Check if File / Path is Alias, Shortcut or Symbolic link - java

I need to traverse files in a folder, and find all images. I need to include subdirectories, as well as made shortcuts (on windows), aliases (for mac users) or symbolic links.
I found working API that only works for the symbolic links.. I can't seem to determine if a file is an Alias or a shortcut..
Code I have:
private List<Path> getFiles(String folder) throws IOException {
List<Path> files = new ArrayList<>();
try (DirectoryStream<Path> stream = Files.newDirectoryStream(Paths.get(folder))) {
for (Path p : stream) {
System.out.println(p);
if(isLink(p.toFile())) {
files.addAll(getFiles(p.toFile().getCanonicalPath()));
}
String mimeType = Files.probeContentType(p);
if (StringUtils.isNotBlank(mimeType) && mimeType.contains("image")) {
files.add(p);
}
}
return files;
}
and
public static boolean isLink(File file) {
try {
if (!file.exists())
return true;
else {
String cnnpath = file.getCanonicalPath();
String abspath = file.getAbsolutePath();
return !abspath.equals(cnnpath);
}
} catch (IOException ex) {
System.err.println(ex);
return true;
}
}
Some help would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!

To avoid toFile() calls you could also use Files.isSymbolicLink(Path p) and p.toRealPath() to determine the target of symbolic links for the paths you use.
Windows shortcuts are not modelled in Java File / Path APIs. An implementation which reads Windows shortcut binary format can be found here in another SO question - it better if using drive letters not using UNC pathnames.
I can't help for MacOS alias.
You should keep track of the directories visited in getFiles to avoid infinite loop when following links.

Related

Java: Is there a way, how I can import a file which is in the same folder as the .jar? [duplicate]

Want to improve this post? Provide detailed answers to this question, including citations and an explanation of why your answer is correct. Answers without enough detail may be edited or deleted.
My code runs inside a JAR file, say foo.jar, and I need to know, in the code, in which folder the running foo.jar is.
So, if foo.jar is in C:\FOO\, I want to get that path no matter what my current working directory is.
return new File(MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation()
.toURI()).getPath();
Replace "MyClass" with the name of your class.
Obviously, this will do odd things if your class was loaded from a non-file location.
Best solution for me:
String path = Test.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().getPath();
String decodedPath = URLDecoder.decode(path, "UTF-8");
This should solve the problem with spaces and special characters.
To obtain the File for a given Class, there are two steps:
Convert the Class to a URL
Convert the URL to a File
It is important to understand both steps, and not conflate them.
Once you have the File, you can call getParentFile to get the containing folder, if that is what you need.
Step 1: Class to URL
As discussed in other answers, there are two major ways to find a URL relevant to a Class.
URL url = Bar.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation();
URL url = Bar.class.getResource(Bar.class.getSimpleName() + ".class");
Both have pros and cons.
The getProtectionDomain approach yields the base location of the class (e.g., the containing JAR file). However, it is possible that the Java runtime's security policy will throw SecurityException when calling getProtectionDomain(), so if your application needs to run in a variety of environments, it is best to test in all of them.
The getResource approach yields the full URL resource path of the class, from which you will need to perform additional string manipulation. It may be a file: path, but it could also be jar:file: or even something nastier like bundleresource://346.fwk2106232034:4/foo/Bar.class when executing within an OSGi framework. Conversely, the getProtectionDomain approach correctly yields a file: URL even from within OSGi.
Note that both getResource("") and getResource(".") failed in my tests, when the class resided within a JAR file; both invocations returned null. So I recommend the #2 invocation shown above instead, as it seems safer.
Step 2: URL to File
Either way, once you have a URL, the next step is convert to a File. This is its own challenge; see Kohsuke Kawaguchi's blog post about it for full details, but in short, you can use new File(url.toURI()) as long as the URL is completely well-formed.
Lastly, I would highly discourage using URLDecoder. Some characters of the URL, : and / in particular, are not valid URL-encoded characters. From the URLDecoder Javadoc:
It is assumed that all characters in the encoded string are one of the following: "a" through "z", "A" through "Z", "0" through "9", and "-", "_", ".", and "*". The character "%" is allowed but is interpreted as the start of a special escaped sequence.
...
There are two possible ways in which this decoder could deal with illegal strings. It could either leave illegal characters alone or it could throw an IllegalArgumentException. Which approach the decoder takes is left to the implementation.
