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I have a maven project that has resources packaged inside src/main/resources. That dependency uses the weka library, specifically the AddClassification class that in its AddClassification.setOptions() method uses the java.io.FILE class to read a given model file. Maybe its also important to notice that this project is a dependency of other maven projects and that in the end it will be used by a web app application running inside apache-tomcat.

For clarification the method AddClassification.setOptions() is called like this:

AddClassification filter = new AddClassification();
filter.setInputFormat(labeled);
String[] options = new String[3];
options[0] = "-serialized";
options[1] = "models/trained.model";
options[2] = "-classification";
filter.setOptions(options);

So, down to my problems and needs:

  • I need to pass a file path string to the AddClassification.setOptions();
  • I need to use the weka library as this little dependency wasn't codded by myself;
  • All model files should be inside the Jar file (src/main/resources) to allow convenient distribution;
  • java.io.File won't read files inside the Jar file directly (i have looked it up);
  • I know that class.getResourceAsStream would solve the problem nicely but the weka library wants a String parameter to use java.io.File.

How can i solve the problem? I could easily copy all resources to a hardcoded system directory but that would make my project a pain to distribute to other systems. I'm looking for a correct way to solve the problem.

I hope that i made myself clear enough.

1
  • you can't, libraries that rely on implementations like this are poorly written and designed
    – user177800
    Jul 14, 2014 at 14:55

3 Answers 3

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Looking through the code the simplest way I can see to achieve it would be to subclass AddClassification and override the protected getActualClassifier method to load your classifier from a getResourceAsStream. Annoyingly you still have to ensure that you pass a path to a file that definitely exists to setOptions otherwise it'll complain, but you may be able to get away with something like /dev/null or /bin/sh as you don't need to actually read from the file, it just has to exist.

AddClassification filter = new AddClassification() {
  protected Classifier getActualClassifier() {
    ObjectInputStream   ois;

    if (m_ActualClassifier == null) {
      try {
        ois = new ObjectInputStream(
                     this.getClass().getResourceAsStream("classifier.ser"));
        m_ActualClassifier = (Classifier) ois.readObject();
        m_SerializedHeader = null;
        // let's see whether there's an Instances header stored as well
        try {
          m_SerializedHeader = (Instances) ois.readObject();
        }
        catch (Exception e) {
          // ignored
          m_SerializedHeader = null;
        }
        ois.close();
      }
      catch (Exception e) {
        m_ActualClassifier = null;
        System.err.println("Failed to instantiate classifier:");
        e.printStackTrace();
      }
    }

    return m_ActualClassifier;
  }
};

filter.setInputFormat(labeled);
String[] options = new String[3];
options[0] = "-serialized";
options[1] = "/dev/null";
options[2] = "-classification";
filter.setOptions(options);
-1

You can always copy your resource to a temporary file:

Path file = Files.createTempFile(null, null);

try (InputStream stream =
    MyOwnClass.class.getResourceAsStream("models/trained.model")) {

    Files.copy(stream, file, StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
}

options[1] = file.toString();
-2

Please just try that

AddClassification filter = new AddClassification();
filter.setInputFormat(labeled);
String[] options = new String[3];
options[0] = "-serialized";
options[1] =  this.getClass().getResource("/models/trained.model").getFile();
options[2] = "-classification";
filter.setOptions(options);
1
  • 1
    URL.getFile() does not return a file name. It returns the path portion of a URL, which might contain escaped octets and therefore is not guaranteed to correspond to an existing file path. The method is named getFile() because the URL class is very old, part of Java 1.0 in fact, and back then, URLs frequently referred to physical files (such as in ftp: URLs). Compare new URL("file:/C:/Program%20Files/Microsoft") with new File("C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft").
    – VGR
    Jul 14, 2014 at 14:41

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