Re: Add *.jars to *.jars possible/recommendend? Eclipse setup for this?

From:
Lew <noone@lewscanon.com>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.help,comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Wed, 03 Feb 2010 11:11:43 -0500
Message-ID:
<hkc780$f43$1@news.albasani.net>
Nigel Wade wrote:

Don't multi-post. I've just realized this has already been answered in
the other NG.


!

Ulf Meinhardt wrote:

Assume I want to create a new program and to pack everything into a
*.jar archive. To run the program one (or more) additonal external *.jar
is required.

Ok, the potential user could install the two *.jar files independently
and add them to his CLASSPATH. This is somehow uncomfortable. I would
like to deploy/provide simply one *.jar with everything needed inside.

So I have to add the second, external jar into the "main" first jar as
well.

Is this procedure possible/unusual/recommended?


Nigel Wade wrote:

yes/yes/no.


Ulf Meinhardt wrote:

How do I do this from the command line ?


Nigel Wade wrote:

It is actually simpler to package both jars into some other archiving
container (zip, tar or even jar). Then unpack that to create the
necessary structure.

If, for example, the manifest of main.jar contains
  Class-Path: lib/other.jar

then the contents of the archive would be
 main.jar
 lib/other.jar

when extracted it should create the same disk structure.

The manifest in main.jar will allow the class loader to find
lib/other.jar. The path in the manifest is relative to the location of
the executing jar, not the current directory.


You can best do this with Ant.

Ulf Meinhardt wrote:

How do I tell Eclipse to not only reference the external *.jar lib but
ADD them physically into the target *.jar?


Don't. Do what Nigel said, or just pack the main and auxiliary JARs together
in a directory and associated subdirectories that get copied to the
application root directory.

Words to the wise:

JAR files are nearly complete vehicles for application delivery, combining
features of ZIP with Java intelligence to know how to run the application.
The "java" command has an option "-jar" that tells Java to run the program
from the JAR file ("main.jar" in Nigel's example). Use of the "-jar" option
suppresses all other classpath options and takes the classpath entirely from
the (main) JAR manifest.

The easiest, best, and most commonly used layout is what Nigel suggested, with
the main JAR in the application directory and the library JARs on which it
relies in the same directory or the "lib/" subdirectory thereof, as specified
in the manifest. Do not use absolute paths or parent directory ("../") paths
for the libraries.

No more multiposting, now that you know.

--
Lew

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