Error: Could not find or load main class - java

I have a source folder (src) containing a jar file and many other folders of java codes. I have made a batch file which executes the following command perfectly fine while being in the "src" folder.
java -mx6g -cp .:trove.jar testing.Tester /somepath/myfile.txt
However, when I want to execute this batch file from a different path, even if I add the complete address, it still doesn't work. For instance:
java -mx6g -cp .:/Programs/src/trove.jar testing.Tester /somepath/myfile.txt
Even changing to this doesn't work:
java -mx6g -cp .:/Programs/src/trove.jar /Programs/src/testing/testing.Tester /somepath/myfile.txt
I get the error: Error: Could not find or load main class testing.Tester.

It may help you:
Syntax for "executable" JAR files:
java [ <option> ... ] -jar <jar-file-name> [<argument> ...]
e.g.
java -Xmx100m -jar /usr/local/acme-example/listuser.jar fred
Class and Classpaths are specified in the MANIFEST of the JAR file
You have to give fully specified path
java [option]/Programs/src/:/Programs/src/trove.jar testing.Tester /AbsolutePath/fileName.txt

the dot at the start of the classpath means current directory (src). you may need to fully specify that path as well.
java -mx6g -cp /Programs/src/:/Programs/src/trove.jar testing.Tester /somepath/myfile.txt

Related

Unable to compile using Picocli

I'm a dev student
I would love to use Picocli in my project, unfortunately I doesn't understand how to compile using Picocli
I trie to follow the instruction given here https://picocli.info/ or here https://picocli.info/quick-guide.html but the step to compile aren't detailed. I'm not using Gradle nor Maven but they aren't really listed as required.
This is how it tried to compile the Checksum example given in the picocli.info webpage :
jar cf checksum.jar Checksum.java ; jar cf picocli-4.6.1.jar CommandLine.java && echo "hello" > hello
Then I simply copy paste this gived command : https://picocli.info/#_running_the_application
java -cp "picocli-4.6.1.jar:checksum.jar" CheckSum --algorithm SHA-1 hello
And get the following result :
Error: Could not find or load main class CheckSum
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: CheckSum
I tried to compile everything myself and then add the .jar like this :
java CheckSum -jar picocli-4.6.1.jar
But then the error output looks like this:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: picocli/CommandLine
at CheckSum.main(Checksum.java:33)
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: picocli.CommandLine
at java.base/jdk.internal.loader.BuiltinClassLoader.loadClass(BuiltinClassLoader.java:581)
at java.base/jdk.internal.loader.ClassLoaders$AppClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoaders.java:178)
at java.base/java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:521)
... 1 more
Witch I don't understand since I added the dependency.
What am I missing ?
Thanks in advance
The problem is that the command jar cf checksum.jar Checksum.java only creates a jar file (jar files are very similar to zip files) that contains the Checksum.java source file.
What you want to do instead is compile the source code first. After that, we can put the resulting Checksum.class file (note the .class extension instead of the .java extension) in the checksum.jar. The Java SDK includes the javac tool that can be used to compile the source code. Detailed steps follow below.
First, open a terminal window and navigate to a directory that contains both the Checksum.java source file and the picocli-4.6.1.jar library.
Now, the command to compile (on Windows) is:
javac -cp .;picocli-4.6.1.jar Checksum.java
Linux uses : as path separator instead of ;, so on Linux, the command to compile is:
javac -cp .:picocli-4.6.1.jar Checksum.java
The -cp option allows you to specify the classpath, which should contain the directories and jar/zip files containing any other class files that your project uses/depends on. Since Checksum.java uses the picocli classes, we put the picocli jar in the classpath. Also add the current directory . to the classpath when the current directory contains any classes. I just add . habitually now.
Now, if you list the files in the current directory, you should see that a file Checksum.class has been created in this directory.
Our Checksum class has a main method, so we can now run the program with the java tool:
On Windows:
java -cp .;picocli-4.6.1.jar Checksum
On Linux:
java -cp .:picocli-4.6.1.jar Checksum
Note that when running the program with java you specify the class name Checksum, not the file name Checksum.class.
You can pass arguments to the Checksum program by passing them on the command line immediately following the class name:
java -cp .:picocli-4.6.1.jar Checksum --algorithm=SHA-1 /path/to/hello
When your project grows, you may want to keep the source code and the compiled class files in separate directories. The javac compile utility has a -d option where you can specify the destination for the compiled class files. For example:
javac -cp picocli-4.6.1.jar:otherlib.jar -d /destination/path /path/to/source/*.java
This should generate .class files for the specified source files in the specified destination directory (/destination/path in the example above).
When you have many class files, you may want to bundle them in a single jar file. You can use the jar command for that. I often use the options -v (verbose) -c (create) -f (jar file name) when creating a jar for the compiled class files. For example:
jar -cvf MyJar.jar /destination/path/*.class /destination/path2/*.class
Enjoy!

