of your application (this behavior actually depends on the OS used). To load a file, do:
Properties props = new java.util.Properties();
FileInputStream fis new FileInputStream("myfile.txt");
props.load(fis)
As such, any file extension can be used for property file. Additionally, the file can also be stored anywhere, as long as you can use a FileInputStream
.
On a related note if you use a modern framework, the framework may provide additionnal ways of opening a property file. For example, Spring provide a ClassPathResource
to load a property file using a package name from inside a JAR file.
As for iterating through the properties, once the properties are loaded they are stored in the java.util.Properties
object, which offer the propertyNames()
method.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 57678
You can pass an InputStream to the Property, so your file can pretty much be anywhere, and called anything.
Properties properties = new Properties();
try {
properties.load(new FileInputStream("path/filename"));
} catch (IOException e) {
...
}
Iterate as:
for(String key : properties.stringPropertyNames()) {
String value = properties.getProperty(key);
System.out.println(key + " => " + value);
}
Upvotes: 254
Reputation: 1803
Here is another way to iterate over the properties:
Enumeration eProps = properties.propertyNames();
while (eProps.hasMoreElements()) {
String key = (String) eProps.nextElement();
String value = properties.getProperty(key);
System.out.println(key + " => " + value);
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 45754
If you put the properties file in the same package as class Foo, you can easily load it with
new Properties().load(Foo.class.getResourceAsStream("file.properties"))
Given that Properties extends Hashtable you can iterate over the values in the same manner as you would in a Hashtable.
If you use the *.properties extension you can get editor support, e.g. Eclipse has a properties file editor.
Upvotes: 27
Reputation: 31580
This load the properties file:
Properties prop = new Properties();
InputStream stream = ...; //the stream to the file
try {
prop.load(stream);
} finally {
stream.close();
}
I use to put the .properties file in a directory where I have all the configuration files, I do not put it together with the class that accesses it, but there are no restrictions here.
For the name... I use .properties for verbosity sake, I don't think you should name it .properties if you don't want.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 272377
In order:
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1503080
You can store the file anywhere you like. If you want to keep it in your jar file, you'll want to use Class.getResourceAsStream()
or ClassLoader.getResourceAsStream()
to access it. If it's on the file system it's slightly easier.
Any extension is fine, although .properties is more common in my experience
Load the file using Properties.load
, passing in an InputStream
or a StreamReader
if you're using Java 6. (If you are using Java 6, I'd probably use UTF-8 and a Reader
instead of the default ISO-8859-1 encoding for a stream.)
Iterate through it as you'd iterate through a normal Hashtable
(which Properties
derives from), e.g. using keySet()
. Alternatively, you can use the enumeration returned by propertyNames()
.
Upvotes: 81