“How do I make an .EXE file from my Java application?”, “Need help converting jar to exe”, “Is it possible to create a Windows executable using Java?” — these and similar questions are among the most popular topics on Java developer forums.
Should you start such a topic today, you are likely to encounter the following three types of replies:
The truth is that there exist two completely different approaches to the creation of native executables from Java applications, addressing different sets of problems. Moreover, under certain conditions some of those problems may be solved without making an EXE. So the most correct way to reply to such a post would be a request for more information, namely, “What is the goal of conversion to EXE?” And the most frequent answer would be:
Simplify Java Application Deployment
Java compiles to platform-independent bytecode (.class files), which is not directly supported by PC hardware. So a Java program needs a Java Runtime Environment (JRE) to run, which would either interpret the bytecode instructions or compile them to native code on the fly. This in turn means that the author of that program has to ensure somehow that the proper version of the JRE is installed on an end user system.
Generally, you cannot expect that your end users will know what a JRE is, how to check its version, and how to download and install it. This is especially true for consumer applications, such as games or multimedia. And those who already have a JRE installed may not like the idea of installing a different version, because it may break their existing Java applications and favorite applets.
Then, even if you can make sure the right version of the JRE is properly installed on enduser systems, which is quite possible in a classroom or enterprise environment, the command line required to launch your Java application can be quite long:
java -Xmx200m -cp whatever.jar -Dsome.property MyApp
Yes, you may put that line into a batch file and call it runme.bat, but it looks so much easier to give your program to a friend, teacher or colleague as a single file that can be run by a double-click. Or, even better, enable it to be installed and uninstalled in a native manner without affecting other applications.
So it comes as no surprise that the primary motivation for seeking a way to convert a Java application into an EXE file is to make its deployment and use simpler and safer for an average user, that is, a Windows user. What surprises newbie Java developers is that the JDK does not offer such functionality. Before J2SE 1.4, all you could make with JDK tools were:
Executable Jars
Pros
– No need to use any third-party tools
– Single distribution for all Java-enabled platforms
Cons
-Application will not start on systems that do not have a JRE (properly) installed
– Application will not work if it uses APIs absent in the default JRE
– Need to teach users that .JAR files are clickable
Resources
– The Java Archive (JAR) File Format
Tools
– One-JAR
You can make your Java application runnable via a double-click by packaging it into a so called executable jar. You do that by specifying the main class of your application, any extra jar files it may require and so on in the jar’s manifest file
Main-Class: MyAppMain
Class-Path: mylib.jar
Then you use the jar utility from the Java SDK to package your classes and resource files, specifying the m option and the name of your manifest file:
jar cvfm MyApp.jar MyApp.mf *.class *.gif
This will result in the creation of MyApp.jar
. Now, if you type
java -jar MyApp.jar
the Java launcher will read the manifest from MyApp.jar
and invoke the main method from the class MyAppMain
. Moreover, if you double-click that jar file on a system that has JRE installed, the java launcher will be invoked automatically.
Note: As of J2SE 5.0, jar files are associated with the javaw launcher on Windows, which does not open a console on startup. If your application needs a console, write a batch file which would start it using the java launcher.
If your application consists of more than one jar file, there is an open source tool called One-JAR that claims to correctly repackage multiple jars into one.
The major problem with executable jars is compatibility. The default JRE may be of an older version than is required by your application or may not have the necessary Java Optional Packages (previously known as Standard Extensions) installed. For instance, if your app uses the java.nio package introduced in Java 2 version 1.4, it will not work on JRE 1.3.x. Similarly, if it uses JavaMail 1.3, and the default JRE has JavaMail 1.2 or JavaMail is not present at all, the double-clicked jar will not run.
Fortunately, Sun has created a Java application deployment technology that eliminates this compatibility problem and adds some nice features. It is part of the Java 2 platform since version 1.4 and is called
Java Web Start
Pros
– Available for all major desktop platforms
– Single distribution for all JWS-enabled platforms
– Code-signing and sandboxing
– Versioning and incremental updates
– Automatic installation of JREs and optional packages
– Use of third-party tools is optional
Cons
– Internet connectivity required if JWS, JRE, and/or an Optional Package is not present on the system
– Support for jnlp MIME type required on both Web server and browser
– Limited desktop intergation capabilities
Resources
– Deploying Software with JNLP and Java Web Start
– Java Web Start (Roedy Green’s Java Glossary)
Tools
Java Web Start (JWS) and the underlying Java Network Launch Protocol (JNLP) enable Java application delivery from a standard Web server. The end user initiates application installation by clicking on an URL. If the Java Web Start engine is not present on the system, the user is prompted to download and install it. Once Java Web Start is in place, clicking on the same URL will initiate the application download and installation procedures. It may involve download and installation of the required version of the JRE and Optional Packages. Upon their successful completion, the application is launched. The application will be cached on the user’s system so that the next time the user clicks on the same URL, the JWS engine will launch the local copy of the application from the cache, if it detects that the computer is offline or the application was not updated on the Web site.