In practice, URLDecoder generally does not throw IllegalArgumentException as threatened above. And if your file path has spaces encoded as %20, this approach may appear to work. However, if your file path has other non-alphameric characters such as + you will have problems with URLDecoder mangling your file path.
Working code
To achieve these steps, you might have methods like the following:
/**
* Gets the base location of the given class.
* <p>
* If the class is directly on the file system (e.g.,
* "/path/to/my/package/MyClass.class") then it will return the base directory
* (e.g., "file:/path/to").
* </p>
* <p>
* If the class is within a JAR file (e.g.,
* "/path/to/my-jar.jar!/my/package/MyClass.class") then it will return the
* path to the JAR (e.g., "file:/path/to/my-jar.jar").
* </p>
*
* #param c The class whose location is desired.
* #see FileUtils#urlToFile(URL) to convert the result to a {#link File}.
*/
public static URL getLocation(final Class<?> c) {
if (c == null) return null; // could not load the class
// try the easy way first
try {
final URL codeSourceLocation =
c.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation();
if (codeSourceLocation != null) return codeSourceLocation;
}
catch (final SecurityException e) {
// NB: Cannot access protection domain.
}
catch (final NullPointerException e) {
// NB: Protection domain or code source is null.
}
// NB: The easy way failed, so we try the hard way. We ask for the class
// itself as a resource, then strip the class's path from the URL string,
// leaving the base path.
// get the class's raw resource path
final URL classResource = c.getResource(c.getSimpleName() + ".class");
if (classResource == null) return null; // cannot find class resource
final String url = classResource.toString();
final String suffix = c.getCanonicalName().replace('.', '/') + ".class";
if (!url.endsWith(suffix)) return null; // weird URL
// strip the class's path from the URL string
final String base = url.substring(0, url.length() - suffix.length());
String path = base;
// remove the "jar:" prefix and "!/" suffix, if present
if (path.startsWith("jar:")) path = path.substring(4, path.length() - 2);
try {
return new URL(path);
}
catch (final MalformedURLException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return null;
}
}
/**
* Converts the given {#link URL} to its corresponding {#link File}.
* <p>
* This method is similar to calling {#code new File(url.toURI())} except that
* it also handles "jar:file:" URLs, returning the path to the JAR file.
* </p>
*
* #param url The URL to convert.
* #return A file path suitable for use with e.g. {#link FileInputStream}
* #throws IllegalArgumentException if the URL does not correspond to a file.
*/
public static File urlToFile(final URL url) {
return url == null ? null : urlToFile(url.toString());
}
/**
* Converts the given URL string to its corresponding {#link File}.
*
* #param url The URL to convert.
* #return A file path suitable for use with e.g. {#link FileInputStream}
* #throws IllegalArgumentException if the URL does not correspond to a file.
*/
public static File urlToFile(final String url) {
String path = url;
if (path.startsWith("jar:")) {
// remove "jar:" prefix and "!/" suffix
final int index = path.indexOf("!/");
path = path.substring(4, index);
}
try {
if (PlatformUtils.isWindows() && path.matches("file:[A-Za-z]:.*")) {
path = "file:/" + path.substring(5);
}
return new File(new URL(path).toURI());
}
catch (final MalformedURLException e) {
// NB: URL is not completely well-formed.
}
catch (final URISyntaxException e) {
// NB: URL is not completely well-formed.
}
if (path.startsWith("file:")) {
// pass through the URL as-is, minus "file:" prefix
path = path.substring(5);
return new File(path);
}
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid URL: " + url);
}
You can find these methods in the SciJava Common library:
org.scijava.util.ClassUtils
org.scijava.util.FileUtils.
You can also use:
CodeSource codeSource = YourMainClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource();
File jarFile = new File(codeSource.getLocation().toURI().getPath());
String jarDir = jarFile.getParentFile().getPath();
Use ClassLoader.getResource() to find the URL for your current class.
For example:
package foo;
public class Test
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
ClassLoader loader = Test.class.getClassLoader();
System.out.println(loader.getResource("foo/Test.class"));
}
}
(This example taken from a similar question.)
To find the directory, you'd then need to take apart the URL manually. See the JarClassLoader tutorial for the format of a jar URL.
