Documentation Contents

Location-Independent Access to Resources

Overview

A resource is data (images, audio, text, and so on) that a program needs to access in a way that is independent of the location of the program code. Java programs can use two mechanisms to access resources: Applets use Applet.getCodeBase() to get the base URL for the applet code and then extend the base URL with a relative path to load the desired resource, for example with Applet.getAudioClip(url). Applications use "well known locations" such as System.getProperty("user.home") or System.getProperty("java.home"), then add "/lib/resource", and open that file.

Methods in the classes Class and ClassLoader provide a location-independent way to locate resources. For example, they enable locating resources for:

These methods do not provide specific support for locating localized resources. Localized resources are supported by the internationalization facilities.

Resources, names, and contexts

A resource is identified by a string consisting of a sequence of substrings, delimited by slashes (/), followed by a resource name. Each substring must be a valid Java identifier. The resource name is of the form shortName or shortName.extension. Both shortName and extension must be Java identifiers.

The name of a resource is independent of the Java implementation; in particular, the path separator is always a slash (/). However, the Java implementation controls the details of how the contents of the resource are mapped into a file, database, or other object containing the actual resource.

The interpretation of a resource name is relative to a class loader instance. Methods implemented by the ClassLoader class do this interpretation.

System Resources

A system resource is a resource that is either built-in to the system, or kept by the host implementation in, for example, a local file system. Programs access system resources through the ClassLoader methods getSystemResource and getSystemResourceAsStream.

For example, in a particular implementation, locating a system resource may involve searching the entries in the CLASSPATH. The ClassLoader methods search each directory, ZIP file, or JAR file entry in the CLASSPATH for the resource file, and, if found, returns either an InputStream, or the resource name. If not found, the methods return null. A resource may be found in a different entry in the CLASSPATH than the location where the class file was loaded.

Non-System Resources

The implementation of getResource on a class loader depends on the details of the ClassLoader class. For example, AppletClassLoader:

All class loaders will search for a resource first as a system resource, in a manner analogous to searcing for class files. This search rule permits overwriting locally any resource. Clients should choose a resource name that will be unique (using the company or package name as a prefix, for instance).

Resource Names

A common convention for the name of a resource used by a class is to use the fully qualified name of the package of the class, but convert all periods (.) to slashes (/), and add a resource name of the form name.extension. To support this, and to simplify handling the details of system classes (for which getClassLoader returns null), the class Class provides two convenience methods that call the appropriate methods in ClassLoader.

The resource name given to a Class method may have an initial starting "/" that identifies it as an "absolute" name. Resource names that do not start with a "/" are "relative".

Absolute names are stripped of their starting "/" and are passed, without any further modification, to the appropriate ClassLoader method to locate the resource. Relative names are modified according to the convention described previously and then are passed to a ClassLoader method.

Using Methods of java.lang.Class

The Class class implements several methods for loading resources.

The method getResource() returns a URL for the resource. The URL (and its representation) is specific to the implementation and the JVM (that is, the URL obtained in one runtime instance may not work in another). Its protocol is usually specific to the ClassLoader loading the resource. If the resource does not exist or is not visible due to security considerations, the methods return null.

If the client code wants to read the contents of the resource as an InputStream, it can apply the openStream() method on the URL. This is common enough to justify adding getResourceAsStream() to Class and ClassLoader. getResourceAsStream() the same as calling getResource().openStream(), except that getResourceAsStream() catches IO exceptions returns a null InputStream.

Client code can also request the contents of the resource as an object by applying the java.net.URL.getContent() method on the URL. This is useful when the resource contains the data for an image, for instance. In the case of an image, the result is an awt.image.ImageProducer object, not an Image object.

The getResource and getResourceAsStream methods find a resource with a given name. They return null if they do not find a resource with the specified name. The rules for searching for resources associated with a given class are implemented by the class's ClassLoader. The Class methods delegate to ClassLoader methods, after applying a naming convention: if the resource name starts with "/", it is used as is. Otherwise, the name of the package is prepended, after converting all periods (.) to slashes (/).

public InputStream getResourceAsStream(String name) {
  name = resolveName(name);
  ClassLoader cl = getClassLoader();
  if (cl==null) {
    return ClassLoader.getSystemResourceAsStream(name); // A system class.
  }
  return cl.getResourceAsStream(name);
}

public java.net.URL getResource(String name) {
  name = resolveName(name);
  ClassLoader cl = getClassLoader();
  if (cl==null) {
    return ClassLoader.getSystemResource(name);  // A system class.
  }
  return cl.getResource(name);
}

