I have NFS server where in i require to host files and read it. The approach to read and write file on NFS server found is
using NFS Client Like here.
My question is when we can write content on NFS server with normal java read/write program then why is NFS client introduced ? Is there any service specific to NFS which these client provide and why is it different than normal file creation process ?
When you're using normal Java API to access a NFS folder, all communications are actually handled by your OS. So you can just use the normal File API and Java doesn't know if it's accessing a local file or a remote one. But in cases that your OS doesn't support NFS (e.g. if your Java app is running in an environment with limited resources or NFS mounting is disabled in OS level) or you are developing an application that needs more lower level details about the NFS resource (e.g. when you're developing a framework or a middleware), you may need to be able to communicate directly with the server that is exposing files/folders via a library like nfs-client-java.
I was wondering if there is a way to copy files on an SFTP server to another directory on the same SFTP server. I want to do this without getting the file in a client and then setting it in the other folder. Of course this would work fine but I guess that this would produce more overhead, so I would like to avoid this if at all possible. I'm currently working with Spring integration which is based on JCraft JSch.
So far I haven't been able to find any way to do this without an intermediary.
Another approach would be to open an SSH channel and just use the cp command but well that's not too pretty either in my opinion.
Thanks in advance!
A core SFTP protocol does not support duplicating a remote file.
There's a draft of copy-file extension to the protocol, but that's supported by only few SFTP servers (ProFTPD mod_sftp and Bitvise SFTP server for example).
In the most widespread OpenSSH SFTP server it is supported only by very recent version 9.0.
And it's also not supported by the JSch library.
See also my answer to How can I copy/duplicate a file to another directory using SFTP?
So actually using the cp shell command over an "exec" channel (ChannelExec) is unfortunately the best available approach (assuming you connect to a *nix server and you have a shell access).
If you do not have a shell access, then your only option is indeed to download the file to a local temporary folder and upload it back to the new location (or use streams, to avoid a temporary file). See also:
How do I transfer a file from one directory to another using Java SFTP Library JSch?
How do I copy files stored in a remote SFTP server to another folder in the same remote server using Java?
I have a requirement to create/append file on windows machine from WebSphere Message Broker Toolkit v 7.0 (Unix). Unix user does not have permissions to access the windows machine. I wanted to write a Java code which can create or append to a file with other credentials which has access to windows machine (not FTP, it's a shared drive in the same network but a different group).
I found some solutions which the client don't want to use whatever constraints.
Creating a NFS mount point and write to that mount point location.
Use SAMBA framework.
Can anyone suggest something other than this ?
Thanks in advance.
Run a WebSphere MQ Managed File Transfer agent on the Windows host. Then the broker can simply send files to the agent which will write them to the local filesystem on the Windows host. This capability is built into modern versions of MQ.
I started with requirement of reading and writing files in from/in a directory on a remote Ubuntu machine.
First, I wrote a Java program that could read,write files from a shared folder on a remote Windows machine i.e on a LAN. Here, something like this works on my(local) Windows machine :
File inputFile = new File(
"\\172.17.89.76\EBook PDF");/*ignore the syntax errors, the loc is just for the idea*/
Now when I consider a remote Ubuntu machine, obviously I cannot do something like this as the machine is not on the LAN(I'm not sure if that can be done even if it is on the LAN!). Hence, I tried following approaches :
Using Jsch, establishing the trust between two machines(local - remote Linux , remote Linux - remote Linux) and file writing using sftp.(done)
Running sockets on the two machines - one sender, one receiver(both Java)(done)
Attempting to achieve I/O alike the code snippet for Windows (LAN) machines(not achieved)
While doing all these, I had many queries, read many posts etc. and I felt that I'm missing something on the fundamentals :
Some sort of trust-building(between two machines) utility will be required to achieve IO. But finally, I want to write a code like the snippet given, irrespective of the machines, network etc.