I'm surprised to see that none recently proposed to use Path. Here follows a citation: "The Path class includes various methods that can be used to obtain information about the path, access elements of the path, convert the path to other forms, or extract portions of a path"
Thus, a good alternative is to get the Path objest as:
Path path = Paths.get(Test.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI());
The only solution that works for me on Linux, Mac and Windows:
public static String getJarContainingFolder(Class aclass) throws Exception {
CodeSource codeSource = aclass.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource();
File jarFile;
if (codeSource.getLocation() != null) {
jarFile = new File(codeSource.getLocation().toURI());
}
else {
String path = aclass.getResource(aclass.getSimpleName() + ".class").getPath();
String jarFilePath = path.substring(path.indexOf(":") + 1, path.indexOf("!"));
jarFilePath = URLDecoder.decode(jarFilePath, "UTF-8");
jarFile = new File(jarFilePath);
}
return jarFile.getParentFile().getAbsolutePath();
}
If you are really looking for a simple way to get the folder in which your JAR is located you should use this implementation.
Solutions like this are hard to find and many solutions are no longer supported, many others provide the path of the file instead of the actual directory. This is easier than other solutions you are going to find and works for java version 1.12.
new File(".").getCanonicalPath()
Gathering the Input from other answers this is a simple one too:
String localPath=new File(getClass().getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI()).getParentFile().getPath()+"\\";
Both will return a String with this format:
"C:\Users\User\Desktop\Folder\"
In a simple and concise line.
I had the the same problem and I solved it that way:
File currentJavaJarFile = new File(Main.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().getPath());
String currentJavaJarFilePath = currentJavaJarFile.getAbsolutePath();
String currentRootDirectoryPath = currentJavaJarFilePath.replace(currentJavaJarFile.getName(), "");
I hope I was of help to you.
Here's upgrade to other comments, that seem to me incomplete for the specifics of
using a relative "folder" outside .jar file (in the jar's same
location):
String path =
YourMainClassName.class.getProtectionDomain().
getCodeSource().getLocation().getPath();
path =
URLDecoder.decode(
path,
"UTF-8");
BufferedImage img =
ImageIO.read(
new File((
new File(path).getParentFile().getPath()) +
File.separator +
"folder" +
File.separator +
"yourfile.jpg"));
For getting the path of running jar file I have studied the above solutions and tried all methods which exist some difference each other. If these code are running in Eclipse IDE they all should be able to find the path of the file including the indicated class and open or create an indicated file with the found path.
But it is tricky, when run the runnable jar file directly or through the command line, it will be failed as the path of jar file gotten from the above methods will give an internal path in the jar file, that is it always gives a path as
rsrc:project-name (maybe I should say that it is the package name of the main class file - the indicated class)
I can not convert the rsrc:... path to an external path, that is when run the jar file outside the Eclipse IDE it can not get the path of jar file.
The only possible way for getting the path of running jar file outside Eclipse IDE is
System.getProperty("java.class.path")
this code line may return the living path (including the file name) of the running jar file (note that the return path is not the working directory), as the java document and some people said that it will return the paths of all class files in the same directory, but as my tests if in the same directory include many jar files, it only return the path of running jar (about the multiple paths issue indeed it happened in the Eclipse).
Other answers seem to point to the code source which is Jar file location which is not a directory.
Use
return new File(MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI().getPath()).getParentFile();
the selected answer above is not working if you run your jar by click on it from Gnome desktop environment (not from any script or terminal).
Instead, I have fond that the following solution is working everywhere:
try {
return URLDecoder.decode(ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResource(".").getPath(), "UTF-8");
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
return "";
}
I had to mess around a lot before I finally found a working (and short) solution.
It is possible that the jarLocation comes with a prefix like file:\ or jar:file\, which can be removed by using String#substring().
URL jarLocationUrl = MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation();
String jarLocation = new File(jarLocationUrl.toString()).getParent();
For the jar file path:
String jarPath = new File(MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation()
.toURI()).getPath();
For getting the directory path of that jar file:
String dirPath = new File(MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation()
.toURI()).getParent();
The results of the two lines above are like this:
/home/user/MyPrograms/myapp/myjar.jar (value of jarPath)
/home/user/MyPrograms/myapp (value of dirPath)
public static String dir() throws URISyntaxException
{
URI path=Main.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI();
String name= Main.class.getPackage().getName()+".jar";
String path2 = path.getRawPath();
path2=path2.substring(1);
if (path2.contains(".jar"))
{
path2=path2.replace(name, "");
}
return path2;}
Works good on Windows
I tried to get the jar running path using
String folder = MyClassName.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().getPath();
c:\app>java -jar application.jar
Running the jar application named "application.jar", on Windows in the folder "c:\app", the value of the String variable "folder" was "\c:\app\application.jar" and I had problems testing for path's correctness
File test = new File(folder);
if(file.isDirectory() && file.canRead()) { //always false }
So I tried to define "test" as:
String fold= new File(folder).getParentFile().getPath()
File test = new File(fold);
to get path in a right format like "c:\app" instead of "\c:\app\application.jar" and I noticed that it work.
