What does the D in
-Dproperty=value
Set a system property value.
Of the Java application launcher stand for? For some reason it's been bothering me, why D?
What does the D in
-Dproperty=value
Set a system property value.
Of the Java application launcher stand for? For some reason it's been bothering me, why D?
I've always assumed it was to define the value of a property... possibly a legacy from C compilers, which often use -D
as similar to #define
in code.
EDIT: The closest I have to a source for this at the moment is some JDK 1.1 documentation which specifies the flag as:
Redefines a property value. propertyName is the name of the property whose value you want to change and newValue is the value to change it to. [...]
That at least contains the word "redefine" which is close to "define" :)
java -Dmydir="some string" SomeClass
the part of SomeClass
which class is it referring to? I'm using it to get an external .properties
file modify certain attributes on my program, using Spring, Struts2 and Tomcat 8.5. My thoughts are that it's referring to the class with the main
method, but in my case no main
method exists as it's a web application, could you explain it to me?
In C/C++ compilers the similar syntax is used to define preprocessor macros from the command line:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
printf(GREETING);
return 0;
}
.
gcc hello.c -DGREETING="\"Hello, world\""
Java doesn't have a preprocessor, but properties defined with -D
are ofter used for the similar reason - to pass some program-specific information about the current environment. The only difference is that in Java we pass them in runtime, not in compile-time:
public class Hello {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println(System.getProperty("greeting"));
}
}
.
java -Dgreeting="Hello, world" Hello
I think this similarity is the source of similar syntax.
The reason is D stands for DEFINE, because what that command switch does is defining variables.