Setting Classpath from Command LineUse set CLASSPATH command initially, and then run Java application or tool in the same command line window. “ It will search the classes/resources in mentioned classpath locations. Classpath entries that are neither directories nor archives (.
When you specify -jar
then the -cp
parameter will be ignored.
From the documentation:
When you use this option, the JAR file is the source of all user classes, and other user class path settings are ignored.
You also cannot "include" needed jar files into another jar file (you would need to extract their contents and put the .class files into your jar file)
You have two options:
lib
directory into the manifest (you can use relative paths there)-cp
: java -cp MyJar.jar:lib/* com.somepackage.subpackage.Main
Run a jar file and specify a class path like this:
java -cp <jar_name.jar:libs/*> com.test.App
jar_name.jar
is the full name of the JAR you want to execute
libs/*
is a path to your dependency JARs
com.test.App
is the fully qualified name of the class from the JAR that has the main(String[])
method
The jar and dependent jar should have execute permissions.
You can do these in unix shell:
java -cp MyJar.jar:lib/* com.somepackage.subpackage.Main
You can do these in windows powershell:
java -cp "MyJar.jar;lib\*" com.somepackage.subpackage.Main
Alternatively, use the manifest to specify the class-path and main-class if you like, so then you don't need to use -cp
or specify the main class. In your case it would contain lines like this:
Main-Class: com.test.App
Class-Path: lib/one.jar lib/two.jar
Unfortunately you need to spell out each jar in the manifest (not a biggie as you only do once, and you can use a script to build the file or use a build tool like ANT or Maven or Gradle). And the reference has to be a relative or absolute directory to where you run the java -jar MyJar.jar
.
Then execute it with
java -jar MyJar.jar
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