Reputation:
I have written a program in Eclipse IDE which uses BouncyProvider class of BouncyCastle.jar. So to compile my class I added BouncyCastle.jar in my project classpath and it compiles perfectly.
Now I want to export my project as Runnable JAR so when I do that from Eclipse, it by default adds the classes of BouncyCastle.jar also in that runnable jar.
But I want to keep my application jar and BouncyCastle.jar different from each other.
How can I achieve this? Can anybody please help?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 7573
Reputation: 29119
It looks like this has been added in Eclipse 3.5 Milestone 5. See the News for the latest build and bug 219530
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1017
It sounds like you want to use the "Export JAR File" wizard instead of the "Export Runnable JAR File" wizard. When exporting a runnable jar file, Eclipse attempts to pack everything needed to run the application into a single archive. On the other hand, the "Export JAR File" wizard gives you more control over what is packaged in the archive. You can still create a runnable jar file, but you must make sure to include BouncyCastle.jar on the classpath when you execute the jar. Here are step-by-step instructions:
You should be able to execute the jar file by executing "java -jar myjarfile.jar -classpath BouncyCastle.jar" from a command line.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 43560
Unfortunately, looks like you can't actually do that. A JAR can't use another JAR that's stored inside itself.
I'd say, unless you have a really strong reason why you can't unpack your BouncyCastle.jar (like maybe licensing problems?)
just let it unpack (which you can do by adding BouncyCastle.jar as an external archive in Eclipse:)
Right-click on your project
Build Path...
Add External Archives...
Add your archive
Export as runnable JAR)
and watch your package names for conflicts.
Here's an open Java bug ID I found describing your situation
One-JAR may help - a open source solution to your situation
Upvotes: 1