Another important feature of JWS is its ability to run your application in a sandbox – a restricted container based on Java security architecture. But, unlike an applet, your application can gain access to local system resources like the filesystem, printer and system clipboard using the JNLP API even if it comes from an untrusted environment, after prompting the user for confirmation.
Java Web Start is available for Windows, Linux, and Solaris, and is part of MacOS X since v10.1. There are also third-party implementations of the JNLP protocol, some of them also include tools that assist you in the creation and maintenance of JNLP packages.
That was the bright side. Now, what is not so good about JNLP? First off, for seamless operation both the browser and the Web server that hosts the JNLP-enabled application must support application/x-java-jnlp-file
MIME type. Some hosting providers do not support it. Moreover, versioning and incremental updates require additional support from the Web server, which has to be implemented using servlets, cgi-bin scripts, etc.
On the client side, a major browser would be configured to recognize the above MIME type during installation of the JWS engine, but users of less popular browsers, such as Opera, may have to do that manually.
JNLP-enabling an application may involve minor changes in its code and (re)packaging it into a set of jar files.
Before J2SE 5.0, JWS had very little to offer in terms of desktop integration – all it could do was create a desktop icon and/or a Start Menu entry for the application. On Windows, the application will not show up in Add/Remove Programs, so end users would have to run the Java Web Start application manager in order to remove your application.
Finally, JWS user interface needs much polishing. As of J2SE 5.0, users still complain about ugly windows with incomprehensible messages.
To sum it up, JWS can be a viable option in a controlled environment, such as corporate intranet, but it is not ready for the consumer market, where you may be better off using
Custom Java Launchers And Wrappers
Pros
– JRE version check
– JRE download or bundling
– Unique process name and icon
– No end-user training
Cons
– Platform specific
– Desktop intergation capabilities absent or very limited
Resources
Commercial:
JEXECreator
exe4J
NativeJ
execJava
Executor
JExePack
Jlaunch
Free:
JSmooth
Launch4j
jstart32
exeJ
Janel
jstart
Roxes Ant Tasks
Marner Java Launcher
jelude
When a Java program is invoked using one of the methods discussed above (batch file, executable jar, or Java Web Start/JNLP), the operating system runs a Java launcher from the JRE. The Windows version of the JRE has separate launchers for command-line and GUI apps, called java.exe and javaw.exe respectively.
As a result, all running Java applications have the same Taskbar/Alt-Tab icons and appear in the Windows Task Manager as either java.exe
or javaw.exe
. If you have two or more Java apps running, you have no means to distinguish between multiple instances of the standard Java launcher in the Task Manager.
In fact, those launchers are just small native programs that load the Java Virtual Machine from a DLL/shared library and then feed your program to that JVM using the Invocation API. That API is part of the Java Native Interface (JNI), so it is standardized, and it is also very simple. This makes it relatively easy to write your own launcher with a unique name and icon. What it has to do is find a suitable JRE on the end user’s system (unless you bundle the JRE with your application), load and initialize the JVM, and run your application on it.
If you do not have the right tools, skills, or time to develop a custom launcher for your Java application, there are quite a few third-party Java launcher generators listed in the Tools section of the frame. Some of them provide additional features such as instant splash screen, stdout and stderr redirection, and so on, the most notable being wrapping.
A Java wrapper in essentially a custom Java launcher that is also a self-extracting archive containing all the application’s classes, jars and auxiliary files. The wrapper unpacks those files on startup and removes on termination. This way, your application is distributed as a single executable.
A wrapper normally looks up the JRE upon startup. If the JRE is not present or its version does not match the application’s compatibility requirements, some wrappers may install the JRE (if you have included it when wrapping your application) and/or download and install the required version of the JRE.
The most sophisticated wrappers may also setup file associations and create shortcuts on first run. But if you need something more complex, such as support for automatic updates or uniform cross-platform deployment, have a look at
Java-Aware Setup Authoring Tools
Pros
– Complete desktop integration
– Can be platform-specific or cross-platform
– Localization support
– Flexibility
Cons
– Requires third-party tools which may be too pricey and/or complex
Resources
Tools
– IzPack
– JExpress
If all you need is to install a private copy of the JRE alongside your application and create shortcuts that run your application on that JRE, you may use any setup generator. However, using a Java-aware tool may give you the following benefits:
This category is the most diversified in terms of tool pricing and functionality. The differences are explained below by example:
Windows-centric tools, such as Advanced Installer for Javaenable you to build MSI (Windows Installer) packages.
Multi-platform tools can generate native installers for multiple platforms – Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, as well as RPMs and tarballs. install4j is one such tool.
