Jlink - Assemble and Optimize a Set of Modules
Introducing jlink
jlink - assemble and optimize a set of modules, and their dependencies into a custom runtime image. This article gives a reference, for a tutorial on how to use it in practice, see here.
Synopsis
jlink [options] --module-path modulepath --add-modules module [, module...]
options
Command-line options separated by spaces. See jlink
Options.
modulepath
The path where the jlink
tool discovers observable modules. These modules can be modular JAR files, JMOD
files, or exploded modules.
module
The names of the modules to add to the runtime image. The jlink tool adds these modules and their transitive dependencies.
Description
The jlink
tool links a set of modules, along with their transitive dependencies, to create a custom runtime image.
--add-modules mod[, mod...]
Adds the named modules, mod, to the default set of root modules. The default set of root modules is empty.
--bind-services
Link service provider modules and their dependencies.
-c={0|1|2}
or --compress={0|1|2}
Enable compression of resources:
0: No compression 1: Constant string sharing 2: ZIP --disable-plugin pluginname Disables the specified plug-in. See jlink Plug-ins for the list of supported plug-ins.
--endian {little|big}
Specifies the byte order of the generated image. The default value is the format of your system's architecture.
-h
or --help
Prints the help message.
--ignore-signing-information
Suppresses a fatal error when signed modular JARs are linked in the runtime image. The signature-related files of the signed modular JARs aren’t copied to the runtime image.
--launcher command=module
or --launcher command=module/main
Specifies the launcher command name for the module or the command name for the module and main class (the module, and the main class names are separated by a slash /
).
--limit-modules mod[, mod...]
Limits the universe of observable modules to those in the transitive closure of the named modules, mod, plus the main module, if any, plus any further modules specified in the --add-modules option.
--list-plugins
Lists available plug-ins, which you can access through command-line options. See jlink
Plug-ins.
-p
or --module-path modulepath
Specifies the module path.
If this option is not specified, then the default module path is $JAVA_HOME/jmods
. This directory contains the java.base
module and the other standard and JDK modules.
If this option is specified but the java.base
module cannot be resolved from it, then the jlink
command appends $JAVA_HOME/jmods
to the module path.
--no-header-files
Excludes header files.
--no-man-pages
Excludes man pages.
--output path
Specifies the location of the generated runtime image.
--save-opts filename
Saves jlink
options in the specified file.
--suggest-providers [name, ...]
Suggest providers that implement the given service types from the module path.
--version
Prints version information.
@filename
Reads options from the specified file.
An options file is a text file that contains the options and values that you would typically enter in a command prompt.
Options may appear on one line or on several lines. You may not specify environment variables for path names.
You may comment out lines by prefixing a hash symbol #
to the beginning of the line.
The following is an example of an options file for the jlink
command:
#Wed Dec 07 00:40:19 EST 2016
--module-path mlib
--add-modules com.greetings
--output greetingsapp
Options
For plug-in options that require a pattern-list, the value is a comma-separated list of elements, with each element using one the following forms:
- glob-pattern
- glob:glob-pattern
- regex:regex-pattern
- @filename
- filename is the name of a file that contains patterns to be used, one pattern per line.
Plugins
For a complete list of all available plug-ins, run the command jlink --list-plugins
.
compress Options:
--compress={0|1|2}[:filter=pattern-list]
Description:
Compresses all resources in the output image.
Level 0: No compression
Level 1: Constant string sharing
Level 2: ZIP
An optional pattern-list filter can be specified to list the pattern of files to include.
include-locales Options:
--include-locales=langtag[,langtag]*
Description:
Includes the list of locales where langtag is a BCP 47 language tag.
This option supports locale matching as defined in RFC 4647.
Ensure that you add the module jdk.localedata when using this option.
Example:
--add-modules jdk.localedata --include-locales=en,ja,*-IN
order-resources
Options:
--order-resources=pattern-list
Description:
Orders the specified paths in priority order.
If @filename is specified, then each line in pattern-list must be an exact match for
the paths to be ordered.
Example:
--order-resources=/module-info.class,@classlist,/java.base/java/lang/
strip-debug
Options:
--strip-debug
Description:
Strips debug information from the output image.
Examples
The following command creates a runtime image in the directory greetingsapp
. This command links the module com.greetings
, whose module definition is contained in the directory mlib
.
jlink --module-path mlib --add-modules com.greetings --output greetingsapp
The following command lists the modules in the runtime image greetingsapp
:
greetingsapp/bin/java --list-modules
com.greetings
java.base@11
java.logging@11
org.astro@1.0
The following command creates a runtime image in the directory compressedrt that’s stripped of debug symbols, uses compression to reduce space, and includes French language locale information:
jlink --add-modules jdk.localedata --strip-debug --compress=2 --include-locales=fr --output compressedrt
The following example compares the size of the runtime image compressedrt
with fr_rt
, which isn’t stripped of debug symbols and doesn’t use compression:
jlink --add-modules jdk.localedata --include-locales=fr --output fr_rt
du -sh ./compressedrt ./fr_rt
23M ./compressedrt
36M ./fr_rt
The following example lists the providers that implement java.security.Provider
:
jlink --suggest-providers java.security.Provider
Suggested providers:
java.naming provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
java.security.jgss provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
java.security.sasl provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
java.smartcardio provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
java.xml.crypto provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
jdk.crypto.cryptoki provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
jdk.crypto.ec provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
jdk.crypto.mscapi provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
jdk.security.jgss provides java.security.Provider used by java.base
The following example creates a custom runtime image named mybuild
that includes only java.naming
and jdk.crypto.cryptoki
and their dependencies but no other providers.
Note that these dependencies must exist in the module path:
jlink --add-modules java.naming,jdk.crypto.cryptoki --output mybuild
The following command is similar to the one that creates a runtime image named greetingsapp
,
except that it will link the modules resolved from root modules with service binding:
jlink --module-path mlib --add-modules com.greetings --output greetingsapp --bind-services
The following command lists the modules in the runtime image greetingsapp created by this command:
greetingsapp/bin/java --list-modules
com.greetings
java.base@11
java.compiler@11
java.datatransfer@11
java.desktop@11
java.logging@11
java.management@11
java.management.rmi@11
java.naming@11
java.prefs@11
java.rmi@11
java.security.jgss@11
java.security.sasl@11
java.smartcardio@11
java.xml@11
java.xml.crypto@11
jdk.accessibility@11
jdk.charsets@11
jdk.compiler@11
jdk.crypto.cryptoki@11
jdk.crypto.ec@11
jdk.crypto.mscapi@11
jdk.internal.opt@11
jdk.jartool@11
jdk.javadoc@11
jdk.jdeps@11
jdk.jfr@11
jdk.jlink@11
jdk.localedata@11
jdk.management@11
jdk.management.jfr@11
jdk.naming.dns@11
jdk.naming.rmi@11
jdk.security.auth@11
jdk.security.jgss@11
jdk.zipfs@11
org.astro@1.0
Last update: September 14, 2021