Cygwin terminal error in running .sh file because of a jar file

I am trying to run .jar file for my java code from a .sh shell script file. the jar file name contains "." which is making the Cygwin terminal think it is a directory. Here is the command and the results:
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar
Result:
no main manifest attribute, in lib\javax.json-1.0.jar
Then:
error: package javax.json does not exist
import javax.json.Json;
With this mark ^ below the period (right after javax).
How can I solve it? I am working on Windows 10. Thanks!
EDIT:
I have written many forms of the .sh file to get it run, but it won't run. The current one is:
# !bin/bash
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar
javac ./src/TimeTester.java
java TimeTester
Does this look good?
I am getting the following error:
.\src\TimeTester.java:22: error: package javax.json does not exist
import javax.json.Json; (With this ^ below the '.')
AND:
.\src\TimeTester.java:159: error: cannot find symbol
private static JsonObject getJsonFromString(String jsonStr){
And many similar lines in the error.. Any help?
EDIT 2:
This is my current file:
javac -cp ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar:./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar ./src/TimeTester.java
java -cp ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar:./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar:./src TimeTester
But I am getting:
.\src\TimeTester.java:22: error: package javax.json does not exist
import javax.json.Json;
^
With With this (^) under the last dot (.Json)
EDIT 3:
The current .sh file is:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
cd src
javac -cp '../lib/javax.json-1.0.jar;../lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar' TimeTester.java
java -cp '../lib/javax.json-1.0.jar;../lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar' TimeTester
The first command (javac) works and generates the .class file. BUT, the second command (java) does not work and it gives the following error:
Error: Could not find or load main class TimeTester
Your help is really appreciated!
Final EDIT:
Thanks for Jim, the shell script now works. Now I got a java execution error:
java.io.FileNotFoundException: .\in_input\in.txt (The system cannot find the path specified)
Thanks
TL;DR It is a pain to use Cygwin with programs written for Windows because of the conflicting command-line shell conventions between bash and cmd.exe. To compile and run Java programs it is much better to use an IDE such as Eclipse or Netbeans.
However, if you must...
None of this works because you are trying to pass Linux-style paths to the Windows JVM. However you seem to have a more basic misunderstanding:
# !bin/bash
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar
javac ./src/TimeTester.java
java TimeTester
I am surmising that you think the first two statements make the libraries available to the compiler for the third javac line. This is not true, those two lines attempt to execute the jar file, which of course fails since the jar does not contain a main class
What you should be doing is providing those two library paths as arguments to the -cp option of the javac command.
This is where it gets quite tricky, as you are mixing a Linux-style shell emulator with a Windows JVM. Paths that are intended for the shell must remain in Linux style, while paths that are going to be consumed by the JVM must be converted to Windows format, and path strings for the JVM must be delimited with semicolon (Windows style) instead of colon (Linux style). That introduces a further complication since the semicolon in Cygwin (Linux) is the delimiter for multiple commands on one line, so the path string must be quoted to prevent the semicolon from breaking things.
Also problematic is the naming of the class to be compiled. You have not shown us the package declaration of the Java file, but I'm assuming it's in the default package (i.e. there is no package declaration and it's not package src;). In that case you should be in the src directory, not one directory above.
Finally, once you specify -cp, you must also add the current directory to the classpath on Windows if you want it to be included, otherwise it will not find your newly-compiled .class file.
So the compile and execute commands should be
javac -cp '../lib/javax.json-1.0.jar;../lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar' TimeTester.java
java -cp '.;../lib/javax.json-1.0.jar;../lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar' TimeTester
For simple relative paths the Windows JVM will accept forward slashes, but if you have absolute Linux paths (i.e. /cygdrive/c/..., or with the cygdrive path set to /, paths like /c/user/...) the JVM will not understand them and they will need to be translated using cygpath.
None of your 4 commands work:
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar does not work because javax.json-1.0.jar is not an executable jar file.
java -jar ./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar does not work because javax.json-api-1.0.jar is not an executable jar file.
javac ./src/TimeTester.java does not work because your class requires classes from the javax.json package to be on the classpath, and you haven't set the classpath. Classes from the javax.json package are found in the javax.json-1.0.jar file.
java TimeTester does not work because the compilation failed.
To fix all that, remove the first two lines, and specify the classpath on the other two lines, e.g.
javac -cp ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar:./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar ./src/TimeTester.java
java -cp ./lib/javax.json-1.0.jar:./lib/javax.json-api-1.0.jar:./src TimeTester
Notice that you also had to list ./src on the classpath when executing your program.

