Paul Reiners
Paul Reiners

Reputation: 7894

Classpath including JAR within a JAR

Is it possible to specify a Java classpath that includes a JAR file contained within another JAR file?

Upvotes: 147

Views: 171636

Answers (15)

armagedescu
armagedescu

Reputation: 2155

I would advise to use one jar and many libraries in separate jars, not in a single jar. Use separate jar from jar libraries.
Suppose you have such a folder structure:

path/yourApp/yourApp.jar
path/yourApp/lib/lib1.jar
path/yourApp/lib/megalib1.jar
path/yourApp/lib/supermegalib1.jar

All you have to do, add each of used jar to your MANIFEST.MF.

Manifest-Version: 1.0
Main-Class: com.company.MyProgram
Class-Path: ./lib/lib1.jar ./lib/megalib1.jar ./lib/supermegalib1.jar

So, in the manifest, you grant usage to each library.
Single file "all in one jar" might be easier to share and distribute, but not significantly. It will not make your program easier to maintain, and will not make your program to run faster. It will not make significant hdd usage difference. Just distribute as zip and unpack where it needs to be deployed.

Upvotes: 0

Devabc
Devabc

Reputation: 5311

In case you are using Spring Boot, you may want to have a look at this documentation: The Executable Jar Format

Java does not provide any standard way to load nested jar files (that is, jar files that are themselves contained within a jar). This can be problematic if you need to distribute a self-contained application that can be run from the command line without unpacking.

To solve this problem, many developers use “shaded” jars. A shaded jar packages all classes, from all jars, into a single “uber jar”. The problem with shaded jars is that it becomes hard to see which libraries are actually in your application. It can also be problematic if the same filename is used (but with different content) in multiple jars. Spring Boot takes a different approach and lets you actually nest jars directly.

The Spring documentation also lists some alternative single Jar solutions:

Upvotes: 1

Tim de Vries
Tim de Vries

Reputation: 21

Extracting into an Uber-dir works for me as we s should all be using root:\java and have outlets code in packages with versioning. Ie ca.tecreations-1.0.0. Signing is okay because the jars are intact from their downloaded location. 3rd party signatures intact, extract to c:\java. There’s my project dir. run from launcher so java -cp c:\java Launcher

Upvotes: 0

ntg
ntg

Reputation: 14165

If you are building with ant (I am using ant from eclipse), you can just add the extra jar files by saying to ant to add them... Not necessarily the best method if you have a project maintained by multiple people but it works for one person project and is easy.

for example my target that was building the .jar file was:

<jar destfile="${plugin.jar}" basedir="${plugin.build.dir}">
    <manifest>
        <attribute name="Author" value="ntg"/>
        ................................
        <attribute name="Plugin-Version" value="${version.entry.commit.revision}"/>
    </manifest>
</jar>

I just added one line to make it:

<jar ....">
    <zipgroupfileset dir="${external-lib-dir}" includes="*.jar"/>
    <manifest>
        ................................
    </manifest>
</jar>

where

<property name="external-lib-dir" 
          value="C:\...\eclipseWorkspace\Filter\external\...\lib" />

was the dir with the external jars. And that's it...

Upvotes: 7

Steve Moyer
Steve Moyer

Reputation: 5733

If you're trying to create a single jar that contains your application and its required libraries, there are two ways (that I know of) to do that. The first is One-Jar, which uses a special classloader to allow the nesting of jars. The second is UberJar, (or Shade), which explodes the included libraries and puts all the classes in the top-level jar.

I should also mention that UberJar and Shade are plugins for Maven1 and Maven2 respectively. As mentioned below, you can also use the assembly plugin (which in reality is much more powerful, but much harder to properly configure).

