AccessDeniedException on Files.copy from a temporary file in Java NIO2 - java

I am getting used to Java 7 and the new Files class.
I am writing a small application which, at some point, must replace the contents of a file.
I used a temporary file to avoid erasing the target file if somethign goes wrong. However, I'm always getting an AccessDeniedException when performing the actual copy.
Here is my code:
// Temporary file generation.
Path target = getCurrentConfigFile(); // Returns a path, works ok.
Path tempFile = Files.createTempFile("tempfile", null);
Files.write(tempFile, conf.getBytes(Charset.defaultCharset()), StandardOpenOption.WRITE);
// Actual copy.
Files.copy(tempFile, target, StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
// Cleanup.
Files.delete(tempFile);
getCurrentConfigFile() handles the target file Path creation:
(... generates various strings from configuration parameters)
return FileSystems.getDefault().getPath(all, these, various, strings);
When I execute the code, it's through a .bat script, and I get the error both with a standard Command Prompt or elevation.
The target file is in C:\temp\tests, a directory I created with the same Windows user.
It seems the problem lies in reading from the temporary file, as writing directly to the target works.
Where should I look next?

Not an answer but too long for a comment. I run the code below (from the command line on Windows 7) and it works as expected:
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
Path target = Paths.get("C:/temp/test.txt"); // Returns a path, works ok.
Path tempFile = Files.createTempFile("tempfile", null);
Files.write(tempFile, "abc".getBytes(UTF_8), StandardOpenOption.WRITE);
// Actual copy.
Files.copy(tempFile, target, StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
// Cleanup.
Files.delete(tempFile);
}
so your problem is not with that code. It may be somewhere else in your code or due to the permissions on the files/folder you are using.

Related

How to change the user.dir in java 8? [duplicate]

How can I change the current working directory from within a Java program? Everything I've been able to find about the issue claims that you simply can't do it, but I can't believe that that's really the case.
I have a piece of code that opens a file using a hard-coded relative file path from the directory it's normally started in, and I just want to be able to use that code from within a different Java program without having to start it from within a particular directory. It seems like you should just be able to call System.setProperty( "user.dir", "/path/to/dir" ), but as far as I can figure out, calling that line just silently fails and does nothing.
I would understand if Java didn't allow you to do this, if it weren't for the fact that it allows you to get the current working directory, and even allows you to open files using relative file paths....
There is no reliable way to do this in pure Java. Setting the user.dir property via System.setProperty() or java -Duser.dir=... does seem to affect subsequent creations of Files, but not e.g. FileOutputStreams.
The File(String parent, String child) constructor can help if you build up your directory path separately from your file path, allowing easier swapping.
An alternative is to set up a script to run Java from a different directory, or use JNI native code as suggested below.
The relevant OpenJDK bug was closed in 2008 as "will not fix".
If you run your legacy program with ProcessBuilder, you will be able to specify its working directory.
There is a way to do this using the system property "user.dir". The key part to understand is that getAbsoluteFile() must be called (as shown below) or else relative paths will be resolved against the default "user.dir" value.
import java.io.*;
public class FileUtils
{
public static boolean setCurrentDirectory(String directory_name)
{
boolean result = false; // Boolean indicating whether directory was set
File directory; // Desired current working directory
directory = new File(directory_name).getAbsoluteFile();
if (directory.exists() || directory.mkdirs())
{
result = (System.setProperty("user.dir", directory.getAbsolutePath()) != null);
}
return result;
}
public static PrintWriter openOutputFile(String file_name)
{
PrintWriter output = null; // File to open for writing
try
{
output = new PrintWriter(new File(file_name).getAbsoluteFile());
}
catch (Exception exception) {}
return output;
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
{
FileUtils.openOutputFile("DefaultDirectoryFile.txt");
FileUtils.setCurrentDirectory("NewCurrentDirectory");
FileUtils.openOutputFile("CurrentDirectoryFile.txt");
}
}
It is possible to change the PWD, using JNA/JNI to make calls to libc. The JRuby guys have a handy java library for making POSIX calls called jnr-posix. Here's the maven info
As mentioned you can't change the CWD of the JVM but if you were to launch another process using Runtime.exec() you can use the overloaded method that lets you specify the working directory. This is not really for running your Java program in another directory but for many cases when one needs to launch another program like a Perl script for example, you can specify the working directory of that script while leaving the working dir of the JVM unchanged.
See Runtime.exec javadocs
Specifically,
public Process exec(String[] cmdarray,String[] envp, File dir) throws IOException
where dir is the working directory to run the subprocess in
If I understand correctly, a Java program starts with a copy of the current environment variables. Any changes via System.setProperty(String, String) are modifying the copy, not the original environment variables. Not that this provides a thorough reason as to why Sun chose this behavior, but perhaps it sheds a little light...
