86

I would like to get a list of all the classes belonging to a certain package as well as all of their children. The classes may or may not be already loaded in the JVM.

0

13 Answers 13

126

It's not a programmatic solution but you can run

java -verbose:class ....

and the JVM will dump out what it's loading, and from where.

[Opened /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]
[Opened /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/sunrsasign.jar]
[Opened /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/jsse.jar]
[Opened /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/jce.jar]
[Opened /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/charsets.jar]
[Loaded java.lang.Object from /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]
[Loaded java.io.Serializable from /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]
[Loaded java.lang.Comparable from /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]
[Loaded java.lang.CharSequence from /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]
[Loaded java.lang.String from /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.1/jre/lib/rt.jar]

See here for more details.

7
  • 1
    The questions asks "Get a list of all Classes loaded in the JVM", not the list of ".jar" loaded. Feb 1, 2019 at 9:59
  • 2
    The above output details the jars opened and the subsequent class loading Feb 1, 2019 at 10:07
  • Right, in the first moment I only have read ".jar" in the extreme right ... my mistake. sorry! Feb 1, 2019 at 10:16
  • is this a hack of some sorts? would this verbose level get adjusted by user configuration?
    – Sajuuk
    Apr 29, 2019 at 12:45
  • if there's one JVM per java process, i.e. there can be many JVM(java process) running on one machine, then which JVM does your command output correspond?
    – Sajuuk
    May 5, 2019 at 5:07
33

using the Reflections library, it's easy as:

Reflections reflections = new Reflections("my.pkg", new SubTypesScanner(false));

That would scan all classes in the url/s that contains my.pkg package.

  • the false parameter means - don't exclude the Object class, which is excluded by default.
  • in some scenarios (different containers) you might pass the classLoader as well as a parameter.

So, getting all classes is effectively getting all subtypes of Object, transitively:

Set<String> allClasses = 
    reflections.getStore().getSubTypesOf(Object.class.getName());

(The ordinary way reflections.getSubTypesOf(Object.class) would cause loading all classes into PermGen and would probably throw OutOfMemoryError. you don't want to do it...)

If you want to get all direct subtypes of Object (or any other type), without getting its transitive subtypes all in once, use this:

Collection<String> directSubtypes = 
    reflections.getStore().get(SubTypesScanner.class).get(Object.class.getName());
3
  • What Reflections lib version are you using? This example does not work with Reflections 0.9.5. Feb 14, 2014 at 14:52
  • 1
    Nevermind, just got it working using reflections-0.9.9-RC1-uberjar Feb 14, 2014 at 14:58
  • 3
    You only have to go through the suffering that is adding another library to your project. You're not allowed to use the word "easy" when the language in question in Java. You gave me hope thinking this was the standard reflection that's part of the JDK. Jan 14, 2015 at 21:55
25

There are multiple answers to this question, partly due to ambiguous question - the title is talking about classes loaded by the JVM, whereas the contents of the question says "may or may not be loaded by the JVM".

Assuming that OP needs classes that are loaded by the JVM by a given classloader, and only those classes - my need as well - there is a solution (elaborated here) that goes like this:

import java.net.URL;
import java.util.Enumeration;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Vector;

public class CPTest {

    private static Iterator list(ClassLoader CL)
        throws NoSuchFieldException, SecurityException,
        IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
        Class CL_class = CL.getClass();
        while (CL_class != java.lang.ClassLoader.class) {
            CL_class = CL_class.getSuperclass();
        }
        java.lang.reflect.Field ClassLoader_classes_field = CL_class
                .getDeclaredField("classes");
        ClassLoader_classes_field.setAccessible(true);
        Vector classes = (Vector) ClassLoader_classes_field.get(CL);
        return classes.iterator();
    }

    public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception {
        ClassLoader myCL = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
        while (myCL != null) {
            System.out.println("ClassLoader: " + myCL);
            for (Iterator iter = list(myCL); iter.hasNext();) {
                System.out.println("\t" + iter.next());
            }
            myCL = myCL.getParent();
        }
    }

}

One of the neat things about it is that you can choose an arbitrary classloader you want to check. It is however likely to break should internals of classloader class change, so it is to be used as one-off diagnostic tool.