The simplest solution is to pass the path as an argument when running the jar.
You can automate this with a shell script (.bat in Windows, .sh anywhere else):
java -jar my-jar.jar .
I used . to pass the current working directory.
UPDATE
You may want to stick the jar file in a sub-directory so users don't accidentally click it. Your code should also check to make sure that the command line arguments have been supplied, and provide a good error message if the arguments are missing.
Actually here is a better version - the old one failed if a folder name had a space in it.
private String getJarFolder() {
// get name and path
String name = getClass().getName().replace('.', '/');
name = getClass().getResource("/" + name + ".class").toString();
// remove junk
name = name.substring(0, name.indexOf(".jar"));
name = name.substring(name.lastIndexOf(':')-1, name.lastIndexOf('/')+1).replace('%', ' ');
// remove escape characters
String s = "";
for (int k=0; k<name.length(); k++) {
s += name.charAt(k);
if (name.charAt(k) == ' ') k += 2;
}
// replace '/' with system separator char
return s.replace('/', File.separatorChar);
}
As for failing with applets, you wouldn't usually have access to local files anyway. I don't know much about JWS but to handle local files might it not be possible to download the app.?
String path = getClass().getResource("").getPath();
The path always refers to the resource within the jar file.
Try this:
String path = new File("").getAbsolutePath();
This code worked for me to identify if the program is being executed inside a JAR file or IDE:
private static boolean isRunningOverJar() {
try {
String pathJar = Application.class.getResource(Application.class.getSimpleName() + ".class").getFile();
if (pathJar.toLowerCase().contains(".jar")) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
return false;
}
}
If I need to get the Windows full path of JAR file I am using this method:
private static String getPathJar() {
try {
final URI jarUriPath =
Application.class.getResource(Application.class.getSimpleName() + ".class").toURI();
String jarStringPath = jarUriPath.toString().replace("jar:", "");
String jarCleanPath = Paths.get(new URI(jarStringPath)).toString();
if (jarCleanPath.toLowerCase().contains(".jar")) {
return jarCleanPath.substring(0, jarCleanPath.lastIndexOf(".jar") + 4);
} else {
return null;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
log.error("Error getting JAR path.", e);
return null;
}
}
My complete code working with a Spring Boot application using CommandLineRunner implementation, to ensure that the application always be executed within of a console view (Double clicks by mistake in JAR file name), I am using the next code:
#SpringBootApplication
public class Application implements CommandLineRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
Console console = System.console();
if (console == null && !GraphicsEnvironment.isHeadless() && isRunningOverJar()) {
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"cmd", "/c", "start", "cmd", "/k",
"java -jar \"" + getPathJar() + "\""});
} else {
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
#Override
public void run(String... args) {
/*
Additional code here...
*/
}
private static boolean isRunningOverJar() {
try {
String pathJar = Application.class.getResource(Application.class.getSimpleName() + ".class").getFile();
if (pathJar.toLowerCase().contains(".jar")) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
return false;
}
}
private static String getPathJar() {
try {
final URI jarUriPath =
Application.class.getResource(Application.class.getSimpleName() + ".class").toURI();
String jarStringPath = jarUriPath.toString().replace("jar:", "");
String jarCleanPath = Paths.get(new URI(jarStringPath)).toString();
if (jarCleanPath.toLowerCase().contains(".jar")) {
return jarCleanPath.substring(0, jarCleanPath.lastIndexOf(".jar") + 4);
} else {
return null;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
return null;
}
}
}
Something that is frustrating is that when you are developing in Eclipse MyClass.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation() returns the /bin directory which is great, but when you compile it to a jar, the path includes the /myjarname.jar part which gives you illegal file names.
To have the code work both in the ide and once it is compiled to a jar, I use the following piece of code:
URL applicationRootPathURL = getClass().getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation();
File applicationRootPath = new File(applicationRootPathURL.getPath());
File myFile;
if(applicationRootPath.isDirectory()){
myFile = new File(applicationRootPath, "filename");
}
else{
myFile = new File(applicationRootPath.getParentFile(), "filename");
}
Not really sure about the others but in my case it didn't work with a "Runnable jar" and i got it working by fixing codes together from phchen2 answer and another from this link :How to get the path of a running JAR file?
