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I'm writing a groovy script that I want to be controlled via a properties file stored in the same folder. However, I want to be able to call this script from anywhere. When I run the script it always looks for the properties file based on where it is run from, not where the script is.

How can I access the path of the script file from within the script?

6 Answers 6

88

You are correct that new File(".").getCanonicalPath() does not work. That returns the working directory.

To get the script directory

scriptDir = new File(getClass().protectionDomain.codeSource.location.path).parent

To get the script file path

scriptFile = getClass().protectionDomain.codeSource.location.path
8
  • 1
    Interesting. It doesn't work the way I expected it to. But that is due to the fact I am running a gant script from gant. So the codeSource is actually where gant is, not where my script is. Jul 23, 2009 at 17:44
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    Doesn't work for me. getClass().protectionDomain.codeSource returns null. I'm using Groovy 2.0.1.
    – quux00
    Mar 13, 2014 at 21:35
  • Doesn't work on 1.11 either, returns something like: .gradle/caches/1.11/scripts/build_189dc3r2nd588m3657jv5d36h7..
    – minsk
    Jul 23, 2014 at 21:08
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    @quux00: Try MyClassName.class.protectionDomain.codeSource instead (ref. stackoverflow.com/questions/11747833/… )
    – neu242
    Jun 17, 2016 at 10:11
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    depending on how it's run, I get either /groovy for the parent or the correct directory. What about this: getClass().getResource('/${yourScript}.groovy') That works for me assuming your script is on the classpath Feb 2, 2018 at 5:55
22

As of Groovy 2.3.0 the @SourceURI annotation can be used to populate a variable with the URI of the script's location. This URI can then be used to get the path to the script:

import groovy.transform.SourceURI
import java.nio.file.Path
import java.nio.file.Paths

@SourceURI
URI sourceUri

Path scriptLocation = Paths.get(sourceUri)

Note that this will only work if the URI is a file: URI (or another URI scheme type with an installed FileSystemProvider), otherwise a FileSystemNotFoundException will be thrown by the Paths.get(URI) call. In particular, certain Groovy runtimes such as groovyshell and nextflow return a data: URI, which will not typically match an installed FileSystemProvider.

7
  • 6
    java.nio.file.FileSystemNotFoundException: Provider "data" not installed Jan 28, 2019 at 14:45
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    @HuguesFontenelle What's the sourceUri value when you get that exception? Or does that happen on the @SourceUri line and not when you convert it to a Path?
    – M. Justin
    Jan 28, 2019 at 15:00
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    @HuguesFontenelle According to the docs for @SourceURI, the resulting value will be an instance of java.net.URI; plus the map you're showing are the properties of the java.net.URI class. Are you sure it's actually a map that's being set, and not actually a URI? Regardless, this looks like a data URL, not a file URL. Is the source of the script actually a local file, and not something that's been serialized over the network or something like that? In that case, there wouldn't even be a corresponding file, which explains why you couldn't convert it to a Path.
    – M. Justin
    Jan 29, 2019 at 15:47
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    @HuguesFontenelle How are you running the script? Per the answers to this question ( stackoverflow.com/questions/26240588/… ), the @SourceURI approach does not work if running from the Groovy console, which I've confirmed locally. What happens when you run the script directly from the command line? e.g. groovy sourceUriTest.groovy, replacing "sourceUriTest.groovy" with your actual script file?
    – M. Justin
    Jan 29, 2019 at 15:56
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    I'm using nextflow which uses groovy, and I just found out that the file path was available to me using workflow.scriptFile (or workflow. projectDir for the dir path). Thanks for looking into this! Jan 30, 2019 at 12:47
11

This makes sense if you are running the Groovy code as a script, otherwise the whole idea gets a little confusing, IMO. The workaround is here: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-1642

Basically this involves changing startGroovy.sh to pass in the location of the Groovy script as an environment variable.

As long as this information is not provided directly by Groovy, it's possible to modify the groovy.(sh|bat) starter script to make this property available as system property: For unix boxes just change $GROOVY_HOME/bin/groovy (the sh script) to do

export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dscript.name=$0"

before calling startGroovy For Windows: In startGroovy.bat add the following 2 lines right after the line with the :init label (just before the parameter slurping starts):

@rem get name of script to launch with full path
set GROOVY_SCRIPT_NAME=%~f1

A bit further down in the batch file after the line that says "set JAVA_OPTS=%JAVA_OPTS% -Dgroovy.starter.conf="%STARTER_CONF%" add the line

set JAVA_OPTS=%JAVA_OPTS% -Dscript.name="%GROOVY_SCRIPT_NAME%" 
1

For gradle user

I have same issue when I'm starting to work with gradle. I want to compile my thrift by remote thrift compiler (custom by my company).

Below is how I solved my issue:

task compileThrift {
doLast {
        def projectLocation = projectDir.getAbsolutePath(); // HERE is what you've been looking for.
        ssh.run {
            session(remotes.compilerServer) {
                // Delete existing thrift file.
                cleanGeneratedFiles()
                new File("$projectLocation/thrift/").eachFile() { f ->
                    def fileName=f.getName()
                    if(f.absolutePath.endsWith(".thrift")){
                        put from: f, into: "$compilerLocation/$fileName"
                    }
                }
                execute "mkdir -p $compilerLocation/gen-java"
                def compileResult = execute "bash $compilerLocation/genjar $serviceName", logging: 'stdout', pty: true
                assert compileResult.contains('SUCCESSFUL')
                get from: "$compilerLocation/$serviceName" + '.jar', into: "$projectLocation/libs/"
            }
        }
    }
}
1

One more solution. It works perfect even you run the script using GrovyConsole

File getScriptFile(){
    new File(this.class.classLoader.getResourceLoader().loadGroovySource(this.class.name).toURI())
}

println getScriptFile()
0

workaround: for us it was running in an ANT environment and storing some location parent (knowing the subpath) in the Java environment properties (System.setProperty( "dirAncestor", "/foo" )) we could access the dir ancestor via Groovy's properties.get('dirAncestor').
maybe this will help for some scenarios mentioned here.

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