Upvotes: 104

ecbrodie
ecbrodie

Reputation: 11946

Use the zipgroupfileset tag (uses same attributes as a fileset tag); it will unzip all files in the directory and add to your new archive file. More information: http://ant.apache.org/manual/Tasks/zip.html

This is a very useful way to get around the jar-in-a-jar problem -- I know because I have googled this exact StackOverflow question while trying to figure out what to do. If you want to package a jar or a folder of jars into your one built jar with Ant, then forget about all this classpath or third-party plugin stuff, all you gotta do is this (in Ant):

<jar destfile="your.jar" basedir="java/dir">
  ...
  <zipgroupfileset dir="dir/of/jars" />
</jar>

Upvotes: 23

amralieg
amralieg

Reputation: 123

If you have eclpise IDE, you just need to export your JAR and choose "Package Required libraries into generated JAR". eclipse will automatically add the required dependant JARs into the generated JAR as well as generated some eclipse custom class loader that load these JARs automatically.

Upvotes: 2

Tezar
Tezar

Reputation: 557

After some research I have found method that doesn't require maven or any 3rd party extension/program.

You can use "Class-Path" in your manifest file.

For example:

Create manifest file MANIFEST.MF

Manifest-Version: 1.0
Created-By: Bundle
Class-Path: ./custom_lib.jar
Main-Class: YourMainClass

Compile all your classes and run jar cfm Testing.jar MANIFEST.MF *.class custom_lib.jar

c stands for create archive f indicates that you want to specify file v is for verbose input m means that we will pass custom manifest file

Be sure that you included lib in jar package. You should be able to run jar in the normal way.

based on: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/j-5things6/

all other information you need about the class-path do you find here

Upvotes: 35

CM_2014
CM_2014

Reputation: 21

Well, there is a very easy way if you're using Eclipse.

Export your project as a "Runnable" Jar file (right-click project folder from within Eclipse, select "Export..."). When you configure the export settings, be sure to select "Extract required libraries into generated Jar." Keep in mind, select "Extract..." and not "Package required libraries...".

Additionally: You must select a run-configuration in your export settings. So, you could always create an empty main( ) in some class and use it for your run configuration.

Anyway, it isn't guaranteed to work 100% of the time - as you will notice a pop-up message telling you to make sure you check the licenses of the Jar files you're including and something about not copying signature files. However, I have been doing this for years and have never encountered a problem.

Upvotes: 1

Bruce Willis
Bruce Willis

Reputation: 539

You do NOT want to use those "explode JAR contents" solutions. They definitely make it harder to see stuff (since everything is exploded at the same level). Furthermore, there could be naming conflicts (should not happen if people use proper packages, but you cannot always control this).

The feature that you want is one of the top 25 Sun RFEs: RFE 4648386, which Sun, in their infinite wisdom, has designated as being of low priority. We can only hope that Sun wakes up...

In the meanwhile, the best solution that I have come across (which I wish that Sun would copy in the JDK) is to use the custom class loader JarClassLoader.

Upvotes: 53

Jan Goyvaerts
Jan Goyvaerts

Reputation: 3033

Winstone is pretty good http://blog.jayway.com/2008/11/28/executable-war-with-winstone-maven-plugin/. But not for complex sites. And that's a shame because all it takes is to include the plugin.

Upvotes: 1

Vinnie
Vinnie

Reputation: 12730

I use maven for my java builds which has a plugin called the maven assembly plugin.

It does what your asking, but like some of the other suggestions describe - essentially exploding all the dependent jars and recombining them into a single jar

Upvotes: 2

PhiLho
PhiLho

Reputation: 41162

I was about to advise to extract all the files at the same level, then to make a jar out of the result, since the package system should keep them neatly separated. That would be the manual way, I suppose the tools indicated by Steve will do that nicely.

Upvotes: 1

James Schek
James Schek

Reputation: 17960

You need to build a custom class-loader to do this or a third-party library that supports this. Your best bet is to extract the jar from the runtime and add them to the classpath (or have them already added to the classpath).

Upvotes: 2

Joe Skora
Joe Skora

Reputation: 14920

Not without writing your own class loader. You can add jars to the jar's classpath, but they must be co-located, not contained in the main jar.

Upvotes: 6

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