I was trying to load a file in a webapp, and I was getting a FileNotFound
exception when I used FileInputStream
. However, using the same path, I wa
The FileInputStream
class works directly with the underlying file system. If the file in question is not physically present there, it will fail to open it. The getResourceAsStream()
method works differently. It tries to locate and load the resource using the ClassLoader
of the class it is called on. This enables it to find, for example, resources embedded into jar
files.
FileInputStream will load a the file path you pass to the constructor as relative from the working directory of the Java process. Usually in a web container, this is something like the bin
folder.
getResourceAsStream()
will load a file path relative from your application's classpath.
The java.io.File and consorts acts on the local disk file system. The root cause of your problem is that relative paths in java.io
are dependent on the current working directory. I.e. the directory from which the JVM (in your case: the webserver's one) is started. This may for example be C:\Tomcat\bin
or something entirely different, but thus not C:\Tomcat\webapps\contextname
or whatever you'd expect it to be. In a normal Eclipse project, that would be C:\Eclipse\workspace\projectname
. You can learn about the current working directory the following way:
System.out.println(new File(".").getAbsolutePath());
However, the working directory is in no way programmatically controllable. You should really prefer using absolute paths in the File
API instead of relative paths. E.g. C:\full\path\to\file.ext
.
You don't want to hardcode or guess the absolute path in Java (web)applications. That's only portability trouble (i.e. it runs in system X, but not in system Y). The normal practice is to place those kind of resources in the classpath, or to add its full path to the classpath (in an IDE like Eclipse that's the src
folder and the "build path" respectively). This way you can grab them with help of the ClassLoader
by ClassLoader#getResource() or ClassLoader#getResourceAsStream(). It is able to locate files relative to the "root" of the classpath, as you by coincidence figured out. In webapplications (or any other application which uses multiple classloaders) it's recommend to use the ClassLoader
as returned by Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader()
for this so you can look "outside" the webapp context as well.
Another alternative in webapps is the ServletContext#getResource() and its counterpart ServletContext#getResourceAsStream(). It is able to access files located in the public web
folder of the webapp project, including the /WEB-INF
folder. The ServletContext
is available in servlets by the inherited getServletContext() method, you can call it as-is.
classname.getResourceAsStream() loads a file via the classloader of classname. If the class came from a jar file, that is where the resource will be loaded from.
FileInputStream is used to read a file from the filesystem.
getResourceAsStream
is the right way to do it for web apps (as you already learned).
The reason is that reading from the file system cannot work if you package your web app in a WAR. This is the proper way to package a web app. It's portable that way, because you aren't dependent on an absolute file path or the location where your app server is installed.
I am here by separating both the usages by marking them as File Read(java.io) and Resource Read(ClassLoader.getResourceAsStream()).
File Read - 1. Works on local file system. 2. Tries to locate the file requested from current JVM launched directory as root 3. Ideally good when using files for processing in a pre-determined location like,/dev/files or C:\Data.
Resource Read - 1. Works on class path 2. Tries to locate the file/resource in current or parent classloader classpath. 3. Ideally good when trying to load files from packaged files like war or jar.