How do I create a new URL
object using a local file, for the purpose of unit tests?
new File(path).toURI().toURL();
-
24
Using Java 7:
Paths.get(string).toUri().toURL();
However, you probably want to get a URI
. Eg, a URI
begins with file:///
but a URL with file:/
(at least, that's what toString
produces).
-
"...a URI begins with file:/// but a URL with file:/ ..." Is that the case for both Windows and Linux? – ptntialunrlsd Jul 13 '15 at 9:19
-
@ptntialunrlsd That is a good question. I haven't checked, but I would guess yes. – Aleksandr Dubinsky Jul 13 '15 at 15:26
-
7No. An URL is just a special case of an URI. A file URI starts with "file://" and then lists the host (generally omitted), followed by "/" and the path "foo/bar" (generally meant to be read as an absolute path). Thus "file:///foo/var". An URI that looks like "file:/foo/bar" is incorrect. See also: file URI scheme – David Tonhofer Sep 2 '15 at 14:00
-
@DavidTonhofer Thank you for the explanation of URIs, but that doesn't answer ptntialunrlsd's question. What does '...toURL().toString()' produce on Linux? Also, I've reverted your edits because they made my answer more wordy without changing the meaning. – Aleksandr Dubinsky Sep 5 '15 at 17:16
-
3@AleksandrDubinsky It's best to leave pointers to the Oracle javadoc in though.. easier to click through to
java.nio.file.Paths
. Also, please be sure to make clear that you mean the implementations in "URI vs URL". Anwayjava.net.URL.toString()
produces the same thing on Unix, as it must. It only displays one "/" which is very wrong (see file URI scheme). I guess this is in Java because of reasons, better usejava.net.URI
. It correctly generates "file://[host]/" on a call to.toString()
. – David Tonhofer Sep 5 '15 at 21:20
new URL("file:///your/file/here")
-
1where
/your/file/here
is an absolute path to a file on Unix/Linux. On Windows it would be different I think. – Robin Green May 23 '11 at 14:23 -
5That's not very clever, since you have to handle the escaping of characters which are not allowed in URLs yourself. On Windows (and potentially other operating systems), you also have to modify the path separator from the native path to the file. – jarnbjo May 23 '11 at 14:25
-
-
While this is correct, it is not portable as it depends on absolute paths. – mazunki May 2 '20 at 14:59
have a look here for the full syntax: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_URI_scheme
for unix-like systems it will be as @Alex said file:///your/file/here
whereas for Windows systems would be file:///c|/path/to/file
-
7Don't do that manually.
File.toURI().toURL()
is the way to go – Sean Patrick Floyd May 23 '11 at 14:25 -
3@SeanPatrickFloyd sometimes you don't have a choice, like when it is in a
.properties
file. – Sled Jan 30 '14 at 19:24 -
-
2@SeanPatrickFloyd, this question/answer comes up when you search for
java file url
, which in my case means that I was searching for the format of afile://
URL, in Java, for use in a.properties
file, or to type in manually, etc. – daveloyall Apr 28 '15 at 21:40 -
1@SeanPatrickFloyd sometimes you don't have access to the source code, just to the property, and
file://
is unfortunately necessary. Being system dependent is not such a huge issue since it's a mutable property. – vikingsteve Mar 20 '17 at 11:57
You can also use
[AnyClass].class.getResource(filePath)
-
2
-
2If the "filePath" can be found in a jar, the resulting URL is like
jar:file:/home/user/a/b/c/foo.jar!/com/example/stuff/config.txt
. – David Tonhofer Sep 2 '15 at 14:39