Why isn't my java file running (bash)

I am writing a bash script that will let me run a java file from a different directory but I am not sure why my already compiled java file wont run. Relevant code:
#!/bin/bash
if [ "$1" == "JavaAdd" -o "$1" == "JavaAddBad" ]
then
echo "Testing $1"
`java ../Source/Java/"$1"`
else
echo "Invalid File"
fi
this script is under a Script directory. So both subdirectories Script and Source are in the same directory. My compiled java file is under /Source/Java
The parameter to java is not a path or file name.
It is a class name.
You can tell Java where to find it by specifiying a classpath.
java -cp ../somewhere/classes:../../somewhereElse/x.jar com.me.MyClass
The class will then be looked for in all the locations on the classpath. Each location can be either a directory or a jar file.
Also note that the directory you give to the classpath needs to put to the root of your class package hierarchy. So if your class is called com.me.MyClass and it is in a file at ../somewhere/classes/com/me/MyClass.class, you need to include ../somewhere/classes (not any of its subdirectories).
Also note that including a class path does not change the working directory for the program. It will still resolve relative paths when opening files based on the directory where you started it (completely unrelated to where the class files are).

What are the common errors you see when you run 'java -cp ...' or 'java -classpath'? How do you set a directory of jars in classpath? [duplicate]