The working directory is a operating system feature (set when the process starts).
Why don't you just pass your own System property (-Dsomeprop=/my/path) and use that in your code as the parent of your File:
File f = new File ( System.getProperty("someprop"), myFilename)
The smarter/easier thing to do here is to just change your code so that instead of opening the file assuming that it exists in the current working directory (I assume you are doing something like new File("blah.txt"), just build the path to the file yourself.
Let the user pass in the base directory, read it from a config file, fall back to user.dir if the other properties can't be found, etc. But it's a whole lot easier to improve the logic in your program than it is to change how environment variables work.
I have tried to invoke
String oldDir = System.setProperty("user.dir", currdir.getAbsolutePath());
It seems to work. But
File myFile = new File("localpath.ext");
InputStream openit = new FileInputStream(myFile);
throws a FileNotFoundException though
myFile.getAbsolutePath()
shows the correct path.
I have read this. I think the problem is:
Java knows the current directory with the new setting.
But the file handling is done by the operation system. It does not know the new set current directory, unfortunately.
The solution may be:
File myFile = new File(System.getPropety("user.dir"), "localpath.ext");
It creates a file Object as absolute one with the current directory which is known by the JVM. But that code should be existing in a used class, it needs changing of reused codes.
~~~~JcHartmut
You can use
new File("relative/path").getAbsoluteFile()
after
System.setProperty("user.dir", "/some/directory")
System.setProperty("user.dir", "C:/OtherProject");
File file = new File("data/data.csv").getAbsoluteFile();
System.out.println(file.getPath());
Will print
C:\OtherProject\data\data.csv
You can change the process's actual working directory using JNI or JNA.
With JNI, you can use native functions to set the directory. The POSIX method is chdir(). On Windows, you can use SetCurrentDirectory().
With JNA, you can wrap the native functions in Java binders.
For Windows:
private static interface MyKernel32 extends Library {
public MyKernel32 INSTANCE = (MyKernel32) Native.loadLibrary("Kernel32", MyKernel32.class);
/** BOOL SetCurrentDirectory( LPCTSTR lpPathName ); */
int SetCurrentDirectoryW(char[] pathName);
}
For POSIX systems:
private interface MyCLibrary extends Library {
MyCLibrary INSTANCE = (MyCLibrary) Native.loadLibrary("c", MyCLibrary.class);
/** int chdir(const char *path); */
int chdir( String path );
}
The other possible answer to this question may depend on the reason you are opening the file. Is this a property file or a file that has some configuration related to your application?
If this is the case you may consider trying to load the file through the classpath loader, this way you can load any file Java has access to.
If you run your commands in a shell you can write something like "java -cp" and add any directories you want separated by ":" if java doesnt find something in one directory it will go try and find them in the other directories, that is what I do.
Use FileSystemView
private FileSystemView fileSystemView;
fileSystemView = FileSystemView.getFileSystemView();
currentDirectory = new File(".");
//listing currentDirectory
File[] filesAndDirs = fileSystemView.getFiles(currentDirectory, false);
fileList = new ArrayList<File>();
dirList = new ArrayList<File>();
for (File file : filesAndDirs) {
if (file.isDirectory())
dirList.add(file);
else
fileList.add(file);
}
Collections.sort(dirList);
if (!fileSystemView.isFileSystemRoot(currentDirectory))
dirList.add(0, new File(".."));
Collections.sort(fileList);
//change
currentDirectory = fileSystemView.getParentDirectory(currentDirectory);

How to read a file that is located in any location on the computer?

So I have a project, and this is one of the demands:
You should have a class named Project3, containing a main method.
This program reads the levels information from a file whose name is
specified as a command-line parameter (The file should also be
relative to the class-path as described here:)
All the file names specified in the levels and block definition files
should be relative to the class path. The reason we want them to be
relative to the class path is that later we will be able to read the
files from inside a jar, something we can not do with regular File
references.
To get an input stream relative to the class path (even if it's inside
a jar), use the following:
InputStream is =
ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("image.png");
The idea is to keep a folder with files(definitions and images) and
then add that folder to the class path when running the JVM:
java -cp bin:resources ... If you don't add the resources folder to
you class path you wont be able to load them with the command from
above.
When run without parameters, your program should read a default level
file, and run the game accordingly. The location of the default level
file should be hard-coded in your code, and be relative to the
classpath_.
When run without parameters, your program should read a default level file, and run the game accordingly. The location of the default level file should be hard-coded in your code, and be relative to the classpath_.
