Hi Miguel:
I have an issue with that solution; I need to send just two things, the
bundle (bundleX.jar) and a config.properties file, just that. With the file
install, wouldn't I need another .jar?
Hi Jean:
I don't understand that solution(sorry, newby here). Should I implement that
code in the META-INF? How could I load it from the .java classes?
Hi Neil:
NewFileInputStream, getResourceasStream, ... don't work to load files from
outside the classpath. They do work inside Eclipse-Equinox, but not when you
export the .jar. I tested them all, I think:
- propertiesFile.load(new FileInputStream("/config/BD.properties"));
- InputStream is =
ConfigIni.class.getResourceAsStream("/config/BD.properties");
- InputStream is= this.getClass().getResourceAsStream("/BD.properties");
But they just load dinamically inside Eclipse.
Thanks,
Asier
On 1 February 2010 10:41, Jean-Baptiste Onofré <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Neil,
>
> The FileInputStream() usage is correct too. I simply focus on another way
> to do it using blueprint :)
>
> Regards
> JB
>
>
> Neil Bartlett wrote:
>
>> Sorry if I am missing something obvious, but what is wrong with "new
>> FileInputStream(...)" ?
>>
>> Neil
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 9:12 AM, Asier Aranbarri Beldarrain
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi everyone:
>>>
>>> I need to load a config.properties file from outside an osgi bundle and
>>> I'm
>>> having real issues getting it. The .properties MUST be outisde the
>>> classpath, since it must be modified by the user( put user and password
>>> from
>>> mysql) and then read from the bundle (bundle.jar).
>>>
>>> I have no problem loading from outside with an static path or a dynamic
>>> path
>>> INSIDE eclipse. But when I try to load it dinamycally from the
>>> eclipse-independent osgi, I cannot read the file.
>>>
>>> Is there any way to load a file outside the classpath with a .jar? I
>>> repeat
>>> that the .properties MUST be outside the classpath. Static paths don't do
>>> the work for me since I am forcing the user to put in an specific
>>> location
>>> and that's not acceptable(also, he's on linux and I on windows, so the
>>> path
>>> C:\ ... doesnt work).
>>>
>>> Thank you very much,
>>>
>>> Asier
>>>
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