15

Are there any built-in methods I can use to allow users to extract a file from the currently running JAR and save it on their disk?

Thanks in advance.

3 Answers 3

23
File file = new File("newname.ext");
if (!file.exists()) {
     InputStream link = (getClass().getResourceAsStream("/path/resources/filename.ext"));
     Files.copy(link, file.getAbsoluteFile().toPath());
}
1
  • Note that some of Files.copy implementation (java.nio.file.Files) does not close the input stream -> possible memory leak.
    – Vity
    Jan 25, 2018 at 7:24
10

Use getResourceAsStream (docs), you can do whatever you want with it after that.

For a two-liner you could use one of the Commons IO copy methods.

3
  • getResourceAsStream will give you access to any matching resource on the class path and not only a file withing the "currently running JAR", assuming that that is a JAR file executed with "java -jar <JAR-file>".
    – jarnbjo
    Jul 13, 2012 at 14:28
  • @jarnbjo Yep. And if the resource isn't properly packaged, that's possibly an issue, but given the question, I think the issue is much broader than needing it to come specifically from the "running jar", to the exclusion of all other resources packaged exactly the same. Jul 13, 2012 at 14:32
  • Note that you may want to specify an absolute path to the file in the jar. And then any class can be used. Example: InputStream is = Object.class.getResource("/" + filename).openStream(); Oct 26, 2016 at 14:23
0

I am not sure whether you will get know from which jar your class is getting executed but you can try this to extract resources from jar : How to write a Java program which can extract a JAR file and store its data in specified directory (location)?

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