Copying to global clipboard does not work with Java in Ubuntu

Karussell picture Karussell · Jan 9, 2013 · Viewed 11.7k times · Source

The following code from a standalone application works in ubuntu:

import java.awt.Toolkit;
import java.awt.datatransfer.Clipboard;
import java.awt.datatransfer.DataFlavor;
import java.awt.datatransfer.StringSelection;
import java.awt.datatransfer.UnsupportedFlavorException;
import java.io.IOException;

public class ClipboardTest {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        Clipboard clipBoard = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemClipboard();        
        // print the last copied thing
        System.out.println(clipBoard.getContents(null).getTransferData(DataFlavor.stringFlavor));
        StringSelection data = new StringSelection("NOW");
        clipBoard.setContents(data, data);
        // prints NOW
        System.out.println(clipBoard.getContents(null).getTransferData(DataFlavor.stringFlavor));
    }

}

Pasting (Ctrl+V) into a different application results in nothing; I expect "NOW". Calling the above code a second time gives the following exception:

Exception in thread "main" java.awt.datatransfer.UnsupportedFlavorException: Unicode String
    at sun.awt.datatransfer.ClipboardTransferable.getTransferData(ClipboardTransferable.java:160)

As a standalone application, this should work even after 2011 security changes. Copying via Ctrl+C from inside of a JTextField and then pasting elsewhere works.

Have been unsuccessful on ubuntu 11.04 with both the latest java7 (jdk1.7.0_10) and jdk1.6.0_33; It should work and does work as expected on windows 7 with the latest java7 and on mac osx 10.6 with java6_37. Also tried xubuntu 12.04 with those javas and it doesn't work there. Is this a linux/ubuntu bug?

Related question

Answer

Jonathan Drapeau picture Jonathan Drapeau · Jan 22, 2013

I got the same problem with the application at my work and here's an article I've found that explain why and possible solutions. I hope it helps.

Why it happens

Clipboard persistence is a bug that affects many programs under Ubuntu and other X11-based operating systems. Fixing it is a Google Summer of Code 2010 project. Wikipedia has a good overview of the issue. If you want to fix as a user, you can install Parcellite or another clipboard manager. If you want to fix it as a programmer, you can modify your program to conform to the ClipboardManager specification.

X-Window wiki

Using gnome library you could call the store method on the clipboard and fix this. That's the only thing so far that seems to be worth trying. Also saw a similar thing for GTK but only in an Eclipse's bug.