The code:
String path=new java.io.File(Server.class.getProtectionDomain()
.getCodeSource()
.getLocation()
.getPath())
.getAbsolutePath();
path=path.substring(0, path.lastIndexOf("."));
path=path+System.getProperty("java.class.path");
Have tried several of the solutions up there but none yielded correct results for the (probably special) case that the runnable jar has been exported with "Packaging external libraries" in Eclipse. For some reason all solutions based on the ProtectionDomain do result in null in that case.
From combining some solutions above I managed to achieve the following working code:
String surroundingJar = null;
// gets the path to the jar file if it exists; or the "bin" directory if calling from Eclipse
String jarDir = new File(ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResource(".").getPath()).getAbsolutePath();
// gets the "bin" directory if calling from eclipse or the name of the .jar file alone (without its path)
String jarFileFromSys = System.getProperty("java.class.path").split(";")[0];
// If both are equal that means it is running from an IDE like Eclipse
if (jarFileFromSys.equals(jarDir))
{
System.out.println("RUNNING FROM IDE!");
// The path to the jar is the "bin" directory in that case because there is no actual .jar file.
surroundingJar = jarDir;
}
else
{
// Combining the path and the name of the .jar file to achieve the final result
surroundingJar = jarDir + jarFileFromSys.substring(1);
}
System.out.println("JAR File: " + surroundingJar);
The above methods didn't work for me in my Spring environment, since Spring shades the actual classes into a package called BOOT-INF, thus not the actual location of the running file. I found another way to retrieve the running file through the Permissions object which have been granted to the running file:
public static Path getEnclosingDirectory() {
return Paths.get(FileUtils.class.getProtectionDomain().getPermissions()
.elements().nextElement().getName()).getParent();
}
Mention that it is checked only in Windows but i think it works perfect on other Operating Systems [Linux,MacOs,Solaris] :).
I had 2 .jar files in the same directory . I wanted from the one .jar file to start the other .jar file which is in the same directory.
The problem is that when you start it from the cmd the current directory is system32.
Warnings!
The below seems to work pretty well in all the test i have done even
with folder name ;][[;'57f2g34g87-8+9-09!2##!$%^^&() or ()%&$%^##
it works well.
I am using the ProcessBuilder with the below as following:
🍂..
//The class from which i called this was the class `Main`
String path = getBasePathForClass(Main.class);
String applicationPath= new File(path + "application.jar").getAbsolutePath();
System.out.println("Directory Path is : "+applicationPath);
//Your know try catch here
//Mention that sometimes it doesn't work for example with folder `;][[;'57f2g34g87-8+9-09!2##!$%^^&()`
ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder("java", "-jar", applicationPath);
builder.redirectErrorStream(true);
Process process = builder.start();
//...code
🍂getBasePathForClass(Class<?> classs):
/**
* Returns the absolute path of the current directory in which the given
* class
* file is.
*
* #param classs
* #return The absolute path of the current directory in which the class
* file is.
* #author GOXR3PLUS[StackOverFlow user] + bachden [StackOverFlow user]
*/
public static final String getBasePathForClass(Class<?> classs) {
// Local variables
File file;
String basePath = "";
boolean failed = false;
// Let's give a first try
try {
file = new File(classs.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI().getPath());
if (file.isFile() || file.getPath().endsWith(".jar") || file.getPath().endsWith(".zip")) {
basePath = file.getParent();
} else {
basePath = file.getPath();
}
} catch (URISyntaxException ex) {
failed = true;
Logger.getLogger(classs.getName()).log(Level.WARNING,
"Cannot firgue out base path for class with way (1): ", ex);
}
// The above failed?
if (failed) {
try {
file = new File(classs.getClassLoader().getResource("").toURI().getPath());
basePath = file.getAbsolutePath();
// the below is for testing purposes...
// starts with File.separator?