9
  • 1
    @MichaelPlautz the difference is that the other is the thread context class loader and the other is the class loader used by given class. There are a lot of different classloaders used by java, which I won't elaborate in this comment space. The reason is that it is assumed that thread context classloader parent relation would include the whole of JVM, whereas class classloader might not.
    – eis
    Jul 17, 2015 at 18:37
  • 1
    You can avoid the while loop by just doing ClassLoader.class.getDeclaredField("classes").
    – metasim
    May 19, 2016 at 20:11
  • 1
    @NathanH in android there is no such field. Compare android classloader with java se classloader
    – eis
    Sep 20, 2016 at 8:57
  • 1
    @IrfanLatif I haven't got much experience with android, so can't help you there. In general, a new question is for new topics :)
    – eis
    Feb 26, 2021 at 11:34
  • 1
    this answer for java11+ is not valid
    – vicangel
    Nov 6, 2022 at 20:49
11

I'd also suggest you write a -javagent agent, but use the getAllLoadedClasses method instead of transforming any classes.

To synchronize with your client code (Normal Java code), create a socket and communicate with the agent through it. Then you can trigger a "list all classes" method whenever you need.

10

An alternative approach to those described above would be to create an external agent using java.lang.instrument to find out what classes are loaded and run your program with the -javaagent switch:

import java.lang.instrument.ClassFileTransformer;
import java.lang.instrument.IllegalClassFormatException;
import java.security.ProtectionDomain;

public class SimpleTransformer implements ClassFileTransformer {

    public SimpleTransformer() {
        super();
    }

    public byte[] transform(ClassLoader loader, String className, Class redefiningClass, ProtectionDomain domain, byte[] bytes) throws IllegalClassFormatException {
        System.out.println("Loading class: " + className);
        return bytes;
    }
}

This approach has the added benefit of providing you with information about which ClassLoader loaded a given class.

5

List of all Classes loaded in the JVM

From Oracle doc you can use -Xlog option that has a possibility to write into file.

java -Xlog:class+load=info:classloaded.txt
1
3

Run your code under a JRockit JVM, then use JRCMD <PID> print_class_summary

This will output all loaded classes, one on each line.

3

One way if you already know the package top level path is to use OpenPojo

final List<PojoClass> pojoClasses = PojoClassFactory.getPojoClassesRecursively("my.package.path", null);

Then you can go over the list and perform any functionality you desire.

3

This program will prints all the classes with its physical path. use can simply copy this to any JSP if you need to analyse the class loading from any web/application server.

import java.lang.reflect.Field;
import java.util.Vector;

public class TestMain {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Field f;
        try {
            f = ClassLoader.class.getDeclaredField("classes");
            f.setAccessible(true);
            ClassLoader classLoader = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
            Vector<Class> classes =  (Vector<Class>) f.get(classLoader);

            for(Class cls : classes){
                java.net.URL location = cls.getResource('/' + cls.getName().replace('.',
                '/') + ".class");
                System.out.println("<p>"+location +"<p/>");
            }
        } catch (Exception e) {

            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}
1
  • 1
    this answer for java11+ is not valid
    – vicangel
    Nov 6, 2022 at 20:49
3

There's another possibility using VM.class_hierarchy, available since JDK 8 (tested on 1.8.0_322).

