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I am using NetBean and glassFish for developing jsp website and its server. In the server side, I have a java class which generate a text file using FileWriter:

FileWriter writer = new FileWriter("the-file-name.txt", true);

But I found that this file was saved in the directory of glassfish:

C:\Program Files (x86)\glassfish-4.0\glassfish\domains\domain1\config

Also, by checking the path by the code:

Path currentRelativePath = Paths.get("");
String s = currentRelativePath.toAbsolutePath().toString();
System.out.println("Current relative path is: " + s);

the result is also the same with the above path.

How can I get the correct relative path, whether the path of the project or the path of this java file?

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    Change to ".\some_folder\the-file-name.txt"? Jan 17, 2014 at 20:00
  • This class is called by a listener from web.xml: <listener> <listener-class>data.StartUpListener</listener-class> </listener> I am thinking this may be the reason why I get the wrong relative path Jan 17, 2014 at 20:26

2 Answers 2

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This gets the location of the class/jar you are running:

String path = System.getProperty("user.dir");

The string path holds the absolute directory, and using somthing like
path = path.replace("jars", "");, you can find the root directory for the application. For example, if the jar is in the directory C:\Program Files\Example\jars, this would set path to
C:\Program Files\Example\

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  • I also tried this method but I also get the same path: C:\Program Files (x86)\glassfish-4.0\glassfish\domains\domain1\config As I said in the previous comment I think this is cause by the method is called by listener from web.xml Jan 18, 2014 at 13:13
  • That must be, because this worked just fine for me. What about calling a via method, or whatever you want to call it, so you're basically encapsulating the main method that get's the path Jan 18, 2014 at 15:42
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In Servlet

String filePath = getServletContext().getRealPath("/").replace("\\", "/");

In JSP

String filePath = session.getServletContext().getRealPath("/").replace("\\", "/");

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