Summary

Create a tool for packaging self-contained Java applications.

Goals

Create a simple packaging tool, based on the JavaFX javapackager tool, that:

Supports native packaging formats to give end users a natural installation experience. These formats include msi and exe on Windows, pkg and dmg on macOS, and deb and rpm on Linux.

Allows launch-time parameters to be specified at packaging time.

Can be invoked directly, from the command line, or programmatically, via the ToolProvider API.

Non-Goals

The following features of the javapackager tool will not be supported: Java Web Start application support, JavaFX-specific features, jdeps usage for determining required modules, and the Ant plugin.

tool will not be supported: There will be no GUI for the tool; a command-line interface (CLI) is sufficient.

There will be no support for cross compilation. For example, in order to create Windows packages one must run the tool on Windows. The packaging tool will depend upon platform-specific tools.

There will be no special support for legal files beyond what is already provided in JMOD files. There will be no aggregation of individual license files.

There will be no native splash screen support.

There will be no auto-update mechanism.

The tool will not be available on Solaris.

Motivation

Many Java applications need to be installed on a native platform in a first-class way, rather than simply being placed on the class path or the module path. It is not sufficient for the application developer to deliver a simple JAR file; they must deliver an installable package suitable for the native platform. This allows Java applications to be distributed, installed, and uninstalled in a manner that is familiar to users. For example, on Windows users expect to be able to double-click on a package to install their software, and then use the control panel to remove the software; on macOS, users expect to be able to double-click on a DMG file and drag their application to the Application folder.

A packaging tool can also help fill gaps left by other technologies such as Java Web Start, which was removed from Oracle’s JDK 11, and pack200 , which was deprecated in JDK 11 for removal in a future release. Developers can use jlink to strip the JDK down to the minimal set of modules that are needed, and then use the packaging tool to produce a compressed, installable image that can be deployed to target machines.

To address these requirements previously, a packaging tool called javapackager was distributed with Oracle’s JDK 8. However, it was removed from Oracle’s JDK 11 as part of the removal of JavaFX.

Description

The jpackage tool packages a Java application into a platform-specific package that includes all of the necessary dependencies. The application may be provided as a collection of ordinary JAR files or as a collection of modules. The supported platform-specific package formats are:

Linux: deb and rpm

and macOS: pkg and dmg

and Windows: msi and exe

By default, jpackage produces a package in the format most appropriate for the system on which it is run.

Basic usage: Non-modular applications

Suppose you have an application composed of JAR files, all in a directory named lib , and that lib/main.jar contains the main class. Then the command

$ jpackage --name myapp --input lib --main-jar main.jar

will package the application in the local system's default format, leaving the resulting package file in the current directory. If the MANIFEST.MF file in main.jar does not have a Main-Class attribute then you must specify the main class explicitly:

$ jpackage --name myapp --input lib --main-jar main.jar \ --main-class myapp.Main

The name of the package will be myapp , though the name of the package file itself will be longer, and end with the package type (e.g., myapp.exe ). The package will include a launcher for the application, also called myapp . To start the application, the launcher will place every JAR file that was copied from the input directory on the class path of the JVM.

If you wish to produce a package in a format other than the default, then use the --type option. For example, to produce a pkg file rather than dmg file on macOS:

$ jpackage --name myapp --input lib --main-jar main.jar --type pkg

Basic usage: Modular applications

If you have a modular application, composed of modular JAR files and/or JMOD files in a lib directory, with the main class in the module myapp , then the command

$ jpackage --name myapp --module-path lib -m myapp

will package it. If the myapp module does not identify its main class then, again, you must specify that explicitly:

$ jpackage --name myapp --module-path lib -m myapp/myapp.Main

(When packaging a modular JAR or a JMOD file you can specify the main class with the --main-class option to the jar and jmod tools.)

Package metadata

The jpackage tool allows you to specify various kinds of metadata for your package. The options common to all platforms are:

--app-version <version>

--copyright <string>

--description <string>

--license-file <file>

--name <string>

--vendor <string>

The tool uses the arguments provided to these options in the manner appropriate to the package's type. Platform-specific package metadata options are described below.

