Vorrei sottolineare che uno dei problemi è, cosa succede se le stesse risorse sono Trovano in diversi file JAR. Vogliamo leggere /org/node/foo.txt ma non da un file, ma da ciascuno dei file JAR.
Ho finito con questo stesso problema volte. Stavo aspettando al JDK 7 che qualcuno ha scritto un percorso di classe dal file system, ma, purtroppo, non ancora.
La primavera ha la classe di risorse che ti consente di caricare abbastanza bene la classe di risorse.
io ha scritto un piccolo prototipo per risolvere questo grande problema di leggere le risorse sotto forma di più file JAR. Il prototipo non gestisce ogni caso estremo, ma mantiene la ricerca di risorse nelle directory che si trovano nei file del vasetto.
Ho usato stack overflow per un bel po ‘di tempo. Questa è la seconda risposta che ricordo di rispondere a una domanda, quindi mi perdongo se vado troppo a lungo (è la mia natura).
Questo è un prototipo delle risorse del lettore. Il prototipo è privo di un robusto sistema di controllo degli errori.
Ho due prototipi JAR che ho il programma di installazione.
<pre> <dependency> <groupId>invoke</groupId> <artifactId>invoke</artifactId> <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>node</groupId> <artifactId>node</artifactId> <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version> </dependency>
File Jar ha a file in / org / nodo / chiamato resource.txt.
Questo è solo un prototipo di ciò che un controller guarderebbe con classpath: // Ho anche una risorsa.Foo.txt nelle mie risorse locali per questo progetto.
Raccogli tutti e stampali.
package com.foo; import java.io.File; import java.io.FileReader; import java.io.InputStreamReader; import java.io.Reader; import java.net.URI; import java.net.URL; import java.util.Enumeration; import java.util.zip.ZipEntry; import java.util.zip.ZipFile; /** * Prototype resource reader. * This prototype is devoid of error checking. * * * I have two prototype jar files that I have setup. * <pre> * <dependency> * <groupId>invoke</groupId> * <artifactId>invoke</artifactId> * <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version> * </dependency> * * <dependency> * <groupId>node</groupId> * <artifactId>node</artifactId> * <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version> * </dependency> * </pre> * The jar files each have a file under /org/node/ called resource.txt. * <br /> * This is just a prototype of what a handler would look like with classpath:// * I also have a resource.foo.txt in my local resources for this project. * <br /> */ public class ClasspathReader { public static void main(String args) throws Exception { /* This project includes two jar files that each have a resource located in /org/node/ called resource.txt. */ /* Name space is just a device I am using to see if a file in a dir starts with a name space. Think of namespace like a file extension but it is the start of the file not the end. */ String namespace = "resource"; //someResource is classpath. String someResource = args.length > 0 ? args : //"classpath:///org/node/resource.txt"; It works with files "classpath:///org/node/"; //It also works with directories URI someResourceURI = URI.create(someResource); System.out.println("URI of resource = " + someResourceURI); someResource = someResourceURI.getPath(); System.out.println("PATH of resource =" + someResource); boolean isDir = !someResource.endsWith(".txt"); /** Classpath resource can never really start with a starting slash. * Logically they do, but in reality you have to strip it. * This is a known behavior of classpath resources. * It works with a slash unless the resource is in a jar file. * Bottom line, by stripping it, it always works. */ if (someResource.startsWith("/")) { someResource = someResource.substring(1); } /* Use the ClassLoader to lookup all resources that have this name. Look for all resources that match the location we are looking for. */ Enumeration resources = null; /* Check the context classloader first. Always use this if available. */ try { resources = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResources(someResource); } catch (Exception ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } if (resources == null || !resources.hasMoreElements()) { resources = ClasspathReader.class.getClassLoader().getResources(someResource); } //Now iterate over the URLs of the resources from the classpath while (resources.hasMoreElements()) { URL resource = resources.nextElement(); /* if the resource is a file, it just means that we can use normal mechanism to scan the directory. */ if (resource.getProtocol().equals("file")) { //if it is a file then we can handle it the normal way. handleFile(resource, namespace); continue; } System.out.println("Resource " + resource); /* Split up the string that looks like this: jar:file:/Users/rick/.m2/repository/invoke/invoke/1.0-SNAPSHOT/invoke-1.0-SNAPSHOT.jar!/org/node/ into this /Users/rick/.m2/repository/invoke/invoke/1.0-SNAPSHOT/invoke-1.0-SNAPSHOT.jar and this /org/node/ */ String split = resource.toString().split(":"); String split2 = split.split("!"); String zipFileName = split2; String sresource = split2; System.out.printf("After split zip file name = %s," + " \nresource in zip %s \n", zipFileName, sresource); /* Open up the zip file. */ ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile(zipFileName); /* Iterate through the entries. */ Enumeration entries = zipFile.entries(); while (entries.hasMoreElements()) { ZipEntry entry = entries.nextElement(); /* If it is a directory, then skip it. */ if (entry.isDirectory()) { continue; } String entryName = entry.getName(); System.out.printf("zip entry name %s \n", entryName); /* If it does not start with our someResource String then it is not our resource so continue. */ if (!entryName.startsWith(someResource)) { continue; } /* the fileName part from the entry name. * where /foo/bar/foo/bee/bar.txt, bar.txt is the file */ String fileName = entryName.substring(entryName.lastIndexOf("/") + 1); System.out.printf("fileName %s \n", fileName); /* See if the file starts with our namespace and ends with our extension. */ if (fileName.startsWith(namespace) && fileName.endsWith(".txt")) { /* If you found the file, print out the contents fo the file to System.out.*/ try (Reader reader = new InputStreamReader(zipFile.getInputStream(entry))) { StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(); int ch = 0; while ((ch = reader.read()) != -1) { builder.append((char) ch); } System.out.printf("zip fileName = %s\n\n####\n contents of file %s\n###\n", entryName, builder); } catch (Exception ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } } //use the entry to see if it's the file '1.txt' //Read from the byte using file.getInputStream(entry) } } } /** * The file was on the file system not a zip file, * this is here for completeness for this example. * otherwise. * * @param resource * @param namespace * @throws Exception */ private static void handleFile(URL resource, String namespace) throws Exception { System.out.println("Handle this resource as a file " + resource); URI uri = resource.toURI(); File file = new File(uri.getPath()); if (file.isDirectory()) { for (File childFile : file.listFiles()) { if (childFile.isDirectory()) { continue; } String fileName = childFile.getName(); if (fileName.startsWith(namespace) && fileName.endsWith("txt")) { try (FileReader reader = new FileReader(childFile)) { StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(); int ch = 0; while ((ch = reader.read()) != -1) { builder.append((char) ch); } System.out.printf("fileName = %s\n\n####\n contents of file %s\n###\n", childFile, builder); } catch (Exception ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } } } } else { String fileName = file.getName(); if (fileName.startsWith(namespace) && fileName.endsWith("txt")) { try (FileReader reader = new FileReader(file)) { StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(); int ch = 0; while ((ch = reader.read()) != -1) { builder.append((char) ch); } System.out.printf("fileName = %s\n\n####\n contents of file %s\n###\n", fileName, builder); } catch (Exception ex) { ex.printStackTrace(); } } } } }
Puoi vedere un esempio più completo qui con l’output di esempio.
.