Current Tutorial
Jmod - Create JMOD archives

Jmod - Create JMOD archives

 

Introducing jmod

jmod - create JMOD files and list the content of existing JMOD files

 

Synopsis

jmod (create|extract|list|describe|hash) [options] jmod-file

Includes the following:

Main operation modes

create Creates a new JMOD archive file.

extract Extracts all the files from the JMOD archive file.

list Prints the names of all the entries.

describe Prints the module details.

hash Determines leaf modules and records the hashes of the dependencies that directly and indirectly require them.

Options

options See Options for jmod.

Required

jmod-file Specifies the name of the JMOD file to create or from which to retrieve information.

 

Description

The JMOD file format lets you aggregate files other than .class files, metadata, and resources. This format is transportable but not executable, which means that you can use it during compile time or link time but not at run time.

Many jmod options involve specifying a path whose contents are copied into the resulting JMOD files. These options copy all the contents of the specified path, including subdirectories and their contents, but exclude files whose names match the pattern specified by the --exclude option.

With the --hash-modules option or the jmod hash command, you can, in each module's descriptor, record hashes of the content of the modules that are allowed to depend upon it, thus "tying" together these modules. This enables a package to be exported to one or more specifically-named modules and to no others through qualified exports.

The runtime verifies if the recorded hash of a module matches the one resolved at run time; if not, the runtime returns an error.

 

Options

--class-path path Specifies the location of application JAR files or a directory containing classes to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--cmds path Specifies the location of native commands to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--config path Specifies the location of user-editable configuration files to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

–-dir path Specifies the location where jmod puts extracted files from the specified JMOD archive.

--dry-run Performs a dry run of hash mode. It identifies leaf modules and their required modules without recording any hash values.

--exclude pattern–list Excludes files matching the supplied comma-separated pattern list, each element using one the following forms:

glob-pattern

glob:glob-pattern

regex:regex-pattern

--hash-modules regex-pattern Determines the leaf modules and records the hashes of the dependencies directly and indirectly requiring them, based on the module graph of the modules matching the given regex-pattern. The hashes are recorded in the JMOD archive file being created, or a JMOD archive or modular JAR on the module path specified by the jmod hash command.

--header-files path Specifies the location of the header files to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--help or -h Prints a usage message.

--help-extra Prints help for extra options.

–-legal-notices path Specifies the location of the legal notices to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--libs path Specifies the location of the native libraries to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--main-class class-name Specifies the main class to record in the module-info.class file.

--man-pages path Specifies the location of the man pages to copy into the resulting JMOD file.

--module-version module-version Specifies the module version to record in the module-info.class file.

--module-path path or -p path Specifies the module path. This option is required if you also specify --hash-modules.

--target-platform platform Specifies the target platform.

--version Prints the version information of the jmod tool.

@filename Reads the options from the specified file.

An options file is a text file that contains the options and values that you would ordinarily 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 prefixinga hash symbol (#) to the beginning of the line.

The following is an example of an options file for the jmod command:

#Wed Dec 07 00:40:19 EST 2016
create --class-path mods/com.greetings --module-path mlib
  --cmds commands --config configfiles --header-files src/h
  --libs lib --main-class com.greetings.Main
  --man-pages man --module-version 1.0
  --os-arch "x86_x64" --os-name "Mac OS X"
  --os-version "11.2.3" greetingsmod

 

Extra Options

In addition to the options described in Options for jmod, the following are extra options that can be used with the command.

--do-not-resolve-by-default Exclude from the default root set of modules

--warn-if-resolved Hint for a tool to issue a warning if the module is resolved. One of deprecated, deprecated-for-removal, or incubating.

 

Examples

The following is an example of creating a JMOD file:

jmod create --class-path mods/com.greetings --cmds commands
  --config configfiles --header-files src/h --libs lib
  --main-class com.greetings.Main --man-pages man --module-version 1.0
  --os-arch "x86_x64" --os-name "Mac OS X"
  --os-version "11.2.3" greetingsmod 

The following example demonstrates what happens when you try to link a leaf module (in this example, ma) with a required module (mb), and the hash value recorded in the required module doesn't match that of the leaf module.

  1. Create and compile the following .java files:
  • jmodhashex/src/ma/module-info.java
module ma {
  requires mb;
}
  • jmodhashex/src/mb/module-info.java
module mb {
}
  • jmodhashex2/src/ma/module-info.java
module ma {
  requires mb;
}
  • jmodhashex2/src/mb/module-info.java
module mb {
}
  1. Create a JMOD archive for each module. Create the directories jmodhashex/jmods and jmodhashex2/jmods, and then run the following commands from the jmodhashex directory, then from the jmodhashex2 directory:
jmod create --class-path mods/ma jmods/ma.jmod
jmod create --class-path mods/mb jmods/mb.jmod
  1. Optionally preview the jmod hash command. Run the following command from the jmodhashex directory:
jmod hash --dry-run -module-path jmods --hash-modules .*

The command prints the following:

Dry run:
mb
  hashes ma SHA-256 07667d5032004b37b42ec2bb81b46df380cf29e66962a16481ace2e71e74073a

This indicates that the jmod hash command (without the --dry-run option) will record the hash value of the leaf module ma in the module mb.

  1. Record hash values in the JMOD archive files contained in the jmodhashex directory. Run the following command from the jmodhashex directory:
jmod hash --module-path jmods --hash-modules .*

The command prints the following:

Hashes are recorded in module mb
  1. Print information about each JMOD archive contained in the jmodhashex directory. Run the highlighted commands from the jmodhashex directory:
jmod describe jmods/ma.jmod

ma
  requires mandated java.base
  requires mb

jmod describe jmods/mb.jmod

mb
  requires mandated java.base
  hashes ma SHA-256 07667d5032004b37b42ec2bb81b46df380cf29e66962a16481ace2e71e74073a
  1. Attempt to create a runtime image that contains the module ma from the directory jmodhashex2 but the module mb from the directory jmodhashex. Run the following command from the jmodhashex2 directory:

Linux and macOS:

jlink --module-path $JAVA_HOME/jmods:jmods/ma.jmod:../jmodhashex/jmods/mb.jmod --add-modules ma --output ma-app

Windows:

jlink --module-path %JAVA_HOME%/jmods;jmods/ma.jmod;../jmodhashex/jmods/mb.jmod --add-modules ma --output ma-app

The command prints an error message similar to the following:

Error: Hash of ma (a2d77889b0cb067df02a3abc39b01ac1151966157a68dc4241562c60499150d2) differs to
expected hash (07667d5032004b37b42ec2bb81b46df380cf29e66962a16481ace2e71e74073a) recorded in mb

Last update: September 14, 2021


Current Tutorial
Jmod - Create JMOD archives