public interface Filer
close
method has been called on the Writer
or
OutputStream
used to write the contents of the file.
Three kinds of files are distinguished: source files, class files,
and auxiliary resource files.
There are two distinguished supported locations (subtrees
within the logical file system) where newly created files are
placed: one for new source files, and
one for new
class files. (These might be specified on a tool's command line,
for example, using flags such as -s
and -d
.) The
actual locations for new source files and new class files may or
may not be distinct on a particular run of the tool. Resource
files may be created in either location. The methods for reading
and writing resources take a relative name argument. A relative
name is a non-null, non-empty sequence of path segments separated
by '/'
; '.'
and '..'
are invalid path
segments. A valid relative name must match the
"path-rootless" rule of RFC 3986, section
3.3.
The file creation methods take a variable number of arguments to
allow the originating elements to be provided as hints to
the tool infrastructure to better manage dependencies. The
originating elements are the types or packages (representing
package-info
files) or modules (representing
module-info
files) which caused an annotation processor to
attempt to create a new file. For example, if an annotation
processor tries to create a source file,
GeneratedFromUserSource
, in response to processing
the type element for@Generate public class UserSource {}
UserSource
should be passed as part of
the creation method call as in:
If there are no originating elements, none need to be passed. This information may be used in an incremental environment to determine the need to rerun processors or remove generated files. Non-incremental environments may ignore the originating element information.filer.createSourceFile("GeneratedFromUserSource", eltUtils.getTypeElement("UserSource"));
During each run of an annotation processing tool, a file with a
given pathname may be created only once. If that file already
exists before the first attempt to create it, the old contents will
be deleted. Any subsequent attempt to create the same file during
a run will throw a FilerException
, as will attempting to
create both a class file and source file for the same type name or
same package name. The initial inputs to
the tool are considered to be created by the zeroth round;
therefore, attempting to create a source or class file
corresponding to one of those inputs will result in a FilerException
.
In general, processors must not knowingly attempt to overwrite
existing files that were not generated by some processor. A
Filer
may reject attempts to open a file corresponding to an
existing type, like java.lang.Object
. Likewise, the
invoker of the annotation processing tool must not knowingly
configure the tool such that the discovered processors will attempt
to overwrite existing files that were not generated.
Processors can indicate a source or class file is generated by
including a Generated
annotation if the
environment is configured so that that type is accessible.
- API Note:
- Some of the effect of overwriting a file can be achieved by using a decorator-style pattern. Instead of modifying a class directly, the class is designed so that either its superclass is generated by annotation processing or subclasses of the class are generated by annotation processing. If the subclasses are generated, the parent class may be designed to use factories instead of public constructors so that only subclass instances would be presented to clients of the parent class.
- Since:
- 1.6
-
Method Summary
Modifier and Type Method Description JavaFileObject
createClassFile(CharSequence name, Element... originatingElements)
Creates a new class file, and returns an object to allow writing to it.FileObject
createResource(JavaFileManager.Location location, CharSequence moduleAndPkg, CharSequence relativeName, Element... originatingElements)
Creates a new auxiliary resource file for writing and returns a file object for it.JavaFileObject
createSourceFile(CharSequence name, Element... originatingElements)
Creates a new source file and returns an object to allow writing to it.FileObject
getResource(JavaFileManager.Location location, CharSequence moduleAndPkg, CharSequence relativeName)
Returns an object for reading an existing resource.
-
Method Details
-
createSourceFile
JavaFileObject createSourceFile(CharSequence name, Element... originatingElements) throws IOExceptionCreates a new source file and returns an object to allow writing to it. A source file for a type, or a package can be created. The file's name and path (relative to the root output location for source files) are based on the name of the item to be declared in that file as well as the specified module for the item (if any). If more than one type is being declared in a single file (that is, a single compilation unit), the name of the file should correspond to the name of the principal top-level type (the public one, for example).A source file can also be created to hold information about a package, including package annotations. To create a source file for a named package, have the
name
argument be the package's name followed by".package-info"
; to create a source file for an unnamed package, use"package-info"
.The optional module name is prefixed to the type name or package name and separated using a "
/
" character. For example, to create a source file for typea.B
in modulefoo
, use aname
argument of"foo/a.B"
.If no explicit module prefix is given and modules are supported in the environment, a suitable module is inferred. If a suitable module cannot be inferred
FilerException
is thrown. An implementation may use information about the configuration of the annotation processing tool as part of the inference.Creating a source file in or for an unnamed package in a named module is not supported.