File associations

You can define one or more file-type associations for your application via the --file-associations option, which can be used more than once. The argument to this option is a properties file with values for one or more of the following keys:

extension specifies the extension of files to be associated with the application,

specifies the extension of files to be associated with the application, mime-type specifies the MIME type of files to be associated with the application,

specifies the MIME type of files to be associated with the application, icon specifies an icon, within the application image, for use with this association, and

specifies an icon, within the application image, for use with this association, and description specifies a short description of the association.

Launchers

By default, the jpackage tool creates a simple native launcher for your application. You can customize the default launcher via the following options:

--arguments <string> — Command-line arguments to pass to the main class if no command line arguments are given to the launcher (this option can be used multiple times)

— Command-line arguments to pass to the main class if no command line arguments are given to the launcher (this option can be used multiple times) --java-options <string> — Options to pass to the JVM (this option can be used multiple times)

If your application requires additional launchers then you can add them via the --add-launcher option:

--add-launcher <launcher-name>=<file>

The named <file> should be a properties file with values for one or more of the keys app-version icon arguments java-options main-class main-jar module , or win-console . The values of these keys will be interpreted as arguments to the options of the same name, but with respect to the launcher being created rather than the default launcher. The --add-launcher option can be used multiple times.

Application images

The jpackage tool constructs an application image as input to the platform-specific packaging tool that it invokes in its final step. Normally this image is a temporary artifact, but sometimes you need to customize it before it's packaged. You can, therefore, run the jpackage tool in two steps. First, create the initial application image with the special package type app-image :

$ jpackage --name myapp --module-path lib -m myapp --type app-image

This will produce an application image in the myapp directory. Customize that image as needed, and then create the final package via the --app-image option:

$ jpackage --name myapp --app-image myapp

Runtime images

An application image contains both the files comprising your application as well as the JDK runtime image that will run your application. By default, the jpackage tool invokes the the jlink tool to create the runtime image. The content of the image depends upon the type of the application:

For a non-modular application composed of JAR files, the runtime image contains the same set of JDK modules that is provided to class-path applications in the unnamed module by the regular java launcher.

For a modular application composed of modular JAR files and/or JMOD files, the runtime image contains the application's main module and the transitive closure of all of its dependencies. It will not include all the available service providers; if you want those to be bound then specify the --bind-services option to the jpackage tool.

In either case, if you want additional modules to be added to the runtime image you can use the --add-modules option with the jpackage tool. The list of modules in a runtime image is available in the image's release file.

Runtime images created by the jpackage tool do not contain debug symbols, the usual JDK commands, man pages, or the src.zip file.

If you wish to customize the runtime image further then you can invoke jlink yourself and pass the resulting image to the jpackage tool via the --runtime-image option. For example, if you've used the jdeps tool to determine that your non-modular application only needs the java.base and java.sql modules, you could reduce the size of your package significantly:

$ jlink --add-modules java.base,java.sql --output myjre $ jpackage --name myapp --input lib --main-jar main.jar --runtime-image myjre

Platform-specific details

This section describes the platform-specific aspects of the jpackage tool, including application image layouts and platform-specific options. The command jpackage --help will print a summary of all options.

The application images created by the jpackage tool contain some files not shown in the layouts below; such files should be considered implementation details that are subject to change.

Linux

myapp/ bin/ // Application launcher(s) myapp lib/ app/ myapp.cfg // Configuration info, created by jpackage myapp.jar // JAR files, copied from the --input directory mylib.jar ... runtime/ // JDK runtime image

The default installation directory on Linux is /opt . This can be overridden via the --install-dir option.

Linux-specific options:

--linux-package-name <package name> — Name for the Linux package, defaults to the application name

— Name for the Linux package, defaults to the application name --linux-deb-maintainer <email address> — Maintainer for a DEB package

— Maintainer for a DEB package --linux-menu-group <menu-group-name> — Menu group this application is placed in

— Menu group this application is placed in --linux-package-deps <deps> — Required packages or capabilities for the application

— Required packages or capabilities for the application --linux-rpm-license-type <type string> — Type of the license ( License: <value> of the RPM .spec file)

— Type of the license ( of the RPM file) --linux-app-release <release value> — Release value of the RPM <name>.spec file, or the Debian revision value of the DEB control file

