Using Java 6 or later, the classpath option supports wildcards. Note the following:
- Use straight quotes (
"
)
- Use
*
, not *.jar
Windows
java -cp "Test.jar;lib/*" my.package.MainClass
Unix
java -cp "Test.jar:lib/*" my.package.MainClass
This is similar to Windows, but uses :
instead of ;
. If you cannot use wildcards, bash
allows the following syntax (where lib
is the directory containing all the Java archive files):
java -cp "$(printf %s: lib/*.jar)"
(Note that using a classpath is incompatible with the -jar
option. See also: Execute jar file with multiple classpath libraries from command prompt)
Understanding Wildcards
From the Classpath document:
Class path entries can contain the basename wildcard character *
, which is considered equivalent to specifying a list of all the files
in the directory with the extension .jar
or .JAR
. For example, the
class path entry foo/*
specifies all JAR files in the directory named
foo. A classpath entry consisting simply of *
expands to a list of all
the jar files in the current directory.
A class path entry that contains *
will not match class files. To
match both classes and JAR files in a single directory foo, use either
foo;foo/*
or foo/*;foo
. The order chosen determines whether the
classes and resources in foo
are loaded before JAR files in foo
, or
vice versa.
Subdirectories are not searched recursively. For example, foo/*
looks
for JAR files only in foo
, not in foo/bar
, foo/baz
, etc.
The order in which the JAR files in a directory are enumerated in the
expanded class path is not specified and may vary from platform to
platform and even from moment to moment on the same machine. A
well-constructed application should not depend upon any particular
order. If a specific order is required then the JAR files can be
enumerated explicitly in the class path.
Expansion of wildcards is done early, prior to the invocation of a
program's main method, rather than late, during the class-loading
process itself. Each element of the input class path containing a
wildcard is replaced by the (possibly empty) sequence of elements
generated by enumerating the JAR files in the named directory. For
example, if the directory foo
contains a.jar
, b.jar
, and c.jar
, then
the class path foo/*
is expanded into foo/a.jar;foo/b.jar;foo/c.jar
,
and that string would be the value of the system property
java.class.path
.
The CLASSPATH
environment variable is not treated any differently from
the -classpath
(or -cp
) command-line option. That is, wildcards are
honored in all these cases. However, class path wildcards are not
honored in the Class-Path jar-manifest
header.
Note: due to a known bug in java 8, the windows examples must use a backslash preceding entries with a trailing asterisk: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8131329
Summarize other answers I found 11 main ways to do this (see below). And I wrote some performance tests (see results below):
Ways to convert an InputStream to a String:
Using IOUtils.toString
(Apache Utils)
String result = IOUtils.toString(inputStream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
Using CharStreams
(Guava)
String result = CharStreams.toString(new InputStreamReader(
inputStream, Charsets.UTF_8));
Using Scanner
(JDK)
Scanner s = new Scanner(inputStream).useDelimiter("\\A");
String result = s.hasNext() ? s.next() : "";
Using Stream API (Java 8). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like \r\n
) to \n
.
String result = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream))
.lines().collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));
Using parallel Stream API (Java 8). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like \r\n
) to \n
.
String result = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream))
.lines().parallel().collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));
Using InputStreamReader
and StringBuilder
(JDK)
int bufferSize = 1024;
char[] buffer = new char[bufferSize];
StringBuilder out = new StringBuilder();
Reader in = new InputStreamReader(stream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
for (int numRead; (numRead = in.read(buffer, 0, buffer.length)) > 0; ) {
out.append(buffer, 0, numRead);
}
return out.toString();
Using StringWriter
and IOUtils.copy
(Apache Commons)
StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
IOUtils.copy(inputStream, writer, "UTF-8");
return writer.toString();
Using ByteArrayOutputStream
and inputStream.read
(JDK)
ByteArrayOutputStream result = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
byte[] buffer = new byte[1024];
for (int length; (length = inputStream.read(buffer)) != -1; ) {
result.write(buffer, 0, length);
}
// StandardCharsets.UTF_8.name() > JDK 7
return result.toString("UTF-8");
Using BufferedReader
(JDK). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like \n\r
) to line.separator
system property (for example, in Windows to "\r\n").
