1jar(1)                      General Commands Manual                     jar(1)
2
3
4

Name

6       jar-The Java Archive Tool
7
8       jar combines multiple files into a single JAR archive file.
9

SYNOPSIS

11          Create jar file
12             jar  c[v0Mmfe]  [manifest] [jarfile] [entrypoint] [-C dir] input‐
13             files [-Joption]
14
15          Update jar file
16             jar u[v0Mmfe] [manifest] [jarfile] [entrypoint] [-C  dir]  input‐
17             files [-Joption]
18
19          Extract jar file
20             jar x[vf] [jarfile] [inputfiles] [-Joption]
21
22          List table of contents of jar file
23             jar t[vf] [jarfile] [inputfiles] [-Joption]
24
25          Add index to jar file
26             jar i jarfile [-Joption]
27
28
29       where:
30
31          cuxtiv0Mmfe
32             Options that control the jar command.
33
34          jarfile
35             Jar  file  to be created (c), updated (u), extracted (x), or have
36             its table of contents viewed (t).  The  -f  option  and  filename
37             jarfile  are  a  pair  --  if  either  is present, they must both
38             appear. Note that omitting f and jarfile  accepts  a  "jar  file"
39             from  standard  input  (for  x  and t) or sends the "jar file" to
40             standard output (for c and u).
41
42          inputfiles
43             Files or directories, separated by spaces, to  be  combined  into
44             jarfile  (for c and u), or to be extracted (for x) or listed (for
45             t) from jarfile. All directories are processed  recursively.  The
46             files are compressed unless option 0 (zero) is used.
47
48          manifest
49             Pre-existing  manifest  file  whose  name:  value pairs are to be
50             included in MANIFEST.MF in the jar file. The -m option and  file‐
51             name  manifest are a pair -- if either is present, they must both
52             appear. The letters m, f and e must appear in the same order that
53             manifest, jarfile, entrypoint appear.
54
55          entrypoint
56             The name of the class that set as the application entry point for
57             stand-alone applications bundled into executable jar file. The -e
58             option  and  entrypoint  are a pair -- if either is present, they
59             must both appear. The letters m, f and e must appear in the  same
60             order that manifest, jarfile, entrypoint appear.
61
62          -C dir
63             Temporarily  changes directories to dir while processing the fol‐
64             lowing inputfiles argument. Multiple -C dir inputfiles  sets  are
65             allowed.
66
67          -Joption
68             Option  to  be  passed  into the Java runtime environment. (There
69             must be no space between -J and option).
70
71

