156

What's the best way to quit a Java application with code?

2
  • 1
    Hmm. I think the question may be too general. Quit under what circumstances? Apr 19, 2010 at 21:22
  • 3
    Let all your non-daemon threads finish normally? Apr 19, 2010 at 21:35

12 Answers 12

202

You can use System.exit() for this purpose.

According to oracle's Java 8 documentation:

public static void exit(int status)

Terminates the currently running Java Virtual Machine. The argument serves as a status code; by convention, a nonzero status code indicates abnormal termination.

This method calls the exit method in class Runtime. This method never returns normally.

The call System.exit(n) is effectively equivalent to the call:

Runtime.getRuntime().exit(n)

0
109
System.exit(0);

The "0" lets whomever called your program know that everything went OK. If, however, you are quitting due to an error, you should System.exit(1);, or with another non-zero number corresponding to the specific error.

Also, as others have mentioned, clean up first! That involves closing files and other open resources.

2
  • I thought it was System.exit(1) ?
    – AFK
    Apr 19, 2010 at 21:21
  • 14
    As Chris states, System.exit(1) (or any other number) is if you want to indicate that it closed due to an error. System.exit(0) indicates that the program closed normally. You can also change 1 to any number you like, then when you are running your application from a script you can determine if there was an error.
    – StormFoo
    Nov 24, 2011 at 12:59
10

System.exit(int i) is to be used, but I would include it inside a more generic shutdown() method, where you would include "cleanup" steps as well, closing socket connections, file descriptors, then exiting with System.exit(x).

6

System.exit() is usually not the best way, but it depends on your application.

The usual way of ending an application is by exiting the main() method. This does not work when there are other non-deamon threads running, as is usual for applications with a graphical user interface (AWT, Swing etc.). For these applications, you either find a way to end the GUI event loop (don't know if that is possible with the AWT or Swing), or invoke System.exit().

4

Using dispose(); is a very effective way for closing your programs.

I found that using System.exit(x) resets the interactions pane and supposing you need some of the information there it all disappears.

3

I agree with Jon, have your application react to something and call System.exit().

Be sure that:

  • you use the appropriate exit value. 0 is normal exit, anything else indicates there was an error
  • you close all input and output streams. Files, network connections, etc.
  • you log or print a reason for exiting especially if its because of an error
1

The answer is System.exit(), but not a good thing to do as this aborts the program. Any cleaning up, destroy that you intend to do will not happen.

0

There's two simple answers to the question.

This is the "Professional way":

//This just terminates the program.
System.exit(0);

This is a more clumsier way:

//This just terminates the program, just like System.exit(0).
return;
1
  • System.exit(0); return; is good too, the return prevents any ruther code from being run before the System can exit, otherwise you'd need a flag (.. i.e. if (!called_exit) { further code after exit statement }
    – ycomp
    Apr 15, 2016 at 0:36
-1
Runtime.getCurrentRumtime().halt(0);
3
  • 1
    Better: Runtime.getRuntime().halt(0); Worked perfectly for me within Scala! May 27, 2013 at 11:53
  • @GerhardHagerer but what if you get the not current runti,me?
    – Dude Bro
    Jun 25, 2013 at 14:06
  • 1
    From the Javadoc for halt: "This method should be used with extreme caution. Unlike the exit method, this method does not cause shutdown hooks to be started and does not run uninvoked finalizers if finalization-on-exit has been enabled. If the shutdown sequence has already been initiated then this method does not wait for any running shutdown hooks or finalizers to finish their work." In short, you shouldn't need to use halt, you should prefer exit. Jun 11, 2017 at 3:05
-2

System.exit() will do what you want. But in most situations, you probably want to exit a thread, and leave the main thread alive. By doing that, you can terminate a task, but also keep the ability to start another task without restarting the app.

-3

System.exit(ABORT); Quit's the process immediately.

1
  • There is no such variable as ABORT.
    – Al V
    Aug 22, 2016 at 18:42
-3

This should do it in the correct way:

mainFrame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE);
mainFrame.addWindowListener(new WindowListener() {

@Override
public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e) {
    if (doQuestion("Really want to exit?")) {
      mainFrame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
      mainFrame.dispose();
    }
}

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