The para-answer is that you shouldn't be downloading jars by hand at all, you should be using Gradle, Ivy, Maven, or something similar to manage your jars for you. These tools take a simple specification of your dependencies as input, and go and find, download, store, and make available all the necessary jar files. This takes a little bit of getting used to, but are rather wonderful once you're in the swing of it.
A direct answer, though, is that on orthodox unix, these files belong in /usr/local/share
. usr
because they're read-only data that is not part of the base operating system, local
because they are not being supplied by the operating system (which owns the rest of /usr
), and share
because jar files are architecture-independent.
Note that on FreeBSD, the 'ports' package management system puts files in /usr/local
, but i believe it shares it with the local administrator. There isn't some other location where purely local files go.
If the system has a convention for where package-managed jars go, then copy that under /usr/local
. For example, on Ubuntu, there is /usr/share/java
, so you should use /usr/local/share/java
.
Further, if the system has a convention for handling versions, copy that. Again, on Ubuntu, jars are all stored in one directory, with version numbers in the name, but with a versionless symlink pointing to the default/latest version. So, i have a file at /usr/share/java/xstream-1.3.1.jar
, and a symlink at /usr/share/java/xstream.jar
pointing to it. I'd use the same approach in /usr/local/share/java
.
Now, that's for orthodox unix. You're on OS X, which is not orthodox unix. Still, the principles apply: find how the system stores jars it provides, and transpose that into a user-managed filesystem space.