The Jsch solution and the others suggested(usage of http, ftp etc. over URL) finally are using some services that are running on the remote machine. In other words, it is NOT THAT Java IO is being used to access the remote file system - this doesn't appeal to me as I'm relying on services rather than using good-old I/O.
Samba, SSHFS too popped onto the scene, only to add to my confusion. But I don't see them as the solutions to my objective !
To reiterate, I want to write a code using Java I/O(either plain or nio, both are fine) which simply can read, write remote files without using services over protocols like ftp, http etc. or socket sender-receiver model. Is my expectation valid?
If not, why and what is the best I can do to read/write remote files
using Java?
If yes, how to achieve the same !
P.S : Please comment in case I need to elaborate to pose my question accurately !
To answer your question - No, your expectation isn't valid.
Retrieving files from a remote server is inherently reliant on the services running on that server. To retrieve a file from a remote server, the remote server needs to be expecting your request for a file.
The cases you listed in your question (using jsch and sftp, using a sender and receiver Java sockets) that you have achieved already, are essentially the same as this:
File inputFile = new File(
"\\172.17.89.76\EBook PDF");
The only difference is that Java is using the native os's built in support for reading from a windows style share. The remote windows machine has a sharing service running on it (just like Samba on linux, or a java socket program) waiting for your request.
From the Java API docs on File (http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/io/File.html)
The canonical pathname of a file that resides on some other machine and is accessed via a remote-filesystem protocol such as SMB or NFS ...
So essentially "Good old Java I/O" is more or less just a wrapper over some common protocols.
To answer the second part of your question (what is the best I can do to read/write remote files using Java?), that depends on what remote system you are accessing and, more importantly, what services are running on it.
In the case of your target remote machine being an Ubuntu machine, I would say the best alternative would be to use Jsch. If your target machine can be either a windows machine or a linux machine, I would probably go for running Java sockets on the two machines (obviously dependant on whether you have access to installing your app on the remote machine).
Generally speaking, go with the common lowest denominator between your target systems (in terms of file sharing protocols).
If you want to access a filesystem on a remote computer, then this computer has to make his filesystem available with a service. Such a service is typically a background job, which handles incoming requests and returns a response, e.g. for authentication, authorization, reading and writing. The specification of the request/response pattern is called a protocol. Well known protocols are SMB (or SAMBA) on Windows or NFS on UNIX/LINUX. To access such a remote service you mount the remote filesystem on the level of the operating system and make it available locally as a drive on Windows or as mount point on UNIX.
Then you can access the remote file system from your Java program like any local file system.
Of course it is also possible to write your own file service provider (with your own protocol layer) and run it on the remote machine. As transport layer for such an endeavor sockets (TCP/IP) can be used. Another good transport layer would be the http protocol, e.g. with a restful service or something based on WebDav.
We used sshfs. You can add to /etc/fstab the line:
sshfs#user#remoteAddress:remoteDir /mnt/ssh fuse defaults 0 0
and then mount /mnt/ssh
I think RMI might be the solution, you could set up a server an RMI server on the machine you want to connect to, and use your machine a the client.
I would give the client a path to the file this will be sent to the server, the server could then read in the file as bytes and sent the file back to the client.
The question us also related to linux but solution is needed for Java. So I have a data directory
/somedir/data
on linux server
servername
I can ssh to the server and do anything I want only from deployment machine (due public/private keys in place). But there's a Java process that should read files from that directory. How can I force it read that files? I was trying to use File("//servername/somedir/data") with no success. Any help would be appreciated.
You must share the file using one of the network file services.
For example:
NFS (check with showmount -e);
Samba (check with smbclient -L);
AFS;
HTTP/FTP (check first if there a HTTP/FTP-server on the host).
You can also access this file using SSH (you say that you have SSH connection to the host, that means that SSH is accessible anyway).
If you want to connect to the SSH server from Java program,
you can use (for example) JSch for that.
Example of JSch usage is here.