String newLine = System.getProperty("line.separator");
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(
new InputStreamReader(inputStream));
StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
for (String line; (line = reader.readLine()) != null; ) {
if (result.length() > 0) {
result.append(newLine);
}
result.append(line);
}
return result.toString();
Using BufferedInputStream
and ByteArrayOutputStream
(JDK)
BufferedInputStream bis = new BufferedInputStream(inputStream);
ByteArrayOutputStream buf = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
for (int result = bis.read(); result != -1; result = bis.read()) {
buf.write((byte) result);
}
// StandardCharsets.UTF_8.name() > JDK 7
return buf.toString("UTF-8");
Using inputStream.read()
and StringBuilder
(JDK). Warning: This solution has problems with Unicode, for example with Russian text (works correctly only with non-Unicode text)
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
for (int ch; (ch = inputStream.read()) != -1; ) {
sb.append((char) ch);
}
return sb.toString();
Warning:
Solutions 4, 5 and 9 convert different line breaks to one.
Solution 11 can't work correctly with Unicode text
Performance tests
Performance tests for small String
(length = 175), url in github (mode = Average Time, system = Linux, score 1,343 is the best):
Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
8. ByteArrayOutputStream and read (JDK) avgt 10 1,343 ± 0,028 us/op
6. InputStreamReader and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 6,980 ± 0,404 us/op
10. BufferedInputStream, ByteArrayOutputStream avgt 10 7,437 ± 0,735 us/op
11. InputStream.read() and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 8,977 ± 0,328 us/op
7. StringWriter and IOUtils.copy (Apache) avgt 10 10,613 ± 0,599 us/op
1. IOUtils.toString (Apache Utils) avgt 10 10,605 ± 0,527 us/op
3. Scanner (JDK) avgt 10 12,083 ± 0,293 us/op
2. CharStreams (guava) avgt 10 12,999 ± 0,514 us/op
4. Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 15,811 ± 0,605 us/op
9. BufferedReader (JDK) avgt 10 16,038 ± 0,711 us/op
5. parallel Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 21,544 ± 0,583 us/op
Performance tests for big String
(length = 50100), url in github (mode = Average Time, system = Linux, score 200,715 is the best):
Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
8. ByteArrayOutputStream and read (JDK) avgt 10 200,715 ± 18,103 us/op
1. IOUtils.toString (Apache Utils) avgt 10 300,019 ± 8,751 us/op
6. InputStreamReader and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 347,616 ± 130,348 us/op
7. StringWriter and IOUtils.copy (Apache) avgt 10 352,791 ± 105,337 us/op
2. CharStreams (guava) avgt 10 420,137 ± 59,877 us/op
9. BufferedReader (JDK) avgt 10 632,028 ± 17,002 us/op
5. parallel Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 662,999 ± 46,199 us/op
4. Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 701,269 ± 82,296 us/op
10. BufferedInputStream, ByteArrayOutputStream avgt 10 740,837 ± 5,613 us/op
3. Scanner (JDK) avgt 10 751,417 ± 62,026 us/op
11. InputStream.read() and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 2919,350 ± 1101,942 us/op
Graphs (performance tests depending on Input Stream length in Windows 7 system)
Performance test (Average Time) depending on Input Stream length in Windows 7 system:
length 182 546 1092 3276 9828 29484 58968
test8 0.38 0.938 1.868 4.448 13.412 36.459 72.708
test4 2.362 3.609 5.573 12.769 40.74 81.415 159.864
test5 3.881 5.075 6.904 14.123 50.258 129.937 166.162
test9 2.237 3.493 5.422 11.977 45.98 89.336 177.39
test6 1.261 2.12 4.38 10.698 31.821 86.106 186.636
test7 1.601 2.391 3.646 8.367 38.196 110.221 211.016
test1 1.529 2.381 3.527 8.411 40.551 105.16 212.573
test3 3.035 3.934 8.606 20.858 61.571 118.744 235.428
test2 3.136 6.238 10.508 33.48 43.532 118.044 239.481
test10 1.593 4.736 7.527 20.557 59.856 162.907 323.147
test11 3.913 11.506 23.26 68.644 207.591 600.444 1211.545
Best Answer
You can add them with the following code:
This would include all *.jar files which are under the ${lib} folder.
But this code should be in an ant compile target. Because before generating the jar bundle you need to compile it. And therefore you need the swingx, spring jars.