How do I read the manifest file for a webapp running in apache tomcat?

Nik Reiman picture Nik Reiman · Mar 5, 2009 · Viewed 69.4k times · Source

I have a webapp which contains a manifest file, in which I write the current version of my application during an ant build task. The manifest file is created correctly, but when I try to read it in during runtime, I get some strange side-effects. My code for reading in the manifest is something like this:

    InputStream manifestStream = Thread.currentThread()
                                 .getContextClassLoader()
                                 .getResourceAsStream("META-INFFFF/MANIFEST.MF");
    try {
        Manifest manifest = new Manifest(manifestStream);
        Attributes attributes = manifest.getMainAttributes();
        String impVersion = attributes.getValue("Implementation-Version");
        mVersionString = impVersion;
    }
    catch(IOException ex) {
        logger.warn("Error while reading version: " + ex.getMessage());
    }

When I attach eclipse to tomcat, I see that the above code works, but it seems to get a different manifest file than the one I expected, which I can tell because the ant version and build timestamp are both different. Then, I put "META-INFFFF" in there, and the above code still works! This means that I'm reading some other manifest, not mine. I also tried

this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(...)

But the result was the same. What's the proper way to read the manifest file from inside of a webapp running in tomcat?

Edit: Thanks for the suggestions so far. Also, I should note that I am running tomcat standalone; I launch it from the command line, and then attach to the running instance in Eclipse's debugger. That shouldn't make a difference, should it?

Answer

Pascal Thivent picture Pascal Thivent · Mar 5, 2009

Maybe your side-effects come from the fact that almost all jars include a MANIFEST.MF and you're not getting the right one. To read the MANIFEST.MF from the webapp, I would say:

ServletContext application = getServletConfig().getServletContext();
InputStream inputStream = application.getResourceAsStream("/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF");
Manifest manifest = new Manifest(inputStream);

Please note that running Tomcat from Eclipse is not the same as running Tomcat alone as Eclipse plays with the classloader.