DESCRIPTION

73       The jar tool combines multiple files into a single  JAR  archive  file.
74       jar  is  a general-purpose archiving and compression tool, based on ZIP
75       and the ZLIB @
76       http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ compression format. However, jar was designed
77       mainly package java applets or applications into a single archive. When
78       the components of an applet or application (files, images and sounds)
79       are combined into a single archive, they can be downloaded by a java
80       agent (like a browser) in a single HTTP transaction, rather than
81       requiring a new connection for each piece. This dramatically improves
82       download times. jar also compresses files and so further improves down‐
83       load time. In addition, it allows individual entries in a file to be
84       signed by the applet author so that their origin can be authenticated.
85       The syntax for the jar tool is almost identical to the syntax for the
86       tar command. A jar archive can be used as a class path entry, whether
87       or not it is compressed.
88
89       Typical usage to combine files into a jar file is:
90
91       % jar cf myFile.jar *.class
92
93
94       In this example, all the class files in the current directory are
95       placed into the file named myFile.jar. The jar tool automatically gen‐
96       erates a manifest file entry named META-INF/MANIFEST.MF. It is always
97       the first entry in the jar file. The manifest file declares meta-infor‐
98       mation about the archive, and stores that data as name : value pairs.
99       Refer to the JAR file specification @
100       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/tech
101       notes/guides/jar/jar.html#JAR%20Manifest for details explaining how the
102       jar tool stores meta-information in the manifest file.
103
104       If a jar file should include name : value pairs contained in an exist‐
105       ing manifest file, specify that file using the -m option:
106
107       % jar cmf myManifestFile myFile.jar *.class
108
109
110       An existing manifest file must end with a new line character.  jar does
111       not parse the last line of a manifest file if it does not end with a
112       new line character.
113
114
115       Note:  A jar command that specifies cfm on the command line instead of
116       cmf (the order of the m and -f options are reversed), the jar command
117       line must specify the name of the jar archive first, followed by the
118       name of the manifest file:
119       % jar cfm myFile.jar myManifestFile *.class
120
121
122       The manifest is in a text format inspired by RFC822 ASCII format, so it
123       is easy to view and process manifest-file contents.
124
125       To extract the files from a jar file, use x:
126
127       % jar xf myFile.jar
128
129
130       To extract individual files from a jar file, supply their filenames:
131
132       % jar xf myFile.jar foo bar
133
134
135       Beginning with version 1.3 of the JDK, the jar utility supports
136       JarIndex @
137       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/tech
138       notes/guides/jar/jar.html#JAR_Index, which allows application class
139       loaders to load classes more efficiently from jar files. If an applica‐
140       tion or applet is bundled into multiple jar files,  only the necessary
141       jar files will be downloaded and opened to load classes. This perfor‐
142       mance optimization is enabled by running jar with the -ioption. It will
143       generate package location information for the specified main jar file
144       and all the jar files it depends on, which need to be specified in the
145       Class-Path attribute of the main jar file's manifest.
146
147       % jar i main.jar
148
149
150       In this example, an INDEX.LIST file is inserted into the META-INF
151       directory of main.jar.
152       The application class loader uses the information stored in this file
153       for efficient class loading.  For details about how location informa‐
154       tion is stored in the index file, refer to the JarIndex specification.
155       To copy directories, first compress files in dir1 to stdout, then
156       extract from stdin to dir2 (omitting the -f option from both jar com‐
157       mands):
158
159       % (cd dir1; jar c .) | (cd dir2; jar x)
160
161
162       To review command samples which use jar to opeate on jar files and jar
163       file manifests, see Examples, below. Also refer to the jar trail of the
164       Java Tutorial @
165       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar.
166