The part of the code that handles the input is:
public Void run() throws IOException {
LevelReader level = new LevelReader();
List<level> chosenLevels = new ArrayList<>();
if (args.length >= 1) {
File f = new File(args[0]);
if (f.exists()) {
chosenLevels = level.makeLevel(args[0]);
}
}
if (chosenLevels.size() == 0) {
game.runLevels(defaultLevels);
} else {
game.runLevels(chosenLevels);
}
return null;
}
So my question is:
An argument should be the full path of a file which means:
D:\desktop\level3.txt
Is it possible to read a file from every location on my computer?
Because right now I can do it only if my text file is in the
project's directory (not even in the src folder).
I can't understand the rest of their demands. What does is mean "should be hard-coded in your code, and be relative to the
classpath_." and why is it related to InputStream method(?)
I'm confused all over this.
Thanks.
A classpath resource is not the same as a file.
As you have correctly stated, the full path of a file is something like D:\desktop\level3.txt.
But if ever want to distribute your application so it can run on other computers, which probably won’t have that file in that location, you have two choices:
Ask the user to tell the program where to find the file on their computer.
Bundle the file with the compiled program.
If you place a non-.class file in the same place as .class files, it’s considered a resource. Since you don’t know at runtime where your program’s class files are located,¹ you use the getResource or getResourceAsStream method, which is specifically designed to look in the classpath.
The getResource* methods have the additional benefit that they will work both when you are developing, and when the program is packaged as a .jar file. Individual entries in a .jar file are not separate files and cannot be read using the File or FileInputStream classes.
If I understand your assignment correctly, the default level file should be an application resource, and the name of that resource is what should be hard-coded in your program. Something like:
InputStream is;
if (args.length > 0) {
is = new BufferedInputStream(
new FileInputStream(args[0]));
} else {
// No argument provided, so use program's default level data.
is = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("defaultlevel.txt");
}
chosenLevels = level.makeLevel(is);
¹ You may find some pages that claim you can determine the location of a running program’s code using getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource(), but getCodeSource() may return null, depending on the JVM and ClassLoader implementation, so this is not reliable.
To answer your first question, it doesn't seem like they're asking you to read from anywhere on disk, just from within your class path. So that seems fine.
The second question, "What does is mean 'should be hard-coded in your code, and be relative to the classpath'?". You are always going to have a default level file in your project directory. Define the path to this file as a String in your program and that requirement will be satisfied. It's related to the InputStream because the stream requires a location to read in from.

Is there a way to get the file path of the .java file executed or compiled?

In Python the global variable __file__ is the full path of the current file.
System.getProperty("user.dir"); seems to return the path of the current working directory.
I want to get the path of the current .java, .class or package file.
Then use this to get the path to an image.
My project file structure in Netbeans looks like this:
(source: toile-libre.org)
Update to use code suggested from my chosen best answer:
// read image data from picture in package
try {
InputStream instream = TesseractTest.class
.getResourceAsStream("eurotext.tif");
bufferedImage = ImageIO.read(instream);
}
catch (IOException e) {
System.out.println(e.getMessage());
}
This code is used in the usage example from tess4j.
My full code of the usage example is here.
If you want to load an image file stored right next to your class file, use Class::getResourceAsStream(String name).
In your case, that would be:
try (InputStream instream = TesseractTest.class.getResourceAsStream("eurotext.tif")) {
// read stream here
}
This assumes that your build system copies the .tif file to your build folder, which is commonly done by IDEs, but requires extra setup in build tools like Ant and Gradle.
If you package your program to a .jar file, the code will still work, again assuming your build system package the .tif file next to the .class file.
Is there a way to get the file path of the .java file executed or compiled?
For completeness, the literal answer to your question is "not easily and not always".
There is a round-about way to find the source filename for a class on the callstack via StackFrameElement.getFileName(). However, the filename won't always be available1 and it won't necessarily be correct2.
Indeed, it is quite likely that the source tree won't be present on the system where you are executing the code. So if you needed an image file that was stashed in the source tree, you would be out of luck.
1 - It depends on the Java compiler and compilation options that you use. And potentially on other things.
2 - For example, the source tree can be moved or removed after compilation.
Andreas has described the correct way to solve your problem. Make sure that the image file is in your application's JAR file, and access it using getResource or getResourceAsStream. If your application is using an API that requires a filename / pathname in the file system, you may need to extract the resource from the JAR to a temporary file, or something like that.
