I am using a 3rd party jar file in my CQ5.6.1 project. A program in the jar uses System.getProperty() to read some property file location.
I am not able to find a way to set these properties for the program to read. Any idea how I can do this in CQ?
You can use java options or command line arguments to pass system properties
Java Options
In Windows
set _JAVA_OPTIONS=-Dargument1=value1 -Dargument2=value2
In *nix
export _JAVA_OPTIONS="-Dargument1=value1 -Dargument2=value2"
Command Line
java -jar jarfile.jar -Dargument1=value1 -Dargument2=value2
Then you can get the property value by using System.getProperty()
System.getProperty("argument1")//Will print value1
System.getProperty("argument2")//Will print value2
Related
So if one was to want to use Google protocol buffers in Matlab and using a Windows computer what would be the best way to do that since Matlab is not in the list of supported languages?
I haven't seen an answer on this and I thought the solution was a bit obscure so I am going to post a how to for matlab_out using the protoc.exe
A how to for google protocol buffer matlab out, this is using resources from the internet I will also include a zip file containing all this already done.
Unzip protobuf-‘version#’.zip (looks like: protobuf-#.#.#)
Open file protobuf-#.#.# -> src
Choose your favorite editor (Notepad++ is good) and change Makefile.am (do not include quotes)
a. Under “nobase_include_HEADERS =”
and below “$(GZHEADERS)”
add the line “farsounder/protobuf/compiler/matlab/matlab_generator.h \” (Note the back slash)
b. Under “libprotoc_la_LIBADD = $(PTHREAD_LIBS) libprotobuf.la”
add lines
“farsounder/protobuf/compiler/matlab/matlab_generator.cc \”
“farsounder/protobuf/compiler/matlab/matlab_plugin.cc \”
c. Save the file and exit out
While still in the src directory go into ->google ->protobuf->compiler and change main.cc
a. Under “#include <google/protobuf/compiler/java/java_generator.h>”
add the line “#include <farsounder/protobuf/compiler/matlab/matlab_generator.h>”
b. In main function add the lines
“// Proto2 Matlab
farsounder::protobuf::compiler::matlab::MatlabGenerator matlab_generator;
cli.RegisterGenerator("--matlab_out", &matlab_generator,
"Generate Matlab M files.");”
c. Save the file and exit out
Unzip protobuf-matlab
Open file protobuf-matlab ->src and copy the farsounder directory to protobuf-#.#.# -> src directory
Go back to protobuf-#.#.# directory and into -> vsprojects and open protobuf.sln in Visual Studio, I believe any version should work
There should be a popup that wants to convert the solution file to a more updated version, go ahead and do that
If you do not see solutions explorer open it up using ctrl+alt+L
Open a new windows explorer and go into protobuf-#.#.# ->src->farsounder->protobuf->compiler->matlab, now in visual studio using the solutions explorer expand the libprotoc->Header Files, now in windows explorer copy the matlab_generator.h file and paste it into the Header Files directory
Still in Solutions explorer go into the Source Files directory and copy in the matlab_generator.cc
Contract libprotoc and right click on protoc and click on properties
Under Configuration Properties->Linker->General, Edit Enable Incremental Linking to be No
Under Configuration Properties->Linker->Input, Edit Additional Dependencies
a. Add the lines “Release\libprotobuf.lib” and underneath “Release\libprotoc.lib”
b. Click OK on the Additional Dependencies window and OK on the protoc Property Page
Change the build type to Release
Right-click on libprotobuf and select build, once completed right-click on libprotoc and select build
Once completed right-click on protoc and select build, it should provide you with an protoc.exe under protobuf-#.#.# ->vsprojects->Release, this will now allow you to create matlab .m files by using the matlab_out command
Help to find protobuf-#.#.# and the protobuf-matlab:
Follow these links:
https://code.google.com/p/protobuf-matlab/source/browse/
download the zip file
https://github.com/google/protobuf/releases
download the source code
Extra help, for using protoc.exe
Copy and paste the created protoc.exe to where your .proto file is
Run cmd and change the directory to where your protoc.exe and .proto file is
Run this command (lets pretend the name of my .proto file is “afunprotofile”) “protoc –matlab_out=./ -I./ afunprotofile.proto”
The easiest way is to use Java
The FarSounder code was nice, but it is quite old and unmaintained. The easiest way to produce Matlab compatible code is to just use the Java version of Protobuf. This solution should work on any platform that supports Matlab and Java.
The Steps
Create a .proto file
Process the file with the protoc compiler and output Java source
Using IntelliJ or other tool produce a JAR file that includes the dependencies
Add the JAR file to the Matlab classpath. edit('classpath.txt')
Restart Matlab
The protobuf runtime dependencies
I include these in a single JAR file output of the Protobuf and the two runtime libraries.
protobuf-java-3.3.0.jar
protobuf-java-util-3.3.0.jar
A sample
I wrote a simple Java wrapper class to hide the MyProtobuf.Builder return type from Matlab that I added to the JAR file
public class MyProtobufWrapperWrapper {
public static MyProtobuf.Builder newBuilder()
{
return MyProtobuf.newBuilder();
}
}
In Matlab
p = com.cameronpalmer.MyProtobufWrapper.newBuilder();
p.setIdentifier(java.util.UUID.randomUUID().toString());
p.setTimestampMilliseconds(timestamp);
p.setAngleRadians(0);
p.addAllChannelSamples(channel_vector);
planeWaveBuilt = p.build();
byteArray = planeWaveBuilt.toByteArray();
As Cameron Lowell Palmer's answer suggests, the way to go is via Java.