Is there a way to include all the jar files within a directory in the classpath?
I'm trying java -classpath lib/*.jar:. my.package.Program and it is not able to find class files that are certainly in those jars. Do I need to add each jar file to the classpath separately?
Using Java 6 or later, the classpath option supports wildcards. Note the following:
Use straight quotes (")
Use *, not *.jar
Windows
java -cp "Test.jar;lib/*" my.package.MainClass
Unix
java -cp "Test.jar:lib/*" my.package.MainClass
This is similar to Windows, but uses : instead of ;. If you cannot use wildcards, bash allows the following syntax (where lib is the directory containing all the Java archive files):
java -cp "$(printf %s: lib/*.jar)"
(Note that using a classpath is incompatible with the -jar option. See also: Execute jar file with multiple classpath libraries from command prompt)
Understanding Wildcards
From the Classpath document:
Class path entries can contain the basename wildcard character *, which is considered equivalent to specifying a list of all the files
in the directory with the extension .jar or .JAR. For example, the
class path entry foo/* specifies all JAR files in the directory named
foo. A classpath entry consisting simply of * expands to a list of all
the jar files in the current directory.
A class path entry that contains * will not match class files. To
match both classes and JAR files in a single directory foo, use either
foo;foo/* or foo/*;foo. The order chosen determines whether the
classes and resources in foo are loaded before JAR files in foo, or
vice versa.
Subdirectories are not searched recursively. For example, foo/* looks
for JAR files only in foo, not in foo/bar, foo/baz, etc.
The order in which the JAR files in a directory are enumerated in the
expanded class path is not specified and may vary from platform to
platform and even from moment to moment on the same machine. A
well-constructed application should not depend upon any particular
order. If a specific order is required then the JAR files can be
enumerated explicitly in the class path.
Expansion of wildcards is done early, prior to the invocation of a
program's main method, rather than late, during the class-loading
process itself. Each element of the input class path containing a
wildcard is replaced by the (possibly empty) sequence of elements
generated by enumerating the JAR files in the named directory. For
example, if the directory foo contains a.jar, b.jar, and c.jar, then
the class path foo/* is expanded into foo/a.jar;foo/b.jar;foo/c.jar,
and that string would be the value of the system property
java.class.path.
The CLASSPATH environment variable is not treated any differently from
the -classpath (or -cp) command-line option. That is, wildcards are
honored in all these cases. However, class path wildcards are not
honored in the Class-Path jar-manifest header.
Note: due to a known bug in java 8, the windows examples must use a backslash preceding entries with a trailing asterisk: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8131329
Under Windows this works:
java -cp "Test.jar;lib/*" my.package.MainClass
and this does not work:
java -cp "Test.jar;lib/*.jar" my.package.MainClass
Notice the *.jar, so the * wildcard should be used alone.
On Linux, the following works:
java -cp "Test.jar:lib/*" my.package.MainClass
The separators are colons instead of semicolons.
We get around this problem by deploying a main jar file myapp.jar which contains a manifest (Manifest.mf) file specifying a classpath with the other required jars, which are then deployed alongside it. In this case, you only need to declare java -jar myapp.jar when running the code.
So if you deploy the main jar into some directory, and then put the dependent jars into a lib folder beneath that, the manifest looks like:
Manifest-Version: 1.0
Implementation-Title: myapp
Implementation-Version: 1.0.1
Class-Path: lib/dep1.jar lib/dep2.jar
NB: this is platform-independent - we can use the same jars to launch on a UNIX server or on a Windows PC.
My solution on Ubuntu 10.04 using java-sun 1.6.0_24 having all jars in "lib" directory:
java -cp .:lib/* my.main.Class
If this fails, the following command should work (prints out all *.jars in lib directory to the classpath param)
java -cp $(for i in lib/*.jar ; do echo -n $i: ; done). my.main.Class
Short answer: java -classpath lib/*:. my.package.Program
Oracle provides documentation on using wildcards in classpaths here for Java 6 and here for Java 7, under the section heading Understanding class path wildcards. (As I write this, the two pages contain the same information.) Here's a summary of the highlights:
In general, to include all of the JARs in a given directory, you can use the wildcard * (not *.jar).
The wildcard only matches JARs, not class files; to get all classes in a directory, just end the classpath entry at the directory name.
The above two options can be combined to include all JAR and class files in a directory, and the usual classpath precedence rules apply. E.g. -cp /classes;/jars/*
The wildcard will not search for JARs in subdirectories.
The above bullet points are true if you use the CLASSPATH system property or the -cp or -classpath command line flags. However, if you use the Class-Path JAR manifest header (as you might do with an ant build file), wildcards will not be honored.
Yes, my first link is the same one provided in the top-scoring answer (which I have no hope of overtaking), but that answer doesn't provide much explanation beyond the link. Since that sort of behavior is discouraged on Stack Overflow these days, I thought I'd expand on it.
