How do I run a class in a WAR from the command line?

旧城冷巷雨未停 提交于 2019-11-26 15:20:33
Yonatan Maman

You can do what Hudson (continuous integration project) does. you download a war which can be deployed in tomcat or to execute using

java -jar hudson.war

(Because it has an embedded Jetty engine, running it from command line cause a server to be launched.) Anyway by looking at hudson's manifest I understand that they put a Main class in the root for the archive. In your case your war layout should be look like:

under root:

  • mypackage/MyEntryPointClass.class
  • WEB-INF/lib
  • WEB-INF/classes
  • META-INF/MANIFEST.MF

while the manifest should include the following line:

Main-Class: mypackage.MyEntryPointClass

please notice that the mypackage/MyEntryPointClass.class is accessable from the command line only, and the classes under WEB-INF/classes are accessable from the application server only.

HTH

Similar to what Richard Detsch but with a bit easier to follow (works with packages as well)

Step 1: Unwrap the War file.

jar -xvf MyWar.war

Step 2: move into the directory

cd WEB-INF

Step 3: Run your main with all dependendecies

java -classpath "lib/*:classes/." my.packages.destination.FileToRun

A war is a webapp. If you want to have a console/standalone application reusing the same classes as you webapp, consider packaging your shared classes in a jar, which you can put in WEB-INF/lib. Then use that jar from the command line. Thus you get both your console application, and you can use the same classes in your servlets, without making two different packages. This, of course, is true when the war is exploded.

To execute SomeClass.main(String [] args) from a deployed war file do:

Step 1: Write class SomeClass.java that has a main method method i.e. (public static void main(String[] args) {...})

Step 2: Deploy your WAR

Step 3: cd /usr/local/yourprojectsname/tomcat/webapps/projectName/WEB-INF

Step 4: java -cp "lib/jar1.jar:lib/jar2.jar: ... :lib/jarn.jar" com.mypackage.SomeClass arg1 arg2 ... arg3

Note1: (to see if the class SomeOtherClass.class is in /usr/tomcat/webapps/projectName/WEB-INF/lib)

run --> cd /usr/tomcat/webapps/projectName/WEB-INF/lib && find . -name '*.jar' | while read jarfile; do if jar tf "$jarfile" | grep SomeOtherClass.class; then echo "$jarfile"; fi; done

Note2: Write to standard out so you can see if your main actually works via print statements to the console. This is called a back door.

Note3: The comment above by Bozhidar Bozhanov seems correct

The rules of locating classes in an archive file is that the location of the file's package declaration and the location of the file within the archive have to match. Since your class is located in WEB-INF/classes, it thinks the class is not valid to run in the current context.

The only way you can do what you're asking is to repackage the war so the .class file resides in the mypackage directory in the root of the archive rather than the WEB-INF/classes directory. However, if you do that you won't be able to access the file from any of your web classes anymore.

If you want to reuse this class in both the war and outside from the java command line, consider building an executable jar you can run from the command line, then putting that jar in the war file's WEB-INF/lib directory.

In Maven project, You can build jar automatically using Maven War plugin by setting archiveClasses to true. Example below.

<plugin>
       <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
       <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
       <configuration>
        <archiveClasses>true</archiveClasses>
       </configuration>
</plugin>

If you're using Maven, just follow the maven-war-plugin documentation about "How do I create a JAR containing the classes in my webapp?": add <attachClasses>true</attachClasses> to the <configuration> of the plugin:

<project>
  ...
  <artifactId>mywebapp</artifactId>
  <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
  ...
  <build>
    <plugins>
      <plugin>
    <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>2.6</version>
    <configuration>
      <attachClasses>true</attachClasses>
    </configuration>
      </plugin>
    </plugins>
  </build>
  ...
</project>

The you will have 2 products in the target/ folder:

  • The project.war itself
  • The project-classes.jar which contains all the compiled classes in a jar

Then you will be able to execute a main class using classic method: java -cp target/project-classes.jar 'com.mycompany.MainClass' param1 param2

Well, according to Wikipedia, with a WAR file, the classes that get loaded into the classpath are in the "/WEB-INF/classes" and "/WEB-INF/lib" directory.

You could try simply putting a copy of the classes on the root file system of the zip file (which is what a war/jar is). I'm not sure if that would work though.

You can always just create two separate files.

Rawat

It's not possible to run a java class from a WAR file. WAR files have a different structure to Jar files.

To find the related java classes, export (preferred way to use ant) them as Jar put it in your web app lib.

Then you can use the jar file as normal to run java program. The same jar was also referred in web app (if you put this jar in web app lib)

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