// String l = local.replaceFirst("[" + File.separator +
// "/\\\\]", "")
} catch (URISyntaxException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(classs.getName()).log(Level.WARNING,
"Cannot firgue out base path for class with way (2): ", ex);
}
}
// fix to run inside eclipse
if (basePath.endsWith(File.separator + "lib") || basePath.endsWith(File.separator + "bin")
|| basePath.endsWith("bin" + File.separator) || basePath.endsWith("lib" + File.separator)) {
basePath = basePath.substring(0, basePath.length() - 4);
}
// fix to run inside netbeans
if (basePath.endsWith(File.separator + "build" + File.separator + "classes")) {
basePath = basePath.substring(0, basePath.length() - 14);
}
// end fix
if (!basePath.endsWith(File.separator)) {
basePath = basePath + File.separator;
}
return basePath;
}
This code worked for me:
private static String getJarPath() throws IOException, URISyntaxException {
File f = new File(LicensingApp.class.getProtectionDomain().().getLocation().toURI());
String jarPath = f.getCanonicalPath().toString();
String jarDir = jarPath.substring( 0, jarPath.lastIndexOf( File.separator ));
return jarDir;
}
The getProtectionDomain approach might not work sometimes e.g. when you have to find the jar for some of the core java classes (e.g in my case StringBuilder class within IBM JDK), however following works seamlessly:
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println(findSource(MyClass.class));
// OR
System.out.println(findSource(String.class));
}
public static String findSource(Class<?> clazz) {
String resourceToSearch = '/' + clazz.getName().replace(".", "/") + ".class";
java.net.URL location = clazz.getResource(resourceToSearch);
String sourcePath = location.getPath();
// Optional, Remove junk
return sourcePath.replace("file:", "").replace("!" + resourceToSearch, "");
}
I have another way to get the String location of a class.
URL path = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResource("");
Path p = Paths.get(path.toURI());
String location = p.toString();
The output String will have the form of
C:\Users\Administrator\new Workspace\...
The spaces and other characters are handled, and in the form without file:/. So will be easier to use.

Files.copy not recognising binary files on Windows (Java)

So I am trying to copy some files with Files.copy(), and while it is working fine in Mac, and works to copy text files on Windows, when I try to copy a binary file I just get the error:
java.nio.file.NoSuchFileException: C:\path\to\file
My function is:
private void copyFiles()
{
ArrayList<String> temp = new ArrayList<>(); //This is set up outside the function
temp.add("file1");
temp.add("file2"); //etc
String AlphaSimFileName = "folderName"; //This is actually set outside the function
String currentDir = System.getProperty("user.dir");
Path baseAlphaName = Paths.get(currentDir, AlphaSimFileName);
Path baseDirectoryName = Paths.get(currentDir, name);
System.out.println(""+baseAlphaName.toString());
System.out.println(""+baseDirectoryName.toString());
// for (String l: MyFunctions.getFilesAsString()) //gives the list of files to copy.
for (String l: temp)
{
Path p1 = Paths.get(baseAlphaName.toString(), l);
Path p2 = Paths.get(baseDirectoryName.toString(), l);
try
{
Files.copy(p1, p2, StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Anyone have any idea why this is happening?
(Posted on behalf of the OP).
The reason for this was that Windows was automatically hiding file extensions, so the file that I was trying to move (i.e. without the extension) didn't exist.
Try doing it manually first. Use \\ instead of \ when you hardcode the path for Windows using Java. Also, the file extension may be missing.

Check if file is in (sub)directory

I would like to check whether an existing file is in a specific directory or a subdirectory of that.
I have two File objects.
File dir;
File file;
Both are guaranteed to exist. Let's assume
dir = /tmp/dir
file = /tmp/dir/subdir1/subdir2/file.txt
I want this check to return true
For now i am doing the check this way:
String canonicalDir = dir.getCanonicalPath() + File.separator;
boolean subdir = file.getCanonicalPath().startsWith(canonicalDir);
This seems to work with my limited tests, but i am unsure whether this might make problems on some operating systems. I also do not like that getCanonicalPath() can throw an IOException which i have to handle.
Is there a better way? Possibly in some library?
Thanks
In addition to the asnwer from rocketboy, use getCanonicalPath() instad of getAbsolutePath() so \dir\dir2\..\file is converted to \dir\file:
boolean areRelated = file.getCanonicalPath().contains(dir.getCanonicalPath() + File.separator);
System.out.println(areRelated);
or
boolean areRelated = child.getCanonicalPath().startsWith(parent.getCanonicalPath() + File.separator);
Do not forget to catch any Exception with try {...} catch {...}.
NOTE: You can use FileSystem.getSeparator() instead of File.separator. The 'correct' way of doing this will be to get the getCanonicalPath() of the directory that you are going to check against as a String, then check if ends with a File.separator and if not then add File.separator to the end of that String, to avoid double slashes. This way you skip future odd behaviours if Java decides to return directories with a slash in the end or if your directory string comes from somewhere else than Java.io.File.
NOTE2: Thanx to #david for pointing the File.separator problem.
I would create a small utility method:
public static boolean isInSubDirectory(File dir, File file) {
if (file == null)
return false;
if (file.equals(dir))
return true;
return isInSubDirectory(dir, file.getParentFile());
}
This method looks pretty solid:
/**
* Checks, whether the child directory is a subdirectory of the base
* directory.