Windows:
java -cp file.jar;dir/* my.app.ClassName
Linux:
java -cp file.jar:dir/* my.app.ClassName
Remind:
- Windows path separator is ;
- Linux path separator is :
- In Windows if cp argument does not contains white space, the "quotes" is optional
For me this works in windows .
java -cp "/lib/*;" sample
For linux
java -cp "/lib/*:" sample
I am using Java 6
You can try java -Djava.ext.dirs=jarDirectory
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/extensions/spec.html
Directory for external jars when running java
Correct:
java -classpath "lib/*:." my.package.Program
Incorrect:
java -classpath "lib/a*.jar:." my.package.Program
java -classpath "lib/a*:." my.package.Program
java -classpath "lib/*.jar:." my.package.Program
java -classpath lib/*:. my.package.Program
If you are using Java 6, then you can use wildcards in the classpath.
Now it is possible to use wildcards in classpath definition:
javac -cp libs/* -verbose -encoding UTF-8 src/mypackage/*.java -d build/classes
Ref: http://www.rekk.de/bloggy/2008/add-all-jars-in-a-directory-to-classpath-with-java-se-6-using-wildcards/
If you really need to specify all the .jar files dynamically you could use shell scripts, or Apache Ant. There's a commons project called Commons Launcher which basically lets you specify your startup script as an ant build file (if you see what I mean).
Then, you can specify something like:
<path id="base.class.path">
<pathelement path="${resources.dir}"/>
<fileset dir="${extensions.dir}" includes="*.jar" />
<fileset dir="${lib.dir}" includes="*.jar"/>
</path>
In your launch build file, which will launch your application with the correct classpath.
Please note that wildcard expansion is broken for Java 7 on Windows.
Check out this StackOverflow issue for more information.
The workaround is to put a semicolon right after the wildcard. java -cp "somewhere/*;"
To whom it may concern,
I found this strange behaviour on Windows under an MSYS/MinGW shell.
Works:
$ javac -cp '.;c:\Programs\COMSOL44\plugins\*' Reclaim.java
Doesn't work:
$ javac -cp 'c:\Programs\COMSOL44\plugins\*' Reclaim.java
javac: invalid flag: c:\Programs\COMSOL44\plugins\com.comsol.aco_1.0.0.jar
Usage: javac <options> <source files>
use -help for a list of possible options
I am quite sure that the wildcard is not expanded by the shell, because e.g.
$ echo './*'
./*
(Tried it with another program too, rather than the built-in echo, with the same result.)
I believe that it's javac which is trying to expand it, and it behaves differently whether there is a semicolon in the argument or not. First, it may be trying to expand all arguments that look like paths. And only then it would parse them, with -cp taking only the following token. (Note that com.comsol.aco_1.0.0.jar is the second JAR in that directory.) That's all a guess.
This is
$ javac -version
javac 1.7.0
All the above solutions work great if you develop and run the Java application outside any IDE like Eclipse or Netbeans.
If you are on Windows 7 and used Eclipse IDE for Development in Java, you might run into issues if using Command Prompt to run the class files built inside Eclipse.
E.g. Your source code in Eclipse is having the following package hierarchy:
edu.sjsu.myapp.Main.java
You have json.jar as an external dependency for the Main.java
When you try running Main.java from within Eclipse, it will run without any issues.
But when you try running this using Command Prompt after compiling Main.java in Eclipse, it will shoot some weird errors saying "ClassNotDef Error blah blah".
I assume you are in the working directory of your source code !!
Use the following syntax to run it from command prompt:
javac -cp ".;json.jar" Main.java
java -cp ".;json.jar" edu.sjsu.myapp.Main
[Don't miss the . above]
This is because you have placed the Main.java inside the package edu.sjsu.myapp and java.exe will look for the exact pattern.
Hope it helps !!
macOS, current folder
For Java 13 on macOS Mojaveā€¦
If all your .jar files are in the same folder, use cd to make that your current working directory. Verify with pwd.
For the -classpath you must first list the JAR file for your app. Using a colon character : as a delimiter, append an asterisk * to get all other JAR files within the same folder. Lastly, pass the full package name of the class with your main method.
For example, for an app in a JAR file named my_app.jar with a main method in a class named App in a package named com.example, alongside some needed jars in the same folder:
java -classpath my_app.jar:* com.example.App
For windows quotes are required and ; should be used as separator. e.g.:
java -cp "target\\*;target\\dependency\\*" my.package.Main
Short Form: If your main is within a jar, you'll probably need an additional '-jar pathTo/yourJar/YourJarsName.jar ' explicitly declared to get it working (even though 'YourJarsName.jar' was on the classpath)
(or, expressed to answer the original question that was asked 5 years ago: you don't need to redeclare each jar explicitly, but does seem, even with java6 you need to redeclare your own jar ...)
Long Form:
(I've made this explicit to the point that I hope even interlopers to java can make use of this)
Like many here I'm using eclipse to export jars: (File->Export-->'Runnable JAR File'). There are three options on 'Library handling' eclipse (Juno) offers:
opt1: "Extract required libraries into generated JAR"
opt2: "Package required libraries into generated JAR"
opt3: "Copy required libraries into a sub-folder next to the generated JAR"
