/native-platform

Java bindings for various native APIs

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Native-platform: Java bindings for various native APIs

A collection of cross-platform Java APIs for various native APIs. Currently supports OS X, Linux and Windows on Intel architectures.

These APIs support Java 5 and later. Some of these APIs overlap with APIs available in later Java versions.

Available bindings

System information

  • Get kernel name and version.
  • Get machine architecture.

Processes

  • Get the PID of the current process.
  • Get and set the process working directory.
  • Get and set the process environment variables.

Terminal and console

These bindings work for both the UNIX terminal and the Windows console:

  • Determine if stdout/stderr are attached to a terminal.
  • Query the terminal size.
  • Switch between bold and normal mode on the terminal.
  • Change foreground color on the terminal.
  • Move terminal cursor up, down, left, right, start of line.
  • Clear to end of line.

File systems

  • Get and set UNIX file mode.
  • Create and read symbolic links.
  • Determine file type.
  • List the available file systems on the machine.
  • Query file system mount point.
  • Query file system type.
  • Query file system device name.
  • Query whether a file system is local or remote.

Windows

  • Query registry value.
  • Query the subkeys and values of a registry key.

Supported platforms

Currently ported to OS X, Linux and Windows. Support for Solaris and FreeBSD is a work in progress. Tested on:

  • OS X 10.9.1 (x86_64), 10.6.7 (i386)
  • Ubunutu 13.10 (amd64), 12.10 (amd64), 8.04.4 (i386, amd64)
  • Windows 8.1 (x64), 7 (x64), XP (x86, x64)

Using

Include native-platform.jar and native-platform-${os}-${arch}.jar in your classpath. From Gradle, you can do this:

repositories {
    maven { url "http://repo.gradle.org/gradle/libs-releases-local" }
}

dependencies {
    compile "net.rubygrapefruit:native-platform:0.7"
}

You can also download here

Some sample code to use the terminal:

import net.rubygrapefruit.platform.Native;
import net.rubygrapefruit.platform.Terminals;
import net.rubygrapefruit.platform.Terminal;
import static net.rubygrapefruit.platform.Terminals.Output.*;

Terminals terminals = Native.get(Terminals.class);

// check if terminal
terminals.isTerminal(Stdout);

// use terminal
Terminal stdout = terminals.getTerminal(Stdout);
stdout.bold();
System.out.println("bold text");

Changes

0.7

  • Some fixes for a broken 0.6 release.

0.6

  • Some fixes for Windows 7 and OS X 10.6.

You should avoid using this release, and use 0.7 or later instead.

0.5

  • Query the available values of a Windows registry key. Thanks to Michael Putters.

0.4

  • Get file type.
  • Query Windows registry value and subkeys.
  • Fixes to work on 64-bit Windows XP.

0.3

  • Get and set process working directory.
  • Get and set process environment variables.
  • Launch processes.
  • Fixed character set issue on Linux and Mac OS X.
  • Fixes to work with 64-bit OpenJDK 7 on Mac OS X. Thanks to Rene Gr�schke.

0.2

  • Fixes to make native library extraction multi-process safe.
  • Fixes to windows terminal detection and reset.

0.1

  • Initial release.

Development

Building

You will need to use the Gradle wrapper. Just run gradlew in the root directory.

Ubuntu

The g++ compiler is required to build the native library. You will need to install the g++ package for this.

You need to install the libncurses5-dev package to pick up the ncurses header files. Also worth installing the ncurses-doc package too.

64-bit machines with multi-arch support

Where multi-arch support is available (e.g. recent Ubuntu releases), you can build the i386 and amd64 versions of the library on the same machine.

You need to install the gcc-multilib and g++-multilib packages to pick up i386 support.

You need to install the lib32ncurses5-dev package to pick up the ncurses i386 version.

Windows

You need to install Visual studio 2010 or later, plus the Windows SDK to allow you to build both x86 and x64 binaries.

OS X

The g++ compiler is required to build the native library. You will need to install the XCode command-line tools for this.

