A bridge between Node.js programs and Java APIs written in Rust using napi-rs to provide a fast and memory-safe interface between the two languages.
The pre-compiled binaries will be provided with the package, the only thing
you need to do on your machine is install a Java Runtime Environment (JRE)
for this package to use. In contrast to other node.js <-> java
interfaces,
the binary is not hard linked to the JDK it has been compiled with but rather
loads the jvm native library dynamically when the program first starts up.
The full documentation of this package is available here.
NOTE: As of version 2.1.0
, this package has been renamed from @markusjx/java
to java-bridge
.
npm i java-bridge
Note: In order to use this package on windows, you'll need to install the Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015.
This module also provides a command line interface that allows you to generate typescript
definitions for your java classes.
The command line interface is called java-ts-definition-generator
and can be installed
using npm install -g java-ts-definition-generator
.
The full documentation can be
found here.
This is only required for development purposes. When installing the package
using npm i
, you can skip this.
In order to build this project, you should install
Then, to build the project, run:
npm install
npm run build
✅ = Pre-compiled binaries are available
-
= Pre-compiled binaries are not available
Operating System | i686 | x64 | arm | arm64 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Linux | - | ✅ | - | ✅ |
Windows | ✅ | ✅ | - | - |
macOS | - | ✅ | - | ✅ |
Distro | Version |
---|---|
Ubuntu | >= 20.04 |
Debian | >= bullseye |
import { importClass } from './java-bridge';
const System = importClass('java.lang.System');
System.out.println('Hello world!');
Create a new Java VM using
the ensureJvm
method.
Calling this after the jvm has already been created will do nothing.
Destroying the jvm manually is not (yet) supported.
This will first search for a suitable jvm
native library on the system and then
start the jvm with no extra options. This is also called when any call to the jvm is made
but the jvm is not yet started.
import { ensureJvm } from 'java-bridge';
ensureJvm();
You can pass extra options to the jvm when creating it, for example requesting a specific jvm version, specifying the location of the jvm native library or passing additional arguments to the jvm.
import { ensureJvm, JavaVersion } from 'java-bridge';
ensureJvm({
libPath: 'path/to/jvm.dll',
version: JavaVersion.VER_9,
opts: ['-Xms512m', '-Xmx512m'],
});
All threads will be attached as daemon threads, allowing the jvm to exit when the main thread exits. This behaviour can not be changed, as it may introduce undefined behaviour.
Important note on jvm options: Different arguments must be parsed as separate strings in
the opts
array.
Otherwise, the jvm will not be able to parse the arguments correctly.
When using this package in a packaged electron application, you should unpack this package
and
the appropriate binaries for your platform into the app.asar.unpacked
folder. When using
electron-builder, you can do this by adding the following to your package.json
:
{
"build": {
"asarUnpack": [
"node_modules/java-bridge/**",
"node_modules/java-bridge-*/**"
]
}
}
Additionally, you should set the isPackagedElectron
option to true
when creating the
jvm:
ensureJvm({
isPackagedElectron: true,
});
This option should not have any effect when not using electron or not having the application packaged.
In order to import your own classes into the node environment, you need
to add the JAR file to the class path. You can do that with the
appendClasspath
or classpath.append
methods. After loading a JAR, you can import classes from it like any other class
from the JVM using importClass
or importClassAsync
.
import { appendClasspath } from 'java-bridge';
// Append a single jar to the class path
appendClasspath('/path/to/jar.jar');
// Append multiple jars to the class path
appendClasspath(['/path/to/jar1.jar', '/path/to/jar2.jar']);
or
import { classpath } from 'java-bridge';
// Append a single jar to the class path
classpath.append('/path/to/jar.jar');
If you want to use Java APIs in a synchronous way, you can use the synchronous API of this module. Any call to the Java API will be executed in the same thread as your node process so this may cause your program to hang until the execution is finished. But - in contrast to the asynchronous API - these calls are a lot faster as no extra threads need to be created/attached to the JVM.
All synchronous java methods are proceeded with the postfix Sync
.
This means, all methods of a class (static and non-static) are generated twice,
once as a synchronous call and once as an asynchronous call.
If you are looking for asynchronous calls, take a look at the next section.
In order to import a class synchronously, you can use
the importClass
function.