- API Note:
- To use a particular charset to encode the contents of the
file, an
OutputStreamWriter
with the chosen charset can be created from theOutputStream
from the returned object. If theWriter
from the returned object is directly used for writing, its charset is determined by the implementation. An annotation processing tool may have an-encoding
flag or analogous option for specifying this; otherwise, it will typically be the platform's default encoding.To avoid subsequent errors, the contents of the source file should be compatible with the source version being used for this run.
- Implementation Note:
- In the reference implementation, if the annotation
processing tool is processing a single module M,
then M is used as the module for files created without
an explicit module prefix. If the tool is processing multiple
modules, and
Elements.getPackageElement(package-of(name))
returns a package, the module that owns the returned package is used as the target module. A separate option may be used to provide the target module if it cannot be determined using the above rules. - Parameters:
name
- canonical (fully qualified) name of the principal type being declared in this file or a package name followed by".package-info"
for a package information fileoriginatingElements
- type or package or module elements causally associated with the creation of this file, may be elided ornull
- Returns:
- a
JavaFileObject
to write the new source file - Throws:
FilerException
- if the same pathname has already been created, the same type has already been created, the name is otherwise not valid for the entity requested to being created, if the target module cannot be determined, if the target module is not writable, or a module is specified when the environment doesn't support modules.IOException
- if the file cannot be created- See Java Language Specification:
-
7.3 Compilation Units
-
createClassFile
JavaFileObject createClassFile(CharSequence name, Element... originatingElements) throws IOExceptionCreates a new class file, and returns an object to allow writing to it. A class file for a type, or a package can be created. The file's name and path (relative to the root output location for class files) are based on the name of the item to be declared as well as the specified module for the item (if any).A class file can also be created to hold information about a package, including package annotations. To create a class file for a named package, have the
name
argument be the package's name followed by".package-info"
; creating a class file for an unnamed package is not supported.The optional module name is prefixed to the type name or package name and separated using a "
/
" character. For example, to create a class file for typea.B
in modulefoo
, use aname
argument of"foo/a.B"
.If no explicit module prefix is given and modules are supported in the environment, a suitable module is inferred. If a suitable module cannot be inferred
FilerException
is thrown. An implementation may use information about the configuration of the annotation processing tool as part of the inference.Creating a class file in or for an unnamed package in a named module is not supported.
- API Note:
- To avoid subsequent errors, the contents of the class file should be compatible with the source version being used for this run.