Is I lost a couple of hours today on this problem, I would like to elaborate some more. I started with Cameron's answer but I had to do a couple of more steps. Essentially, I had to do all of the following:
Compile proto message for java, e.g. protoc --java_out=./ your_file.proto
Remember to install protobuf java runtime, e.g. in ubuntu: sudo apt install libprotobuf-java
Locate the protobuf java runtime on your system, e.g.: /usr/share/java/protobuf-3.6.1.jar; its path will be used later on. The name should always follow the pattern protobuf-version.jar or protobuf-java-version.jar, therefore locate protobuf- | grep jar$ should reduce the search space for you.
Add a short java file to the same directory, where your protobuf java files went (./x/y/z/MyProto.java). Use your package path instead of x/y/z. If you did not declare java package explicitly in the proto file, then protoc just used your filename as package name. Either way, you can probably check where the protoc generated files went by yourself. Contents of MyProto.java are listed below. Just replace YourProtoFileName and YourMessageName with your stuff. Note that this step is not optional, as this will not generate a simple helper class. For the life of me, Matlab would not let me use inner classes directly (in java, YourMessageName is the inner class of YourProtoFileName). But with the above helper, it was quite happy to generate them for me. Note that if you have more than one message defined in your proto file, you might need to expose more than one builder in this way. And if you only need to read protobuffers, then you might need to export just YourMessageName and not Builder.
package x.y.z;
import x.y.z.YourProtoFileName; // if you do not know it, do `ls x.y.z/*.java`
public class MyProto {
public static YourProtoFileName.YourMessageName.Builder newBuilder() {
return YourProtoFileName.YourMessageName.newBuilder();
}
}
Check Matlab's version of java; in Matlab write version -java. In my case it was 1.8, while the default java installed on my system (java -version) is 11. I had to manually select java 1.8 for the next step, otherwise the whole thing did not work. Even worse, Matlab only produced a very nondescript error "No class x.y.z.YourProtoFileName." Thanks Matlab! You might need to install proper version first (sudo apt install openjdk-8-jdk) and then use update-java-alternatives or just locate javac for the appropriate java version on your system.
Compile both your java file and the one generated by protoc. Remember to point classpath at the jar file or protobuffer runtime that you found above. And remember to use your javac path. In a single command: /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64/bin/javac x.y.z/*.java -cp /usr/share/java/protobuf-3.6.1.jar. This will generate class files in ./x/y/z/.
Optional: pack the class files in a jar for easier distribution: jar cvf ./YourProtoFilename.jar x/y/z/*.class. Note that this command line works for me, since I've put all classes, including MyProto, in the same package. You might need to adapt it to your needs.
Start Matlab.
% make Matlab aware of your new classes
javaaddpath('./')
% tell Matlab where protobuf dependancy lives (use the path from step 3)
javaaddpath('/usr/share/java/protobuf-3.6.1.jar')
% test if the classes were found
methods('x.y.z.YourProtoFilename.YourMessageName')
% if methods are listed then you are good to go
% use the helper form step 4
b = x.y.z.MyProto.newBuilder();
% now you have a builder you can use to build your protobuf message
See Google's protobuf java primer to go on from here, as using java in Matlab is fairly straight forward: just write java statements. As long as they are simple statements :)
The same procedure works on octave too. With a bit different syntax for java inside octave. And octave was less picky about the java version in my case. YMMV
#WPFUser,
We followed below steps to build protoc for matlab.
1) git clone https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf.git to protobuf-main folder
2) git submodule update --init --recursive
3) git clone https://github.com/farsounder/protobuf-matlab.git - protobuf_matlab folder
4) Copied src folder from protobuf_matlab repo to protobuf-main/src
5) Updated cmake/libprotoc.cmake to include matlab_generator.cc and matlab_generator.h files
6) Updated cmake/extract_includes.bat.in to include matlab_generator.h file
7) \src\google\protobuf\compiler\main.cc to include matlab_generator
I am using Netbeans 8.0.2 and phpdocumentor 2.8.2 on a windows 7 platform.
I would like to use custom phpdoc.dist.xml config files by project so I can specify framework directories and etc. to exclude from the generated doc. I also want to keep my Netbeans PHPDOC plugin config as generic as possible, without specific output directories, ignore options, config path parameters, etc., so on, so that that the config will apply to all my projects.
The phpdoc.dist.xml file works great. The doc generated is exactly what I want.