Typically I'd use opt2 (and opt1 was definitely breaking), however native code in one of the jars I'm using I discovered breaks with the handy "jarinjar" trick that eclipse leverages when you choose that option. Even after realizing I needed opt3, and then finding this StackOverflow entry, it still took me some time to figure it out how to launch my main outside of eclipse, so here's what worked for me, as it's useful for others...
If you named your jar: "fooBarTheJarFile.jar"
and all is set to export to the dir: "/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir".
(meaning the 'Export destination' field will read: '/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile.jar' )
After you hit finish, you'll find eclipse then puts all the libraries into a folder named 'fooBarTheJarFile_lib' within that export directory, giving you something like:
/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile.jar
/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/SomeOtherJar01.jar
/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/SomeOtherJar02.jar
/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/SomeOtherJar03.jar
/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/SomeOtherJar04.jar
You can then launch from anywhere on your system with:
java -classpath "/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" -jar /theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile.jar package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main.TheClassWithYourMain
(For Java Newbies: 'package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main' is the declared package-path that you'll find at the top of the 'TheClassWithYourMain.java' file that contains the 'main(String[] args){...}' that you wish to run from outside java)
The pitfall to notice: is that having 'fooBarTheJarFile.jar' within the list of jars on your declared classpath is not enough. You need to explicitly declare '-jar', and redeclare the location of that jar.
e.g. this breaks:
java -classpath "/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile.jar;/theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" somepackages.inside.yourJar.leadingToTheMain.TheClassWithYourMain
restated with relative paths:
cd /theFully/qualifiedPath/toYourChosenDir/;
BREAKS: java -cp "fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main.TheClassWithYourMain
BREAKS: java -cp ".;fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main.TheClassWithYourMain
BREAKS: java -cp ".;fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" -jar package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main.TheClassWithYourMain
WORKS: java -cp ".;fooBarTheJarFile_lib/*" -jar fooBarTheJarFile.jar package.path_to.the_class_with.your_main.TheClassWithYourMain
(using java version "1.6.0_27"; via OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM on ubuntu 12.04)
You need to add them all separately. Alternatively, if you really need to just specify a directory, you can unjar everything into one dir and add that to your classpath. I don't recommend this approach however as you risk bizarre problems in classpath versioning and unmanagability.
The only way I know how is to do it individually, for example:
setenv CLASSPATH /User/username/newfolder/jarfile.jar:jarfile2.jar:jarfile3.jar:.
Hope that helps!
class from wepapp:
> mvn clean install
> java -cp "webapp/target/webapp-1.17.0-SNAPSHOT/WEB-INF/lib/tool-jar-1.17.0-SNAPSHOT.jar;webapp/target/webapp-1.17.0-SNAPSHOT/WEB-INF/lib/*" com.xx.xx.util.EncryptorUtils param1 param2
Think of a jar file as the root of a directory structure. Yes, you need to add them all separately.
Not a direct solution to being able to set /* to -cp but I hope you could use the following script to ease the situation a bit for dynamic class-paths and lib directories.
libDir2Scan4jars="../test";cp=""; for j in `ls ${libDir2Scan4jars}/*.jar`; do if [ "$j" != "" ]; then cp=$cp:$j; fi; done; echo $cp| cut -c2-${#cp} > .tmpCP.tmp; export tmpCLASSPATH=`cat .tmpCP.tmp`; if [ "$tmpCLASSPATH" != "" ]; then echo .; echo "classpath set, you can now use ~> java -cp \$tmpCLASSPATH"; echo .; else echo .; echo "Error please check libDir2Scan4jars path"; echo .; fi;
Scripted for Linux, could have a similar one for windows too. If proper directory is provided as input to the "libDir2Scan4jars"; the script will scan all the jars and create a classpath string and export it to a env variable "tmpCLASSPATH".
Set the classpath in a way suitable multiple jars and current directory's class files.
CLASSPATH=${ORACLE_HOME}/jdbc/lib/ojdbc6.jar:${ORACLE_HOME}/jdbc/lib/ojdbc14.jar:${ORACLE_HOME}/jdbc/lib/nls_charset12.jar;
CLASSPATH=$CLASSPATH:/export/home/gs806e/tops/jconn2.jar:.;
export CLASSPATH
I have multiple jars in a folder. The below command worked for me in JDK1.8 to include all jars present in the folder. Please note that to include in quotes if you have a space in the classpath
Windows
Compiling: javac -classpath "C:\My Jars\sdk\lib\*" c:\programs\MyProgram.java
Running: java -classpath "C:\My Jars\sdk\lib\*;c:\programs" MyProgram
Linux
Compiling: javac -classpath "/home/guestuser/My Jars/sdk/lib/*" MyProgram.java
Running: java -classpath "/home/guestuser/My Jars/sdk/lib/*:/home/guestuser/programs" MyProgram
Order of arguments to java command is also important:
c:\projects\CloudMirror>java Javaside -cp "jna-5.6.0.jar;.\"
Error: Unable to initialize main class Javaside
Caused by: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: com/sun/jna/Callback
versus
c:\projects\CloudMirror>java -cp "jna-5.6.0.jar;.\" Javaside
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: Unable