— Release value of the RPM file, or the Debian revision value of the DEB control file --linux-app-category <category value> — Group value of the RPM <name>.spec file, or the Section value of the DEB control file

— Group value of the RPM file, or the Section value of the DEB control file --linux-shortcut Creates a shortcut for the application

macOS

MyApp.app/ Contents/ Info.plist MacOS/ // Application launcher(s) MyApp Resources/ // Icons, etc. app/ MyApp.cfg // Configuration info, created by jpackage myapp.jar // JAR files, copied from the --input directory mylib.jar ... runtime/ // JDK runtime image

The default installation directory on macOS is /Applications . This can be overridden via the --install-dir option.

macOS-specific options:

--mac-package-identifier <string> — An identifier that uniquely identifies the application for macOS (defaults to the main class name; limited to alphanumeric, hyphen, and period characters)

— An identifier that uniquely identifies the application for macOS (defaults to the main class name; limited to alphanumeric, hyphen, and period characters) --mac-package-name <string> — Name of the application as it appears in the menu bar (defaults to the application name; must be less than 16 characters long and be suitable for displaying in the menu bar and the application Info window)

— Name of the application as it appears in the menu bar (defaults to the application name; must be less than 16 characters long and be suitable for displaying in the menu bar and the application Info window) --mac-package-signing-prefix <string> — When signing the application bundle, the value prepended to all components that need to be signed but don't have an existing bundle identifier

— When signing the application bundle, the value prepended to all components that need to be signed but don't have an existing bundle identifier --mac-sign — Request that the bundle be signed

— Request that the bundle be signed --mac-signing-keychain <file> — Path of the keychain to search for the signing identity (defaults to the standard keychains)

— Path of the keychain to search for the signing identity (defaults to the standard keychains) --mac-signing-key-user-name <team name> — Team name portion of the Apple signing identity (for example, "Developer ID Application: ")

Windows

MyApp/ MyApp.exe // Application launcher(s) app/ MyApp.cfg // Configuration info, created by jpackage myapp.jar // JAR files, copied from the --input directory mylib.jar ... runtime/ // JDK runtime image

The default installation directory on Windows is C:/Program Files/ . This can be overridden via the --install-dir option.

Windows-specific options:

--win-console — Creates a console launcher for the application (should be specified for applications which require console interactions)

— Creates a console launcher for the application (should be specified for applications which require console interactions) --win-dir-chooser — Adds a dialog to enable the user to choose a directory in which to install the application

— Adds a dialog to enable the user to choose a directory in which to install the application --win-menu — Adds the application to the system menu

— Adds the application to the system menu --win-menu-group <menu-group-name> — Start Menu group in which to place this application

— Start Menu group in which to place this application --win-per-user-install — Install the application on a per-user basis

— Install the application on a per-user basis --win-shortcut — Create a desktop shortcut for the application

— Create a desktop shortcut for the application --win-upgrade-uuid <string> — UUID associated with upgrades for this package

Delivering jpackage

The jpackage tool will be delivered in the JDK as an incubator module named jdk.incubator.jpackage . As a feature delivered in an incubator module, the jpackage tool's command line options, application layout, and other exported interfaces are not guaranteed to be stable and may be revised in a future release. The tool will display a warning when run from the command line. The jdk.incubator.jpackage module will not be resolved by default, and will cause a warning to be displayed when it is resolved.

The jpackage tool is based on the javapackager tool, with all features related to Java Web Start and JavaFX removed. The command-line interface (CLI) conforms to JEP 293 (Guidelines for JDK Command-Line Tool Options). In addition to the command-line interface, jpackage is accessible via the ToolProvider API ( java.util.spi.ToolProvider ) under the name "jpackage" .

Testing

Most tests can be done with automated scripts, but there are a few considerations to be aware of:

Testing the native packages may require optional tools to be installed; those tests will need to be written such that they are skipped on systems without the necessary tools.

Verifying some types of native packages (e.g., exe on Windows or dmg on macOS) may require some manual testing.

We need to ensure that native packages can be installed and uninstalled cleanly, so that developers can test in their local environment without fear of polluting their systems.

Dependencies

Native packages will be generated using tools on the target platform. For Windows, there is an additional tool that developers will need to install if they want to generate native packages:

Wix, a third-party tool, is required to generate msi or exe packages