Solaris

For Solaris 11, you need to install the development/gcc-45 and system/header packages.

Running

Run gradle installApp to install the test application into test-app/build/install/native-platform-test. Or gradle distZip to create an application distribution in test-app/build/distributions/native-platform-test-$version.zip.

You can run $INSTALL_DIR/bin/native-platform-test to run the test application.

Releasing

  1. Check the version number in build.gradle.
  2. Create a tag.
  3. Build each variant:
    1. Checkout tag.
    2. ./gradlew clean :test :uploadJni -Prelease -PartifactoryUserName=<> -PartifactoryPassword=<>
  4. Build Java library and test app:
    1. Checkout tag.
    2. ./gradlew clean :test :uploadArchives testApp:uploadArchives -Prelease -PartifactoryUserName=<> -PartifactoryPassword=<>
  5. Checkout master
  6. Increment version number in build.gradle and this readme.
  7. Push tag and changes.

Testing

  • Test on IBM JVM.
  • Test on Java 5, 6, 7.
  • Test on Windows 7, Windows XP

TODO

Fixes

  • All: Process.getPid() should return a long
  • All: fail subsequent calls to Native.get() when Native.initialize() fails.
  • Posix: allow terminal to be detected when ncurses cannot be loaded
  • Windows: fix detection of shared drive under VMWare fusion and Windows XP
  • Windows: restore std handles after launching child process
  • Linux: detect remote filesystems.
  • Solaris: fix unicode file name handling.
  • Solaris: fail for unsupported architecture.
  • Solaris: build 32 bit and 64 bit libraries.
  • Freebsd: finish port.
  • Freebsd: fail for unsupported architecture.
  • Freebsd: build 32 bit and 64 bit libraries.

Improvements

  • All: fall back to WrapperProcessLauncher + DefaultProcessLauncher for all platforms, regardless of whether a native integration is available or not.
  • All: change the terminal API to handle the fact that stdout/stderr/stdin can all be attached to the same or to different terminals.
  • All: have Terminal extend Appendable and Flushable
  • All: add a method to Terminal that returns a PrintStream that can be used to write to the terminal, regardless of what System.out or System.err point to.
  • Windows: use wchar_to_java() for system and file system info.
  • All: test network file systems
  • Windows: test mount points
  • All: cache class, method and field lookups
  • Unix: change readLink() implementation so that it does not need to NULL terminate the encoded content
  • All: don't use NewStringUTF() anywhere
  • Mac: change java_to_char() to convert java string directly to utf-8 char string.
  • Mac: change char_to_java() to assume utf-8 encoding and convert directly to java string.
  • Linux: change char_to_java() to use iconv() to convert from C char string to UTF-16 then to java string.
  • Windows: support for cygwin terminal
  • Solaris: use TERM=xtermc instead of TERM=xterm.
  • All: add diagnostics for terminal.
  • All: version each native interface separately.
  • All: string names for errno values.
  • All: split into multiple projects.
  • Mac: use fully decomposed form for unicode file names on hfs+ filesystems.
  • All: extend FileSystem to deal with removable media.
  • Unix: add a Terminal implementation that uses ANSI control codes. Use this when TERM != 'dumb' and libncurses cannot be loaded.
  • All: add a method to Terminal that indicates whether the cursor wraps to the next line when a character is written to the rightmost character position.
  • All: check for null parameters.

Ideas

  • Publish to bintray.
  • Expose meta-data about an NTFS volume:
  • Expose native desktop notification services:
    • OS X message center
    • Growl
    • Snarl
    • dnotify
  • Locate various system directories (eg program files on windows).
  • Expose platform-specific HTTP proxy configuration. Query registry on windows to determine IE settings.
  • Expose native named semaphores, mutexes and condition variables (CreateMutex, CreateSemaphore, CreateEvent, semget, sem_open, etc).
  • Expose information about network interfaces.
  • Fire events when filesystems or network interfaces change in some way.
  • Fire events when terminal size changes.
  • Fire events when files change.
  • Expose system keystores and authentication services.
  • Expose a mechanism for generating a temporary directory.