The problem or feature, and it seems to be a phpdocumentor one as it also applies from plain command line, is that the phpdoc.bat command (without a specific config parm) has to be run from the same root directory as the phpdoc.dist.xml file, or it ignores it. No problem if I'm using command line as I can change into that directory first, but I would like to use Netbeans. I have searched on this extensively and cannot find an answer.
I considered whether to modify the phpdocumentor files to insert cd /D path/to/myproject/dir to change the directory using some Netbeans variable to represent myproject/dir, but I could not find the right place in the code or the variable to use. Plus, then I'm supporting a custom mod to phpdocumentor.
I did find these directions for a PHPStorm setup, where the author specified a PHPStorm variable for the --config command line option to point to his custom phpdoc.dist.xml.
--config="$ProjectFileDir$/phpdoc.dist.xml"
If I could do the same in Netbeans like maybe "${BASE_DIR}/phpdoc.dist.xml" it would be great, but so far I haven't hit on anything Netbeans will recognize/pay attention to in the PhpDoc script: box.
I have also tried writing a wrapper .bat file to capture my own command line variable %1 and do the directory change to that before calling phpdoc.bat, but Netbeans throws and error and says that's not a valid .bat file. I cannot find any phpdocumentor parameter to configure by specific Netbeans project but the output directory. And I would prefer not to be defining a bunch of projects on subdirectories in Netbeans, just to address phpdocumentor.
Now I am out of ideas. Can anyone point me to a solution?
I am trying to configure Netbeans IDE 7.4 for node-webkit development.
It is excellent IDE but I want to run my projects with F6 button. To do this I added NW.EXE as additional browser (executable is located outside project folder).
After this I have a problem with execution arguments. NW.EXE expects a folder path to be specified as an argument, but I cannot leave empty field of Start File in project settings and the Project URL has to start with either http:// or file:// while Node-webkit needs a path like C:/path_to_app
Does any method exist to deal with this feature?
In short, you can work this around by creating a batch program and let it strip the file name down to the path name part, to be fed to nw.exe, as it requires.
Unfortunately, as you said, we don't have full control over the way the main file of the project is passed to the browser, hence some further actions (in addition to the creation of the batch file) are needed.
This is how I got it working after a bit of struggle:
added nw.exe to the system %PATH% variable (optional, just for ease of access)
created nw.bat in the same folder as nw.exe, and filled it with this content:
#echo %1
start nw.exe %~d1%~p1
The first line of this batch file is just to inspect the actual parameter that is getting passed to the batch file.
The second line uses start to invoke nw.exe without having to wait for its return (you may need to specify the full path to nw.exe, if you didn't add it to the system %PATH% variable).
The second line also passes to nw.exe the drive part of the parameter (extracted from %1 by %~d1) concatenating it to the path of the parameter (extracted from %1 by %~p1).
For instance, my last run from within NetBeans gave this output:
D:\node\test\index.html
D:\node\test>start nw.exe D:\node\test\
Then I needed something to tie the NetBeans run button to an arbitrary executable, and luckily I found a perfect fit.
So here is how I went on:
installed the Node.js Projects plugin from Timboudreau Update Center
went to Options > Miscellaneous > Node.js and set the Node.js Binary field to point to my nw.bat file
In my project, I've also taken care to put package.json in the same folder of index.html (being that that's the main file of my package, and that's what will be fed to the batch file).
Now pressing F6 on my NetBeans installation happily runs my node-webkit project without any further ado :-)
I'm trying to pass a .txt file as a paramater into my java program.
My program is titled SetTest and the file I'm trying to read is Ted.txt. From a Windows 7 command prompt I create a temp folder and compile my program there creating SetTest.class. Also in that folder is Ted.txt. From that temp directory I then issue the command:
java SetTest < Ted.txt
Everything works as expected. The program reads in the file and outputs what I'm looking for. All good.
My question is how do I duplicate this using Eclipse? I believe my text file is in the proper location, listed under JRE System Library as seen in the Package Explorer. I've been trying the following from Eclipse: Run -> Run Configurations... Then in the (x)= Arguments section, in the Program arguments field I enter Ted.txt then click on Run. Unfortunately nothing seems to happen. No error message, but I don't see the console output I'm looking for either.
To rephrase your question - you want to send a file to your application's standard input, while it is running in Eclipse.
You can write (copy & paste) data into console (that's where the standard input is taken from). However I am not aware of any possibility how you can redirect file contents directly to the standard input.
UPDATE with correct keywords you might be able to find more resources:
Eclipse reading stdin (System.in) from a file
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=155411
I am trying to deploy a jar file on a tomcat server and initialise RMI. For this I am using the following command--
java -jar -Djava.security.policy=[rmi.policy file path] server.jar [server_ip] [port]
Now, I want the above initialisation and RMI Policy file, and port (for RMI) to be directly done by Java code within the same Jar file.
How do I do this? Also, can I use a URL instead of the IP address?
java.security.policy is a system property, and can be set with System.setProperty(). You don't need to set command line arguments from within the code, as you are just talking to yourself: just use those values in the appropriate places.