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I want to distribute a command-line application written in Java on Windows.

My application is distributed as a zip file, which has a lib directory entry which has the .jar files needed for invoking my main class. Currently, for Unix environments, I have a shell script which invokes the java command with a CLASSPATH created by appending all files in lib directory.

How do I write a .BAT file with similar functionality? What is the equivalent of find Unix command in Windows world?

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5 Answers

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Why would you use find? Presumably you know all the libraries your jar file needs ahead of time, so why not just list them?

Alternatively, you could always use -Djava.ext.dirs=lib and let it pick up everything that way.

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Jon, I wasn't aware of the java.ext.dirs system property - thanks! Imagine an application where you want the user to drop the driver jar in the lib directory, edit a property file and connect to a database using JDBC - my application is similar, and I do not know the CLASSPATH ahead of time. – binil Feb 8 at 5:27
@binil: Yes, that makes sense. It was just your description in the question which made it sound like all the files you needed were in the zip file. – Jon Skeet Feb 8 at 7:43
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Sounds like an executable JAR could work for you. If you're distributing a ZIP with all the JARs your main routine needs, and you really execute it in a command shell, perhaps you could create an executable JAR with the Main-Class and Classpath defined in the manifest. All your users have to do is double click on the JAR and Bob's your uncle.

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Yes, thanks for reminding me of this option! I think I consider should executable JARs with an appropriate manifest entry. – binil Feb 8 at 5:29
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What I do when I release command-line JARs for Windows/Linux is to embed all the JAR libraries inside my JAR using the ANT command:

       <fileset dir="${module.classes.dir}"/>
       <zipfileset src="${endorsed.lib.dir}/myLibrary.jar"/>

In this way the libraries are melt together with your class files.

It is not the best way of binary reusability, but if the libraries are not so heavy, you have your application executed by simply calling java -jar myApp.jar in any OS.

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I (think I) cannot use this "uberjar" idea because I use two spring jars, which embed different XML schema definitions in entries with the same name, which I might need to merge by hand and would be an extra build step. – binil Feb 8 at 5:32
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Since 6.0, Java supports wildcard classpaths.

Java command-line classpath syntax

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Thanks, I was not aware of this feature! But my target environment is Java5, so I might not be able to use this technique in this application. – binil Feb 8 at 5:30
vote up 7 vote down

You want to use the for loop in Batch script

 @echo off
 setLocal EnableDelayedExpansion
 set CLASSPATH="
 for /R ./lib %%a in (*.jar) do (
   set CLASSPATH=!CLASSPATH!;%%a
 )
 set CLASSPATH=!CLASSPATH!"
 echo !CLASSPATH!

This really helped me when I was looking for a batch script to iterate through all the files in a directory, it's about deleting files but it's very useful. http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2008/04/17/8399914.aspx

To be honest, use Jon's answer though, far better if all the files are in one directory, this might help you out at another time though.

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+1 since it's the only one that answered the specific question. – paxdiablo Feb 7 at 23:14

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