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I've spent far too much time trying to figure this out. This should be the simplest thing and everyone who distributes Java applications in jars must have to deal with it.

I just want to know the proper way to add versioning to my Java app so that I can access the version information when I'm testing, e.g. debugging in Eclipse and running from a jar.

Here's what I have in my build.xml:

<target name="jar" depends = "compile">
    <property name="version.num" value="1.0.0"/>
    <buildnumber file="build.num"/>
	<tstamp>
		<format property="TODAY" pattern="yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss" />
	</tstamp>

    <manifest file="${build}/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF">
    	<attribute name="Built-By" value="${user.name}" />
    	<attribute name="Built-Date" value="${TODAY}" />		    	   
        <attribute name="Implementation-Title" value="MyApp" />
        <attribute name="Implementation-Vendor" value="MyCompany" />	    		
        <attribute name="Implementation-Version" value="${version.num}-b${build.number}"/>	    				    	
    </manifest>

	<jar destfile="${build}/myapp.jar" basedir="${build}" excludes="*.jar" />			  		
</target>

This creates /META-INF/MANIFEST.MF and I can read the values when I'm debugging in Eclipse thusly:

public MyClass()
{
    try
    {                        
        InputStream stream = getClass().getResourceAsStream("/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF");
        Manifest manifest = new Manifest(stream);            

        Attributes attributes = manifest.getMainAttributes();

        String implementationTitle = attributes.getValue("Implementation-Title");
        String implementationVersion = attributes.getValue("Implementation-Version");
        String builtDate = attributes.getValue("Built-Date");
        String builtBy = attributes.getValue("Built-By");
   }
   catch (IOException e)
   {            
        logger.error("Couldn't read manifest.");
   }

}

But, when I create the jar file, it loads the manifest of another jar (presumably the first jar loaded by the application - in my case, activation.jar).

Also, the following code doesn't work either although all the proper values are in the manifest file.

    Package thisPackage = getClass().getPackage();
    String implementationVersion = thisPackage.getImplementationVersion();

Any ideas?

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6 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

Here's what I've found that works:

packageVersion.java:

package com.company.division.project.packageversion;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.jar.Attributes;
import java.util.jar.Manifest;

public class packageVersion
{
    void printVersion()
    {
        try
        {         
            InputStream stream = getClass().getResourceAsStream("/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF");

            if (stream == null)
            {
                System.out.println("Couldn't find manifest.");
                System.exit(0);
            }

            Manifest manifest = new Manifest(stream);

            Attributes attributes = manifest.getMainAttributes();

            String impTitle = attributes.getValue("Implementation-Title");
            String impVersion = attributes.getValue("Implementation-Version");
            String impBuildDate = attributes.getValue("Built-Date");
            String impBuiltBy = attributes.getValue("Built-By");

            if (impTitle != null)
            {
                System.out.println("Implementation-Title:   " + impTitle);
            }            
            if (impVersion != null)
            {
                System.out.println("Implementation-Version: " + impVersion);
            }
            if (impBuildDate != null)
            {
                System.out.println("Built-Date: " + impBuildDate);
            }
            if (impBuiltBy != null)
            {
                System.out.println("Built-By:   " + impBuiltBy);
            }

            System.exit(0);
        }
        catch (IOException e)
        {            
            System.out.println("Couldn't read manifest.");
        }        
    }

    /**
     * @param args
     */
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        packageVersion version = new packageVersion();
        version.printVersion();        
    }

}

Here's the matching build.xml:

<project name="packageVersion" default="run" basedir=".">

    <property name="src" location="src"/>
    <property name="build" location="bin"/>
    <property name="dist" location="dist"/>

    <target name="init">
    	<tstamp>
    		<format property="TIMESTAMP" pattern="yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss" />
    	</tstamp>
        <mkdir dir="${build}"/>
        <mkdir dir="${build}/META-INF"/>
    </target>

    <target name="compile" depends="init">
        <javac debug="on" srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}"/>
    </target>

    <target name="dist" depends = "compile">		
    	<mkdir dir="${dist}"/>		
    	<property name="version.num" value="1.0.0"/>
        <buildnumber file="build.num"/>
        <manifest file="${build}/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF">
        	<attribute name="Built-By" value="${user.name}" />
        	<attribute name="Built-Date" value="${TIMESTAMP}" />		    	      	        
            <attribute name="Implementation-Vendor" value="Company" />
        	<attribute name="Implementation-Title" value="PackageVersion" />
            <attribute name="Implementation-Version" value="${version.num} (b${build.number})"/>
        	<section name="com/company/division/project/packageversion">
        		<attribute name="Sealed" value="false"/>
        	</section>	    	
        </manifest>		
    	<jar destfile="${dist}/packageversion-${version.num}.jar" basedir="${build}" manifest="${build}/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF"/>			  		
    </target>

    <target name="clean">
        <delete dir="${build}"/>
        <delete dir="${dist}"/>
    </target>

    <target name="run" depends="dist">      
        <java classname="com.company.division.project.packageversion.packageVersion">
        	<arg value="-h"/>
            <classpath>
            	<pathelement location="${dist}/packageversion-${version.num}.jar"/>
            	<pathelement path="${java.class.path}"/>
            </classpath>
        </java>
    </target>

</project>
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vote up 1 vote down

Just don't use the manifest. Create a foo.properties.original file, with a content such as version=@VERSION@

And in ther same task you are jaring you can do a copy to copu foo.properties.original and then

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vote up 1 vote down

You want to use this:

Enumeration<URL> resources = Thread.getCurrent().getContextClassLoader().getResources("META-INF/MANIFEST.MF");

You can parse the URL to figure out WHICH jar the manifest if from and then read the URL via getInputStream() to parse the manifest.

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vote up 0 vote down

I will also usually use a version file. I will create one file per jar since each jar could have its own version.

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vote up 0 vote down

You can access the manifest (or any other) file within a jar if you use the same class loader to as was used to load the classes.

this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream( ... ) ;

If you are multi-threaded use the following:

Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream( ... ) ;

This is also a realy useful technique for including a default configuration file within the jar.

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vote up 0 vote down

ClassLoader.getResource(String) will load the first manifest it finds on the classpath, which may be the manifest for some other JAR file. Thus, you can either enumerate all the manifests to find the one you want or use some other mechanism, such as a properties file with a unique name.

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