java classpath in unix

I can run java in cygwin+windows using the following settings (the sw/jar directory has several jar files, and I pick the relevant one from the java command line):
CLASSPATH=.;C:\sw\java_6u35\lib\\*;C:\sw\jar\\*
java org.antlr.Tool Calc.g
But I am having the following problems when running in linux:
(1) I can't set a directory name in a classpath, the following line reports an error:
setenv CLASSPATH .:/sw/jdk1.6.0_35/lib/\*:/sw/jar/*
(2) when I run explictly with -jar option, I still get an error:
java -jar /sw/jar/antlr-3.4.jar org.antlr.Tool Calc.g
error(7): cannot find or open file: org.antlr.Tool
However, the class does exist. When I do jar tf /sw/jar/antlr-3.4.jar, I get:
...
org/antlr/Tool.class
So my question is: (a) how do I specify in unix that my jar-directory is xxx that contains several jar files, and (2) how do I pick the relevant jar from this dir at runtime?
To specify multiple jars in a directory, directly in the java command, use this
java -cp "/sw/jar/*" org.antlr.Tool Calc.g
This will include all the jars
If you want to set the classpath in Unix/Linux systems, use this
export CLASSPATH=/sw/jar/a.jar:/sw/jar/b.jar
in unix use this to set the classpath:
export CLASSPATH=myClassPath
about not finding your jar, you're using a leading slash (/), that means that you path is absolute (not relative to your home folder) is this what you want?
if you want the path to be relative to your folder try:
java -jar ~/mypathToMyJar

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