Using this method does not affect your ability to call any method of the class
asynchronously.
import { importClass } from 'java-bridge';
// Import a class
const JString = importClass('java.lang.String');
// Create a new instance of the class
const str = new JString('Hello World');
// Call a method on the instance
str.lengthSync(); // 11
// Supported native types will be automatically converted
// to the corresponding type in the other language
str.toStringSync(); // 'Hello World'
If you want to use Java APIs in an asynchronous way, you can use the asynchronous API of this module. Any call to the Java API will be executed in a separate thread and the execution will not block your program. This is in general a lot slower as the synchronous API but allows the program to run more smoothly.
If you want to improve the performance of the asynchronous API, you can force the module to attach any thread as a daemon thread to the JVM. This allows the program to not constantly attach new threads to the JVM as the old ones can be reused and thus improves the performance.
In order to import a class asynchronously, you can use the
importClassAsync
function.
import { importClassAsync } from 'java-bridge';
const JString = await importClassAsync('java.lang.String');
// Create a new instance asynchrnously using 'newInstanceAsync'
const str = await JString.newInstanceAsync('Hello World');
// Call methods asynchronously
await str.length(); // 11
await str.toString(); // 'Hello World'
You can also implement a Java interface in node.js using the
newProxy
method.
Please note that when calling a java method that uses an interface defined by this method,
you must call that method using the interface asynchronously as Node.js is single threaded
and can't wait for the java method to return while calling the proxy method at the same
time.
import { newProxy } from 'java-bridge';
const proxy = newProxy('path.to.MyInterface', {
// Define methods...
});
// Do something with the proxy
instance.someMethod(proxy);
// Destroy the proxy
proxy.reset();
If you want to redirect the stdout and/or stderr from the java
process to the node.js process, you can use the
enableRedirect
method.
import { stdout } from 'java-bridge';
const guard = stdout.enableRedirect(
(_, data) => {
console.log('Stdout:', data);
},
(_, data) => {
console.error('Stderr:', data);
}
);
Errors thrown in the java process are returned as JavaError
objects.
These objects contain the error message, the full stack trace (including the java, node
and rust process) and the java throwable that caused
the error. The throwable is only available when the error was thrown in the java process
and not in the node process and if the call was a synchronous call.
The throwable can be accessed using the cause
property of the
JavaError
object.
import type { JavaError } from 'java-bridge';
try {
// Call a method that throws an error
someInstance.someMethodSync();
} catch (e: unknown) {
const throwable = (e as JavaError).cause;
throwable.printStackTraceSync();
}
If you want to access the Java throwable from an asynchronous call, you
need to enable
the asyncJavaExceptionObjects
config option
before or while importing the class.
Enabling this will cause the stack trace of the JavaScript error to be lost.
import { importClass } from 'java-bridge';
const SomeClass = importClass('path.to.SomeClass', {
asyncJavaExceptionObjects: true,
});
try {
await SomeClass.someMethod();
} catch (e: unknown) {
const throwable = (e as JavaError).cause;
throwable.printStackTraceSync();
}
If you want to enable logging for this module, you need to re-compile the module
with the log
feature. Please install the dependencies listed in the
build section and run npm run build:all
to build the module with
all features enabled.
Logged events include:
Note: Logging affects the performance of the module. Thus, it is recommended to only enable logging when debugging.
For further information on how to use the logging feature, please take a look at the logging module documentation.
string
, number
, boolean
or BigInt
may be passed to
methods accepting matching
typesstring
values will always be converted to java.lang.String
string
values with just one character may be converted to char
or java.lang.Char
if requiredchar
to a java method, use a string
containing just one
characternumber
values will be converted
to int
, long
, double
, float
, java.lang.Integer
,
java.lang.Long
, java.lang.Double
or java.lang.Float
depending on the type the
java function to call requiresboolean
values will be converted to either boolean
or java.lang.Boolean
BigInt
values will be converted to either long
or java.lang.Long
java.lang.String
values will be converted to string
int
, double
, float
, java.lang.Integer
, java.lang.Double
or java.lang.Float
values will be converted to number
long
or java.lang.Long
values will always be converted to BigInt
boolean
or java.lang.Boolean
values will be converted to boolean
char
or java.lang.Character
values will be converted to string
Buffer
and vice-versaGenerated using TypeDoc