OPTIONS

168          c  Creates a new archive file named jarfile (if f is specified) or
169             to standard output (if f and jarfile are omitted). Add to it the
170             files and directories specified by inputfiles.
171
172          u  Updates an existing file jarfile (when f is specified) by adding
173             to it files and directories specified by inputfiles. For example:
174             jar uf foo.jar foo.class
175             would add the file foo.class to the existing jar file foo.jar.
176             The -u option can also update the manifest entry, as given by
177             this example:
178             jar umf manifest foo.jar
179             updates the foo.jar manifest with the name : value pairs in mani‐
180             fest.
181
182          x  Extracts files and directories from jarfile (if f is specified)
183             or standard input (if f and jarfile are omitted). If inputfiles
184             is specified, only those specified files and directories are
185             extracted. Otherwise, all files and directories are extracted.
186             The time and date of the extracted files are those given in the
187             archive.
188
189          t  Lists the table of contents from jarfile (if f is specified) or
190             standard input (if f and jarfile are omitted). If inputfiles is
191             specified, only those specified files and directories are listed.
192             Otherwise, all files and directories are listed.
193
194          i  Generate index information for the specified jarfile and its
195             dependent jar files. For example:
196             jar i foo.jar
197
198          would generate an INDEX.LIST file in foo.jar which contains location
199          information for each package in foo.jar and all the jar files speci‐
200          fied in the Class-Path attribute of foo.jar. See the index example.
201
202          f  Specifies the file jarfile to be created (c), updated (u),
203             extracted (x), indexed (i), or viewed (t). The -f option and
204             filename jarfile are a pair -- if present, they must both appear.
205             Omitting f and jarfile accepts a jar file name from stdin(for x
206             and t) or sends jar file to stdout (for c and u).
207
208          v  Generates verbose output to standard output. Examples shown
209             below.
210
211          0  (zero) Store without using ZIP compression.
212
213          M  Do not create a manifest file entry (for c and u), or delete a
214             manifest file entry if one exists (for u).
215
216          m  Includes name : value attribute pairs from the specified manifest
217             file manifest in the file at META-INF/MANIFEST.MF. jar adds a
218             name : value pair unless an entry already exists with the same
219             name, in which case jar updates its value.
220             On the command line, the letters m and f must appear in the same
221             order that manifest and jarfile appear. Example use:
222             jar cmf myManifestFile myFile.jar *.class
223             You can add special-purpose name : value attribute pairs to the
224             manifest that aren't contained in the default manifest. For exam‐
225             ple, you can add attributes specifying vendor information, ver‐
226             sion information, package sealing, or to make JAR-bundled appli‐
227             cations executable. See the JAR Files @
228             http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar/ trail in
229             the Java Tutorial  for examples of using the -m option.
230
231          e  Sets entrypoint as the application entry point for stand-alone
232             applications bundled into executable jar file. The use of this
233             option creates or overrides the Main-Class attribute value in the
234             manifest file. This option can be used during creation of jar
235             file or while updating the jar file. This option specifies the
236             application entry point without editing or creating the manifest
237             file.
238             For example, this command creates Main.jar where the Main-Class
239             attribute value in the manifest is set to Main:
240             jar cfe Main.jar Main Main.class
241             The java runtime can directly invoke this application by running
242             the following command:
243             java -jar Main.jar
244             If the entrypoint class name is in a package it may use either a
245             dot (".") or slash ("/") character as the delimiter. For example,
246             if Main.class is in a package called foo the entry point can be
247             specified in the following ways:
248             jar -cfe Main.jar foo/Main foo/Main.class
249             or
250             jar -cfe Main.jar foo.Main foo/Main.class
251             Note:  specifying both -m and -e options together when the given
252             manifest also contains the Main-Class attribute results in an
253             ambigous Main.class specification, leading to an error and the
254             jar creation or update operation is aborted.
255
256          -C dir
257             Temporarily changes directories (cd dir) during execution of the
258             jar command while processing the following inputfiles argument.
259             Its operation is intended to be similar to the -C option of the
260             UNIX tar utility.
261             For example, this command changes to the classes directory and
262             adds the bar.class from that directory to foo.jar:
263             jar uf foo.jar -C classes bar.class
264             This command changes to the classes directory and adds to foo.jar
265             all files within the classes directory (without creating a
266             classes directory in the jar file), then changes back to the
267             original directory before changing to the bin directory to add
268             xyz.class to foo.jar.
269             jar uf foo.jar -C classes . -C bin xyz.class
270             If classes holds files bar1 and bar2, then here's what the jar
271             file will contain using jar tf foo.jar:
272             META-INF/
273             META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
274             bar1
275             bar2
276             xyz.class
277
278          -Joption
279             Pass option to the Java runtime environment, where option is one
280             of the options described on the reference page for the java
281             application launcher. For example, -J-Xmx48M sets the maximum
282             memory to 48 megabytes. It is a common convention for -J to pass
283             options to the underlying runtime environment.
284
285

COMMAND LINE ARGUMENT FILES

287       To shorten or simplify the jar command line, you can specify one or
288       more files that themselves contain arguments to the jar command (except
289       -J options). This enables you to create jar commands of any length,
290       overcoming command line limits imposed by the operating system.
291
292       An argument file can include options and filenames. The arguments
293       within a file can be space-separated or newline-separated. Filenames
294       within an argument file are relative to the current directory, not rel‐
295       ative to the location of the argument file. Wildcards (*) that might
296       otherwise be expanded by the operating system shell are not expanded.
297       Use of the @ character to recursively interpret files is not supported.
298       The -J options are not supported because they are passed to the
299       launcher, which does not support argument files.
300
301       When executing jar, pass in the path and name of each argument file
302       with the @ leading character. When jar encounters an argument beginning
303       with the character @, it expands the contents of that file into the
304       argument list.
305       The example below, classes.list holds the names of files output by a
306       find command:
307
308       % find . -name '*.class' -print > classes.list
309
310
311       You can then execute the jar command on Classes.list by passing it to
312       jar using argfile syntax:
313
314       % jar cf my.jar @classes.list
315
316
317       An argument file can specify a path, but any filenames inside the argu‐
318       ment file that have relative paths are relative to the current working
319       directory, not to the path passed in. Here is an example:
320       % jar @path1/classes.list
321
322

