Load .jar file in C ++ using JNI

I need to integrate my C ++ (OpenCV project) with Java code (web services program), so I am using JNI to integrate them.

I can run helloWorld java code from C ++ using JNI as you can see below:

import java.io.IOException;

public class Main {

    public Main() {
        System.out.println("hello from no arg");
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {     

    }

    private static void callRestPost2(String ontologyURI, String object, String predicate, String subject) throws IOException {
            java.util.Map<String, Object> params = new java.util.HashMap<String, Object>();//hedef
            params.put("operationType", "insertTriple4TrafficOntology");
            params.put("ontologyURI", ontologyURI);
            params.put("object", object);
            params.put("predicate", predicate);
            params.put("subject", subject);
            System.out.println("Hello World!"); 
     }
}

      

But I cannot run my java code with .jar dependency from C ++ using JNI, it gives error on 25th line (I think due to new object from spring framework [spring-web -4.2.4. RELEASE.jar]) is created on line 25).

import java.io.IOException;
import org.springframework.http.HttpMethod;
import org.springframework.http.ResponseEntity;
import org.springframework.web.client.RestTemplate;

public class Main {

    public Main() {
        System.out.println("hello from no arg");
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {     

    }

    private static void callRestPost2(String ontologyURI, String object, String predicate, String subject) throws IOException {
            java.util.Map<String, Object> params = new java.util.HashMap<String, Object>();//hedef
            params.put("operationType", "insertTriple4TrafficOntology");
            params.put("ontologyURI", ontologyURI);
            params.put("object", object);
            params.put("predicate", predicate);
            params.put("subject", subject);
            ResponseEntity<String> entity = null;
            RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
            entity = restTemplate.exchange("http://www.mantam.com.tr/c3po-rest-service/c3pont/insertTriple4TrafficOntology" + "?ontologyURI={ontologyURI}&subject={subject}&object={object}&predicate={predicate}",HttpMethod.POST, null, String.class, params);
             System.out.println(entity.toString());     
    }
}

      

As a result, my question is "How do I load a .jar file in C ++ using JNI?"

My C ++ code:

#include <jni.h>

int main()
{
   Using namespace std;
   JavaVM *jvm;                      // Pointer to the JVM (Java Virtual Machine)
   JNIEnv *env;                      // Pointer to native interface
       //================== prepare loading of Java VM ============================
   JavaVMInitArgs vm_args;                        // Initialization arguments
   JavaVMOption* options = new JavaVMOption[1];   // JVM invocation options
   options[0].optionString = "-Djava.class.path=C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin";   // where to find java .class
   vm_args.version = JNI_VERSION_1_6;             // minimum Java version
   vm_args.nOptions = 1;                          // number of options
   vm_args.options = options;
   vm_args.ignoreUnrecognized = false;     // invalid options make the JVM init fail
       //=============== load and initialize Java VM and JNI interface =============
   jint rc = JNI_CreateJavaVM(&jvm, (void**)&env, &vm_args);  // YES !!
   delete options;    // we then no longer need the initialisation options. 
   if (rc != JNI_OK) {
          // TO DO: error processing... 
         cin.get();
         exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
   }
      //=============== Display JVM version =======================================
   cout << "JVM load succeeded: Version ";
   jint ver = env->GetVersion();
   cout << ((ver>>16)&0x0f) << "."<<(ver&0x0f) << endl;


    jclass cls2 = env->FindClass("Main");  // try to find the class
    if (cls2 == nullptr) {
        cerr << "ERROR: class not found !";
    }
    else {                                  // if class found, continue
        cout << "Class MyTest found" << endl;
        jmethodID mid2 = env->GetStaticMethodID(cls2, "callRestPost2", "(Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/lang/String;)V");
        if (mid2 == nullptr) {
            cerr << "ERROR: method it main2(int) not found !" << endl;
        }
        else {
            jstring jstr1 = env->NewStringUTF("http://traffic.c3po.mantis.com.tr");
            jstring jstr2 = env->NewStringUTF(c);
            jstring jstr3 = env->NewStringUTF("measured_At");
            jstring jstr4 = env->NewStringUTF("Zevkli_Sokak");
            env->CallStaticVoidMethod(cls2, mid2, jstr1, jstr2, jstr3, jstr4);
            cout << endl;
        }
    }

   jvm->DestroyJavaVM();
   cin.get();
}

      

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1 answer


I found a solution and feel happy now :)

You must add the full path to your .jar files. For example:



options = new JavaVMOption[1];   // JVM invocation options
options[0].optionString =   "Djava.class.path=C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin;C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin\\spring-web-4.2.4.RELEASE.jar;C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin\\spring-core-4.2.4.RELEASE.jar;C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin\\spring-beans-4.2.4.RELEASE.jar;C:\\Users\\proje\\workspace\\HelloWorld\\bin\\commons-logging-1.2.jar";   // where to find java .class and .jar files

      

What is it!!!

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