$ jcmd 44506 VM.class_hierarchy

This will give a result like that :

44506:
java.lang.Object/null
|--com.intellij.psi.impl.source.tree.JavaElementType$$Lambda$1163/0x0000000800cd86d8/0x0000600002f012c0
|--com.intellij.ide.IdeTooltipManager/0x0000600002f2c6e0
|--sun.security.ssl.SSLBasicKeyDerivation$SecretSizeSpec/null
|--com.intellij.openapi.editor.impl.view.EditorSizeManager$$Lambda$2094/0x0000000801774c38/0x0000600002f2c6e0
|--com.intellij.psi.util.CachedValueProfiler$EventPlace/0x0000600002f2c6e0 (intf)
|--io.ktor.utils.io.internal.ReadWriteBufferStateKt/0x0000600002fcd680
|--com.intellij.javascript.nodejs.library.core.codeInsight.NodePredefinedReferenceErrorUpdater/0x0000600002f13660
|--com.intellij.openapi.fileEditor.impl.FileDocumentManagerImpl$MyAsyncFileListener/0x0000600002f2c6e0
|--java.lang.management.ManagementFactory$PlatformMBeanFinder$$Lambda$89/0x000000080013e0b0/null
|--org.intellij.plugins.markdown.ui.preview.MarkdownHtmlPanelProvider$AvailabilityInfo/0x0000600002f0ada0
|  |--org.intellij.plugins.markdown.ui.preview.MarkdownHtmlPanelProvider$AvailabilityInfo$2/0x0000600002f0ada0
|  |--org.intellij.plugins.markdown.ui.preview.MarkdownHtmlPanelProvider$AvailabilityInfo$1/0x0000600002f0ada0
|--java.lang.invoke.LambdaForm$DMH/0x000000080012a800/null
|--git4idea.status.GitStagingAreaHolder$$Lambda$2907/0x0000000801d2e690/0x0000600002f41cc0
|--com.intellij.lang.javascript.refactoring.extractSuper.JSCustomExtractInterfaceHandler/0x0000600002f13660 (intf)
|--javax.xml.transform.stream.StreamSource/null
...
2

You might be able to get a list of classes that are loaded through the classloader but this would not include classes you haven't loaded yet but are on your classpath.

To get ALL classes on your classpath you have to do something like your second solution. If you really want classes that are currently "Loaded" (in other words, classes you have already referenced, accessed or instantiated) then you should refine your question to indicate this.

0

If you don't want any libraries and need this information given to you at runtime, you can use this for Java 11+. It finds all system modules loaded at runtime, iterates over their entries (path names) and collects class items.

public static List<String> getSystemClasses() {
    // Errorables is a util class to ignore exceptions on lambda types, easy enough to implement yourself
    return ModuleFinder.ofSystem().findAll().stream()
               .map(modRef -> Errorables.silent(modRef::open)) // open reader to each module
               .flatMap(modReader -> Errorables.silent(modReader::list)) // list all items in the module
               .filter(s -> s.endsWith(".class") && s.indexOf('-') == -1) // retain only classes (except module-info or package-info)
               .map(s -> s.substring(0, s.length() - 6)) // cut off '.class' from the path
               .collect(Collectors.toList());
}

If you need non-system classes then there are some conditions to consider. In both situations you can use a class reference to something in your project to get the needed context to find other classes.

If you want only the currently loaded classes, you can use reflection to access the Vector<Class<?>> classes in ClassLoader. This will not include classes from libraries and such that have not yet been initialized.

screenshot of only the initialized classes

If you want all classes of all libraries you have in a project then you'll want to use reflection to access the AppClassLoader's URLClassPath ucp. This will hold a ArrayList<URL> path containing URL's pointing to every directory/jar/etc holding referenced resources. Navigating those you can use path-walking to collect the names of class entries similar to the code snippet above.

screenshot of file path uris to referenced libraries

-9

Well, what I did was simply listing all the files in the classpath. It may not be a glorious solution, but it works reliably and gives me everything I want, and more.

3
  • 3
    Can you give a code snippet? that way others can benefit from your solution. thanks
    – jtzero
    Oct 6, 2011 at 0:45
  • 5
    @jtzero: I do not know what OP used, but for me System.getProperty("java.class.path") works well.
    – L.R.
    Jan 19, 2012 at 4:27
  • 3
    Please read How do I write a good answer? before attempting to answer more questions.
    – user177800
    Aug 13, 2017 at 7:45