The resolveName method adds a package name prefix if the name is not absolute, and removes any leading "/" if the name is absolute. It is possible, though uncommon, to have classes in diffent packages sharing the same resource.

private String resolveName(String name) {
  if (name == null) {
    return name;
  }
  if (!name.startsWith("/")) {
    Class c = this;
    while (c.isArray()) {
      c = c.getComponentType();
    }
    String baseName = c.getName();
    int index = baseName.lastIndexOf('.');
    if (index != -1) {
      name = baseName.substring(0, index).replace('.', '/') + "/" + name;
    }
  } else {
    name = name.substring(1);
  }
  return name;
}

Using Methods of java.lang.ClassLoader

The ClassLoader class has two sets of methods to access resources. One set returns an InputStream for the resource. The other set returns a URL. The methods that return an InputStream are easier to use and will satisfy many needs, while the methods that return URLs provide access to more complex information, such as an Image and an AudioClip.

The ClassLoadermanges resources similarly to the way it manages classes. A ClassLoader controls how to map the name of a resource to its content. ClassLoader also provides methods for accessing system resources, analogous to the system classes. The Class class provides some convenience methods that delegate functionality to the ClassLoader methods.

Many Java programs will access these methods indirectly through the I18N (localization) APIs. Others will access it through methods in Class. A few will directly invoke the ClassLoader methods.

The methods in ClassLoader use the given String as the name of the resource without applying any absolute/relative transformation (see the methods in Class). The name should not have a leading "/".

System resources are those that are handled by the host implemenation directly. For example, they may be located in the CLASSPATH.

The name of a resource is a "/"-separated sequence of identifiers. The Class class provides convenience methods for accessing resources; the methods implement a convention where the package name is prefixed to the short name of the resource.

Resources can be accessed as an InputStream, or a URL.

The getSystemResourceAsStream method returns an InputStream for the specified system resource or null if it does not find the resource. The resource name may be any system resource.

The getSystemResource method finds a system resource with the specified name. It returns a URL to the resource or null if it does not find the resource. Calling java.net.URL.getContent() with the URL will return an object such as ImageProducer, AudioClip, or InputStream.

The getResourceAsStream method returns an InputStream for the specified resource or null if it does not find the resource.

The getResource method finds a resource with the specified name. It returns a URL to the resource or null if it does not find the resource. Calling java.net.URL.getContent() with the URL will return an object such as ImageProducer, AudioClip, or InputStream.

Security

Since getResource() provides access to information, it must have well-defined and well-founded security rules. If security considerations do not allow a resource to be visible in some security context, the getResource() method will fail (return null) as if the resource were not present at all, this addresses existence attacks.

Class loaders may not provide access to the contents of a .class file for both security and performance reasons. Whether it is possible to obtain a URL for a .class file depends on the specifics, as shown below.

There are no specified security issues or restrictions regarding resources that are found by a non-system class loader. AppletClassLoader provides access to information that is loaded from a source location, either individually, or in a group through a JAR file; thus AppletClassLoader should apply the same checkConnect() rules when dealing with URLs through getResource().

The system ClassLoader provides access to information in the CLASSPATH. A CLASSPATH may contain directories and JAR files. Since a JAR file is created intentionally, it has a different significance than a directory where things may end up in a more casual manner. In particular, we are more strict on getting information out of a directory than out from a JAR file.

If a resource is in a directory:

If the resource is in a JAR file:

Examples

This section provides two examples of client code. The first example uses "absolute resource" names and traditional mechanisms to get a Class object.

package pkg;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.PrintStream;

class Test {

  private static final String absName = "/pkg/mumble.baf";

  public static void test1() {
    Class c=null;
    try {
      c = Class.forName("pkg.Test");
    } catch (Exception ex) {
      // This should not happen.
    }
    InputStream s = c.getResourceAsStream(absName);
    // do something with it.
  }

  public void test2() {
    InputStream s = this.getClass().getResourceAsStream(absName);
  // do something with it.
  }
}

This example uses "relative resource" names and the mechanism available from the compiler through the -experimental flag, to get a Class object.

package pkg;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.PrintStream;

class Test {
  private static final String relName = "mumble.baf";
  public static void test1() {
  InputStream s = Test.class.getResourceAsStream(relName);
  // do something with it.
}

  public void test2() {
    InputStream s = Test.class.getResourceAsStream(relName);
    // do something with it.
  }

API References


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