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After some searching on Google and here, I still haven't found any answer to the following:

Is there a reason that JAR manifests don't just use the properties format?

I am guessing this is historical but it would be nice to know how exactly this came to be – was the decision not to use properties format explicitly made or was the properties format developed after the manifest format?

As far as I can see there would be no technical reason, though manifest format seems a bit more readable.

3 Answers 3

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Good question. I can only speculate.

But one important detail about the Properties implementation (although not necessarily the specification of the file format) is that it doesn't support multiple values with the same key (which you need for per-entry values in the manifest) and for keeping and representing the order of its entries.

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  • Those are important things for manifests. So while this provides a reason for any kind of deviation from the properties format at all, the question remains why the basic format wasn't kept the same (in fact, wouldn't it have been better to just make the Properties implementation more general?).
    – user256434
    Feb 24, 2010 at 23:25
  • As I'm new to StackOverflow I'm not sure what the "standard procedure" is for accepting answers. I'm just going to wait another day or two and if there are no more answers I'll accept this one -- it's the best so far and brings up an interesting difference between the two formats.
    – user256434
    Feb 26, 2010 at 3:42
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It's probably a historical thing. The manifest format is more restrictive about certain things like maximum line length. It also has a bunch of rules about jar signing, but I think that stuff was added later.

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  • I just checked up on those signing rules and they basically reduce to @Joachim's comment, i.e. allowing multiple values with the same key and keeping the order intact. As for the maximum line length, good point! It's 70 characters (and according to Wikipedia there are some issues with interpreting the wrapping rules).
    – user256434
    Feb 24, 2010 at 23:22
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You need to also consider the bootstrap problem. The manifest of the first JAR file loaded may not be read by Java code at all ...

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  • Non argument - for consistency they could have built their bootstrap using the same specification for persistence.
    – Newtopian
    Feb 25, 2010 at 5:25
  • Of course, but it does make clear that java.util.Properties isn't necessarily available and free to use at all times.
    – user207421
    Feb 25, 2010 at 12:55

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