*
* #param base the base directory.
* #param child the suspected child directory.
* #return true, if the child is a subdirectory of the base directory.
* #throws IOException if an IOError occured during the test.
*/
public boolean isSubDirectory(File base, File child)
throws IOException {
base = base.getCanonicalFile();
child = child.getCanonicalFile();
File parentFile = child;
while (parentFile != null) {
if (base.equals(parentFile)) {
return true;
}
parentFile = parentFile.getParentFile();
}
return false;
}
Source
It is similar to the solution by dacwe but doesn't use recursion (though that shouldn't make a big difference in this case).
If you plan to works with file and filenames heavly check apache fileutils and filenameutils libraries. Are full of useful (and portale if portability is mamdatory) functions
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
File root = new File("c:\\test");
String fileName = "a.txt";
try {
boolean recursive = true;
Collection files = FileUtils.listFiles(root, null, recursive);
for (Iterator iterator = files.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();) {
File file = (File) iterator.next();
if (file.getName().equals(fileName))
System.out.println(file.getAbsolutePath());
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
You can traverse File Tree starting from your specific DIR.
At Java 7, there is Files.walkFileTree method. You have only to write your own visitor
to check if current node is searched file. More doc:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/nio/file/Files.html#walkFileTree%28java.nio.file.Path,%20java.util.Set,%20int,%20java.nio.file.FileVisitor%29
You can do this, however it won't catch every use case e.g. dir = /somedir/../tmp/dir/etc..., unless that's how the file was defined also.
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public class FileTest {
public static void main(final String... args) {
final Path dir = Paths.get("/tmp/dir").toAbsolutePath();
final Path file = Paths.get("/tmp/dir/subdir1/subdir2/file.txt").toAbsolutePath();
System.out.println("Dir: " + dir);
System.out.println("File: " + file);
final boolean valid = file.startsWith(dir);
System.out.println("Valid: " + valid);
}
}
In order for the checks to work correctly, you really need to map these using toRealPath() or, in your example, getCanonicalPath(), but you then have to handle exceptions for these examples which is absolutely correct that you should do so.
Since Java 7+ you can just do this:
file.toPath().startsWith(dir.toPath());
How about comparing the paths?
boolean areRelated = file.getAbsolutePath().contains(dir.getAbsolutePath());
System.out.println(areRelated);
or
boolean areRelated = child.getAbsolutePath().startsWith(parent.getAbsolutePath())

Java File API in Windows 7 issue

Basically, I'm just trying to run a list of all the files in a folder using the list function from the Java File class:
artistList = (new File(myPathName)).list();
But what I get is some missing files, even after I have "show hidden files" in Windows 7. I'm wondering where these files are.
If it helps, the path I'm searching in is a folder like /media which I have organized into /media/artist/album/title.mp3 for all my song data. The extra files I end up finding up are AlbumArt jpeg files (and I used songbird version 9 beforehand to sort the folders first, I'm just trying to rename the match the ID3 tags myself with a small Java program).
With the organisation you descibed there will be no media files in the directory /media where your search / listing starts, you have to navigate trought subdirectories untill you reach /media/artist/album from there on you can get files that you actualy looking for. Also you might have to add a filter to list method and implement the filter's accept method to kick out thumbnails and hidden meta-files.
Here a piece of code (untested) that could help you
private final static Set<String> mediaExtensions;
static {
mediaExtensions = new HashSet<String>();
mediaExtensions.add(".mp3");
mediaExtensions.add(".wav");
mediaExtensions.add(".ogg");
// and so on
}
public static void list(File file, List<File> result) {
if(file.isFile()) {
result.add(file);
} else if(file.isDirectory()) {
File files[] = file.listFiles(new FileFilter() {
#Override
public boolean accept(File pathname) {
boolean accept = false;
int i = pathname.getName().lastIndexOf('.');
if(i != -1) {
String ext = pathname.getName().substring(i);
accept = (! pathname.isHidden()) &&
mediaExtensions.contains(ext);
}
return accept;
}
});
if(files != null) {
for(File f : files) {
list(f, result);
}
}
}
}

Delete Files with same Prefix String using Java

I have around 500 text files inside a directory with each with the same prefix in their filename, for example: dailyReport_.
The latter part of the file is the date of the file. (For example dailyReport_08262011.txt, dailyReport_08232011.txt)
I want to delete these files using a Java procedure. (I could go for a shell script and add it a job in the crontab but the application is meant to used by laymen).