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
System.out.println(getPackageParent(Main.class, false));
}
public static String getPackageParent(Class<?> cls, boolean include_last_dot)
throws Exception {
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(cls.getPackage().getName());
if (sb.lastIndexOf(".") > 0)
if (include_last_dot)
return sb.delete(sb.lastIndexOf(".") + 1, sb.length())
.toString();
else
return sb.delete(sb.lastIndexOf("."), sb.length()).toString();
return sb.toString();
}
}

Java: get absolute path of project

I'm trying to run a exe file in path outside of the current package. My code.java file that runs it is in
%Workspace_path%\Project\src\main\java\com\util\code.java
However the directory of where the exe is
%Workspace_path%\Project\src\main\resources\program.exe
If possible, it seems like the best solution here would be to get the absolute path of the Project then append "src\main\resources\" to it. Is there a good way to do this or is there an alternative solution?
I'm using Eclipse, but it would great if it could be used in other IDEs too. Thanks for any help.
The de facto approach to solving this is to bundle the EXE as a classpath resource. It seems you have arranged for this already.
When working with classpath resources, a mature program should not assume that the resource is in the filesystem. The resources could be packaged in a JAR file, or even in a WAR file. The only thing you can trust at that point is the standard methods for accessing resources in Java, as hinted below.
The way to solve your problem, then, is to access the resource contents using the de facto standard of invoking Class.getResourceAsStream (or ClassLoader.getResourceAsStream), save the contents to a temporary file, and execute from that file. This will guarantee your program works correctly regardless of its packaging.
In other words:
Invoke getClass().getResourceAsStream("/program.exe"). From static methods, you can't call getClass, so use the name of your current class instead, as in MyClass.class.getResourceAsStream. This returns an InputStream.
Create a temporary file, preferably using File.createTempFile. This returns a File object identifying the newly created file.
Open an OutputStream to this temp file.
Use the two streams to copy the data from the resource into the temp file. You can use IOUtils.copy if you're into Apache Commons tools. Don't forget to close the two streams when done with this step.
Execute the program thus stored in the temporary file.
Clean up.
In other words (code snippet added later):
private void executeProgramFromClasspath() throws IOException {
// Open resource stream.
InputStream input = getClass().getResourceAsStream("/program.exe");
if (input == null) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Missing classpath resource.");
}
// Transfer.
OutputStream output = null;
try {
// Create temporary file. May throw IOException.
File temporaryFile = File.createTempFile(getClass().getName(), "");
output = new FileOutputStream(temporaryFile);
output = new BufferedOutputStream(output);
IOUtils.copy(input, output);
} finally {
// Close streams.
IOUtils.closeQuietly(input);
IOUtils.closeQuietly(output);
}
// Execute.
try {
String path = temporaryFile.getAbsolutePath();
ProcessBuilder processBuilder = new ProcessBuilder(path);
Process process = processBuilder.start();
process.waitFor();
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
// Optional catch. Keeps the method signature uncluttered.
throw new IOException(e);
} finally {
// Clean up
if (!temporaryFile.delete()) {
// Log this issue, or throw an error.
}
}
}
Well,in your context,the project root is happen to be the current path
.
,that is where the java.exe start to execute,so a easy way is:
String exePath="src\\main\\resources\\program.exe";
File exeFile=new File(".",exePath);
System.out.println(exeFile.getAbusolutePath());
...
I tested this code on Eclipse,It's ok. I think is should work on different ide.
Good Luck!

Directory size mismatch after file copy

Hopefully someone has seen this before. I'm trying to copy all directory contents from the source to a different directory, and for this I started using the Commons FileUtils.copyDirectorytoDirectory method(File src, File dest). The code is pretty simple:
public static void copyDirtoDir(String src, String dest) {
File s = new File(src);
File d = new File(dest);
try {
FileUtils.copyDirectoryToDirectory(s, d);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
To run this test on Linux, I'm running the app as a JAR and passing the src and dest strings from the command line. The problem is that when I check the resulting directory size after execution, there's a huge difference in size (with the copied dir around twice the size of the original - checked using 'du -sh').
I then simply tried with nio.FileChannels, as follows:
public static void copyFile(File in, File out) throws IOException {
FileChannel source = new FileInputStream(in).getChannel();
FileChannel destination = new FileOutputStream(out).getChannel();
source.transferTo(0, source.size(), destination);
source.close();
destination.close();
}
Calling this method for every file inside the directory. The resulting size from this variation is also around twice the size of the original. If I do a listing of the directories' contents, they are the same.
Is there any missing parameter or something that could be causing this size difference?
Not sure what's going on, but you can use diff to diff directories. I'm sure that will pin down the differences easily.
The javadoc says that copyDirectoryToDirectory copies the source directory and all its contents to a directory of the same name in the specified destination directory.
Without seeing your directory structure, I'm guessing this may cause the double data. Any reason why you're not using the simple FileUtils.copyDirectory() ?

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