There are also Java-based setup authoring tools enabling you to create cross-platform installations. Those installations are essentially executable jars with platform-specific logic selected at run time. InstallAnywhere is perhaps the most well known tool of this type, but if its pricing is beyond your budget, consider the cheaper JExpress or the open source IzPack.
Finally, there is One Tool to Rule Them All – InstallShield, which can create both Windows desktop (MSI) and cross-platform installations, plus server and mobile ones, for any type of application and for a multitude of platforms. And yes, it does support JRE lookup and bundling, native launchers, and so on.
For straightforward installations, however, InstallShield is an overkill. Also note that InstallAnywhere and InstallShield are aimed at the enterprise developer and are priced accordingly.
All the above solutions do not change the fundamental principle mentioned in the first section of this article. Whether you make an executable jar or create a sophisticated installer, your Java program is still deployed as platform-independent bytecode. In the early days of Java, the only way to execute a Java program on a common PC hardware was to interpret that bytecode. Today, any decent J2SE implementation contains a Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler that compiles frequently executed methods to native code. So it sounds quite natural to take one step further and compile the entire application down to native code before it is deployed. Such tools exist and they are called
Ahead-Of-Time Compilers
Pros
– Peformance increase
– IP protection
– Better user perception
Cons
– Disk footprint increase
– Limited applicability
Resources
– Improving Swing Performance: JIT vs AOT Compilation
Tools
– GCJ
AOT compilers are known also as “static compilers” and “native code compilers”. The latter term is the most used and, as it often happens, the least correct from the technical standpoint, because JIT compilers also produce native code.
An Ahead-Of-Time (AOT) compiler takes your jars and class files as input, and produces a conventional native executable for the target platform, such as Windows EXE or Linux ELF binary. Just like any other technical solution, this has its advantages and drawbacks.
Advantages
In contrast, native code produced by an optimizing AOT Java compiler is about as hard to reverse engineer as if you have coded the original program in C++. Needless to say, there is no performance loss. If you are concerned about protecting your intellectual property, have a closer look at native compilation.
A native executable runs directly on hardware, without the interpret-profile-compile overhead, so it may start faster and immediately demonstrates the best response times.
Drawbacks
Moreover, in the general case only classes that are loaded by either system or application classloader may be precompiled to native code. So applications that use custom classloaders extensively may only be partially precompiled.
There is also a common misconception that AOT compilation kills Java portability. This is not the case, because the source code need not be changed, so you can always deploy your application as bytecode to a platform for which you do not have an AOT compiler. (This would of course blow the advantage of IP protection away.)
As for tools, there used to be half a dozen in the year 2000, but the only two that have survived are Excelsior JET and GCJ (GNU Compiler for Java). (If you are in the embedded field, check out NewMonics PERC, which targets J2ME CDC and also has limited support for J2SE 1.3.)
Product Comparison
I work for the company that makes Excelsior JET, so skip the rest of the article if you believe it is going to be a shameless plug.
Target Platforms. As of June 2005, the official GCJ Status page lists 15 supported targets, from “bare metal” ARM and XScale to IBM s390x mainframes. Some of the targets, most notably Windows, are not fully supported, though. Excelsior JET only supports Windows and Linux on Intel x86 at the moment. Windows version has been on the market since the year 2000, so it is more mature than the Linux version, introduced in 2004.
Java API Support. GCJ runtime library, libgcj, is an open source clean-room implementation of the core Java API classes, and is way behind Sun developments. Right now (June 2005) it is mostly at JDK 1.2 level with some 1.4 features, but it does not support AWT. So GCJ may only compile graphical applications built using third-party AWT-independent GUI toolkits, such as SWT. Excelsior JET interoperates with the Sun JRE and thus supports the entire J2SE 5.0 API. Work is under way to certify it for 100% compatibility with J2SE 5.0 later in 2005.
Dynamic Class Loading. Both products support dynamic class loading. The GCJ runtime runs dynamically loaded clases on an interpreter, whereas the Excelsior JET runtime features a JIT compiler. The latter may cache compilation results to disk and reuse them on subsequent application launches.
Price. GCJ and libgcj are open source (GPL) and therefore can be freely downloaded, modified and distributed. Note that ‘libgcc exception’ applies to libgcj, so linking with it does not by itself cause your program to fall under the GPL. Excelsior JET prices start from $150 per developer; runtime fee applies if you optimize your application for multiprocessor servers or dual-CPU workstations.
This article first appeared on Javalobby (www.javalobby.org).
Dmitry Leskov is the Director of Marketing for Excelsior, LLC, the maker of the Excelsior JET Java Virtual Machine for Windows and Linux. Before switching to marketing, he used to be a software engineer and programmed for platforms ranging from the Soviet Apple ][ and IBM System/360 clones to the original 32-bit microprocessor called Kronos.