EXAMPLES

324       To add all the files in a particular directory to an archive (overwrit‐
325       ing contents if the archive already exists). Enumerating verbosely
326       (with the -v option) will tell you more information about the files in
327       the archive, such as their size and last modified date.
328       % ls
329       1.au          Animator.class    monkey.jpg
330       2.au          Wave.class        spacemusic.au
331       3.au          at_work.gif
332
333       % jar cvf bundle.jar *
334       added manifest
335       adding: 1.au(in = 2324) (out= 67)(deflated 97%)
336       adding: 2.au(in = 6970) (out= 90)(deflated 98%)
337       adding: 3.au(in = 11616) (out= 108)(deflated 99%)
338       adding: Animator.class(in = 2266) (out= 66)(deflated 97%)
339       adding: Wave.class(in = 3778) (out= 81)(deflated 97%)
340       adding: at_work.gif(in = 6621) (out= 89)(deflated 98%)
341       adding: monkey.jpg(in = 7667) (out= 91)(deflated 98%)
342       adding: spacemusic.au(in = 3079) (out= 73)(deflated 97%)
343
344
345       If you already have separate subdirectories for images, audio files and
346       classes, you can combine them into a single jar file:
347       % ls -F
348       audio/ classes/ images/
349
350       % jar cvf bundle.jar audio classes images
351       added manifest
352       adding: audio/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
353       adding: audio/1.au(in = 2324) (out= 67)(deflated 97%)
354       adding: audio/2.au(in = 6970) (out= 90)(deflated 98%)
355       adding: audio/3.au(in = 11616) (out= 108)(deflated 99%)
356       adding: audio/spacemusic.au(in = 3079) (out= 73)(deflated 97%)
357       adding: classes/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
358       adding: classes/Animator.class(in = 2266) (out= 66)(deflated 97%)
359       adding: classes/Wave.class(in = 3778) (out= 81)(deflated 97%)
360       adding: images/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
361       adding: images/monkey.jpg(in = 7667) (out= 91)(deflated 98%)
362       adding: images/at_work.gif(in = 6621) (out= 89)(deflated 98%)
363
364       % ls -F
365       audio/ bundle.jar classes/ images/
366
367
368       To see the entry names in the jarfile, use the t option:
369       % jar tf bundle.jar
370       META-INF/
371       META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
372       audio/1.au
373       audio/2.au
374       audio/3.au
375       audio/spacemusic.au
376       classes/Animator.class
377       classes/Wave.class
378       images/monkey.jpg
379       images/at_work.gif
380
381
382       To add an index file to the jar file for speeding up class loading, use
383       the i option.
384       Example:
385
386
387       If you split the inter-dependent classes for a stock trade application
388       into three jar files: main.jar, buy.jar, and sell.jar.
389
390
391       If you specify the Class-path attribute in the main.jar manifest as:
392       Class-Path: buy.jar sell.jar
393
394
395       then you can use the -i option to speed up the class loading time for
396       your application:
397       % jar i main.jar
398
399
400       An INDEX.LIST file is inserted to the META-INF directory. This enables
401       the application class loader to download the specified jar files when
402       it is searching for classes or resources.
403

SEE ALSO

405       The Jar Overview @
406       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/jar/jarGuide.html
407
408       The Jar File Specification @
409       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/jar/jar.html
410
411       The JarIndex Spec @
412       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/tech
413       notes/guides/jar/jar.html#JAR_Index
414
415       Jar Tutorial @
416       http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar/index.html
417
418       pack200(1)
419
420                                  16 Mar 2012                           jar(1)
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