How do I programmatically compile and instantiate a Java class?

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夕颜 2020-11-22 03:04

I have the class name stored in a property file. I know that the classes store will implement IDynamicLoad. How do I instantiate the class dynamically?

Right now I h

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  •  悲&欢浪女
    2020-11-22 03:27

    How do I load a Java Class that is not compiled?

    You need to compile it first. This can be done programmatically with the javax.tools API. This only requires the JDK being installed at the local machine on top of JRE.

    Here's a basic kickoff example (leaving obvious exception handling aside):

    // Prepare source somehow.
    String source = "package test; public class Test { static { System.out.println(\"hello\"); } public Test() { System.out.println(\"world\"); } }";
    
    // Save source in .java file.
    File root = new File("/java"); // On Windows running on C:\, this is C:\java.
    File sourceFile = new File(root, "test/Test.java");
    sourceFile.getParentFile().mkdirs();
    Files.write(sourceFile.toPath(), source.getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8));
    
    // Compile source file.
    JavaCompiler compiler = ToolProvider.getSystemJavaCompiler();
    compiler.run(null, null, null, sourceFile.getPath());
    
    // Load and instantiate compiled class.
    URLClassLoader classLoader = URLClassLoader.newInstance(new URL[] { root.toURI().toURL() });
    Class cls = Class.forName("test.Test", true, classLoader); // Should print "hello".
    Object instance = cls.newInstance(); // Should print "world".
    System.out.println(instance); // Should print "test.Test@hashcode".
    

    Which yields like

    hello
    world
    test.Test@ab853b
    

    Further use would be more easy if those classes implements a certain interface which is already in the classpath.

    SomeInterface instance = (SomeInterface) cls.newInstance();
    

    Otherwise you need to involve the Reflection API to access and invoke the (unknown) methods/fields.


    That said and unrelated to the actual problem:

    properties.load(new FileInputStream(new File("ClassName.properties")));
    

    Letting java.io.File rely on current working directory is recipe for portability trouble. Don't do that. Put that file in classpath and use ClassLoader#getResourceAsStream() with a classpath-relative path.

    properties.load(Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("ClassName.properties"));
    

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