I can delete a single file using something like this:
try{
File f=new File("dailyReport_08232011.txt");
f.delete();
}
catch(Exception e){
System.out.println(e);
}
but can I delete the files having a certain prefix? (e.g. dailyReport08 for the 8th month) I could easily do that in shell script by using rm -rf dailyReport08*.txt .
But File f=new File("dailyReport_08*.txt"); doesnt work in Java (as expected).
Now is anything similar possible in Java without running a loop that searches the directory for files?
Can I achieve this using some special characters similar to * used in shell script?
No, you can't. Java is rather low-level language -- comparing with shell-script -- so things like this must be done more explicetly. You should search for files with required mask with folder.listFiles(FilenameFilter), and iterate through returned array deleting each entry. Like this:
final File folder = ...
final File[] files = folder.listFiles( new FilenameFilter() {
#Override
public boolean accept( final File dir,
final String name ) {
return name.matches( "dailyReport_08.*\\.txt" );
}
} );
for ( final File file : files ) {
if ( !file.delete() ) {
System.err.println( "Can't remove " + file.getAbsolutePath() );
}
}
You can use a loop
for (File f : directory.listFiles()) {
if (f.getName().startsWith("dailyReport_")) {
f.delete();
}
}
Java 8 :
final File downloadDirectory = new File("directoryPath");
final File[] files = downloadDirectory.listFiles( (dir,name) -> name.matches("dailyReport_.*?" ));
Arrays.asList(files).stream().forEach(File::delete)
With Java 8:
public static boolean deleteFilesForPathByPrefix(final String path, final String prefix) {
boolean success = true;
try (DirectoryStream<Path> newDirectoryStream = Files.newDirectoryStream(Paths.get(path), prefix + "*")) {
for (final Path newDirectoryStreamItem : newDirectoryStream) {
Files.delete(newDirectoryStreamItem);
}
} catch (final Exception e) {
success = false;
e.printStackTrace();
}
return success;
}
Simple version:
public static void deleteFilesForPathByPrefix(final Path path, final String prefix) {
try (DirectoryStream<Path> newDirectoryStream = Files.newDirectoryStream(path, prefix + "*")) {
for (final Path newDirectoryStreamItem : newDirectoryStream) {
Files.delete(newDirectoryStreamItem);
}
} catch (final Exception e) { // empty
}
}
Modify the Path/String argument as needed. You can even convert between File and Path. Path is preferred for Java >= 8.
I know I'm late to the party. However, for future reference, I wanted to contribute a java 8 stream solution that doesn't involve a loop.
It may not be pretty. I welcome suggestions to make it look better. However, it does the job:
Files.list(deleteDirectory).filter(p -> p.toString().contains("dailyReport_08")).forEach((p) -> {
try {
Files.deleteIfExists(p);
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
});
Alternatively, you can use Files.walk which will traverse the directory depth-first. That is, if the files are buried in different directories.
Use FileFilter like so:
File dir = new File(<path to dir>);
File[] toBeDeleted = dir.listFiles(new FileFilter() {
boolean accept(File pathname) {
return (pathname.getName().startsWith("dailyReport_08") && pathname.getName().endsWith(".txt"));
}
for (File f : toBeDeleted) {
f.delete();
}
There isn't a wildcard but you can implement a FilenameFilter and check the path with a startsWith("dailyReport_"). Then calling File.listFiles(filter) gives you an array of Files that you can loop through and call delete() on.
I agree with BegemoT.
However, just one optimization:
If you need a simple FilenameFilter, there is a class in the Google packages.
So, in this case you do not even have to create your own anonymous class.
import com.google.common.io.PatternFilenameFilter;
final File folder = ...
final File[] files = folder.listFiles(new PatternFilenameFilter("dailyReport_08.*\\.txt"));
// loop through the files
for ( final File file : files ) {
if ( !file.delete() ) {
System.err.println( "Can't remove " + file.getAbsolutePath() );
}
}
Enjoy !
You can't do it without a loop. But you can enhance this loop. First of all, ask you a question: "what's the problem with searching and removing in the loop?" If it's too slow for some reason, you can just run your loop in a separate thread, so that it will not affect your user interface.
Other advice - put your daily reports in a separate folder and then you will be able to remove this folder with all content.
or in scala
new java.io.File(<<pathStr>>).listFiles.filter(_.getName.endsWith(".txt")).foreach(_.delete())
Have a look at Apache FileUtils which offers many handy file manipulations.

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