Issue
I write a Java servlet that I want to install on many instances of Tomcat on different servers. The servlet uses some static files that are packed with the war file under WEB-INF. This is the directory structure in a typical installation:
- tomcat
-- webapps
--- myapp
---- index.html
---- WEB-INF
----- web.xml
----- classes
------ src
------- .....
----- MY_STATIC_FOLDER
------ file1
------ file2
------ file3
How can I know the absolute path of MY_STATIC_FOLDER, so that I can read the static files?
I cannot rely on the "current folder" (what I get in a new File(".")) because it depends on where the Tomcat server was started from, which is different in every installation!
Solution
You could use ServletContext#getRealPath()
to convert a relative web content path to an absolute disk file system path.
String relativeWebPath = "/WEB-INF/static/file1.ext";
String absoluteDiskPath = getServletContext().getRealPath(relativeWebPath);
File file = new File(absoluteDiskPath);
InputStream input = new FileInputStream(file);
// ...
However, if your sole intent is to get an InputStream
out of it, better use ServletContext#getResourceAsStream()
instead because getRealPath()
may return null
whenever the WAR is not expanded into local disk file system but instead into memory and/or a virtual disk:
String relativeWebPath = "/WEB-INF/static/file1.ext";
InputStream input = getServletContext().getResourceAsStream(relativeWebPath);
// ...
This is much more robust than the java.io.File
approach. Moreover, using getRealPath()
is considered bad practice.
See also:
- getResourceAsStream() vs FileInputStream
- What does servletcontext.getRealPath("/") mean and when should I use it
- Where to place and how to read configuration resource files in servlet based application?
- Recommended way to save uploaded files in a servlet application
Answered By - BalusC
Answer Checked By - Katrina (JavaFixing Volunteer)