- Implementation Note:
- In the reference implementation, if the annotation
processing tool is processing a single module M,
then M is used as the module for files created without
an explicit module prefix. If the tool is processing multiple
modules, and
Elements.getPackageElement(package-of(name))
returns a package, the module that owns the returned package is used as the target module. A separate option may be used to provide the target module if it cannot be determined using the above rules. - Parameters:
name
- binary name of the type being written or a package name followed by".package-info"
for a package information fileoriginatingElements
- type or package or module elements causally associated with the creation of this file, may be elided ornull
- Returns:
- a
JavaFileObject
to write the new class file - Throws:
FilerException
- if the same pathname has already been created, the same type has already been created, the name is not valid for a type, if the target module cannot be determined, if the target module is not writable, or a module is specified when the environment doesn't support modules.IOException
- if the file cannot be created
-
createResource
FileObject createResource(JavaFileManager.Location location, CharSequence moduleAndPkg, CharSequence relativeName, Element... originatingElements) throws IOExceptionCreates a new auxiliary resource file for writing and returns a file object for it. The file may be located along with the newly created source files, newly created binary files, or other supported location. The locationsCLASS_OUTPUT
andSOURCE_OUTPUT
must be supported. The resource may be named relative to some module and/or package (as are source and class files), and from there by a relative pathname. In a loose sense, the full pathname of the new file will be the concatenation oflocation
,moduleAndPkg
, andrelativeName
. IfmoduleAndPkg
contains a "/
" character, the prefix before the "/
" character is the module name and the suffix after the "/
" character is the package name. The package suffix may be empty. IfmoduleAndPkg
does not contain a "/
" character, the entire argument is interpreted as a package name.If the given location is neither a module oriented location, nor an output location containing multiple modules, and the explicit module prefix is given,
FilerException
is thrown.If the given location is either a module oriented location, or an output location containing multiple modules, and no explicit modules prefix is given, a suitable module is inferred. If a suitable module cannot be inferred
FilerException
is thrown. An implementation may use information about the configuration of the annotation processing tool as part of the inference.Files created via this method are not registered for annotation processing, even if the full pathname of the file would correspond to the full pathname of a new source file or new class file.
- Implementation Note:
- In the reference implementation, if the annotation
processing tool is processing a single module M,
then M is used as the module for files created without
an explicit module prefix. If the tool is processing multiple
modules, and
Elements.getPackageElement(package-of(name))
returns a package, the module that owns the returned package is used as the target module. A separate option may be used to provide the target module if it cannot be determined using the above rules. - Parameters:
location
- location of the new filemoduleAndPkg
- module and/or package relative to which the file should be named, or the empty string if nonerelativeName
- final pathname components of the fileoriginatingElements
- type or package or module elements causally associated with the creation of this file, may be elided ornull
- Returns:
- a
FileObject
to write the new resource - Throws:
IOException
- if the file cannot be createdFilerException
- if the same pathname has already been created, if the target module cannot be determined, or if the target module is not writable, or if an explicit target module is specified and the location does not support it.IllegalArgumentException
- for an unsupported locationIllegalArgumentException
- ifmoduleAndPkg
is ill-formedIllegalArgumentException
- ifrelativeName
is not relative
-
getResource
FileObject getResource(JavaFileManager.Location location, CharSequence moduleAndPkg, CharSequence relativeName) throws IOExceptionReturns an object for reading an existing resource. The locationsCLASS_OUTPUT
andSOURCE_OUTPUT
must be supported.If
moduleAndPkg
contains a "/
" character, the prefix before the "/
" character is the module name and the suffix after the "/
" character is the package name. The package suffix may be empty; however, if a module name is present, it must be nonempty. IfmoduleAndPkg
does not contain a "/
" character, the entire argument is interpreted as a package name.If the given location is neither a module oriented location, nor an output location containing multiple modules, and the explicit module prefix is given,
FilerException
is thrown.If the given location is either a module oriented location, or an output location containing multiple modules, and no explicit modules prefix is given, a suitable module is inferred. If a suitable module cannot be inferred
FilerException
is thrown. An implementation may use information about the configuration of the annotation processing tool as part of the inference.- Implementation Note:
- In the reference implementation, if the annotation
processing tool is processing a single module M,
then M is used as the module for files read without
an explicit module prefix. If the tool is processing multiple
modules, and
Elements.getPackageElement(package-of(name))
returns a package, the module that owns the returned package is used as the source module. A separate option may be used to provide the target module if it cannot be determined using the above rules. - Parameters:
location
- location of the filemoduleAndPkg
- module and/or package relative to which the file should be searched for, or the empty string if nonerelativeName
- final pathname components of the file- Returns:
- an object to read the file
- Throws:
FilerException
- if the same pathname has already been opened for writing, if the source module cannot be determined, or if the target module is not writable, or if an explicit target module is specified and the location does not support it.IOException
- if the file cannot be openedIllegalArgumentException
- for an unsupported locationIllegalArgumentException
- ifmoduleAndPkg
is ill-formedIllegalArgumentException
- ifrelativeName
is not relative
-