Reputation: 413
Hiii... I want to get the content of properties file into InputStream class object using getSystemResourceAsStream(). I have built the sample code. It works well using main() method,but when i deploy the project and run on the server, properties file path cannot obtained ... so inputstream object store null value.
Sample code is here..
public class ReadPropertyFromFile {
public static Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(ReadPropertyFromFile.class);
public static String readProperty(String fileName, String propertyName) {
String value = null;
try {
//fileName = "api.properties";
//propertyName = "api_loginid";
System.out.println("11111111...In the read proprty file.....");
// ClassLoader loader = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader();
InputStream inStream = ClassLoader.getSystemResourceAsStream(fileName);
System.out.println("In the read proprty file.....");
System.out.println("File Name :" + fileName);
System.out.println("instream = "+inStream);
Properties prop = new Properties();
try {
prop.load(inStream);
value = prop.getProperty(propertyName);
} catch (Exception e) {
logger.warn("Error occured while reading property " + propertyName + " = ", e);
return null;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Exception = " + e);
}
return value;
}
public static void main(String args[]) {
System.out.println("prop value = " + ReadPropertyFromFile.readProperty("api.properties", "api_loginid"));
}
}
Upvotes: 11
Views: 23748
Reputation: 10843
Try using getResourceAsStream()
instead of getSystemResourceAsStream()
.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1108722
i deploy the project and run on the server,
This sounds like a JSP/Servlet webapplication. In that case, you need to use the ClassLoader
which is obtained as follows:
ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
This one has access to the all classpath paths tied to the webapplication in question and you're not anymore dependent on which parent classloader (a webapp has more than one!) has loaded your class.
Then, on this classloader, you need to just call getResourceAsStream()
to get a classpath resource as stream, not the getSystemResourceAsStream()
which is dependent on how the webapplication is started. You don't want to be dependent on that as well since you have no control over it at external hosting:
InputStream input = classLoader.getResourceAsStream("filename.extension");
This is finally more robust than your initial getSystemResourceAsStream()
approach and the Class#getResourceAsStream()
as suggested by others.
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 48265
The SystemClassLoader
loads resources from java.class.path
witch maps to the system variable CLASSPATH
. In your local application, you probably have the resource your trying to load configured in java.class.path
variable. In the server, it's another story because most probably the server loads your resources from another class loader.
Try using the ClassLoader
that loaded class using the correct path:
getClass().getResourceAsStream(fileName);
This article might also be useful.
Upvotes: 7