How to prevent xalan.jar that has META-INF\services\javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory from taking over JDK 1.6 built in Xalan implementation?
Consider this code (based entirely on flying saucer's "getting started" code, their rights reserved):
package flyingsaucerpdf;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.OutputStream;
import org.xhtmlrenderer.pdf.ITextRenderer;
public class PDFMaker {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
new PDFMaker().go();
}
public void go() throws Exception {
String inputFile = "sample.html";
String url = new File(inputFile).toURI().toURL().toString();
String outputFile = "firstdoc.pdf";
OutputStream os = new FileOutputStream(outputFile);
ITextRenderer renderer = new ITextRenderer();
renderer.setDocument(url);
renderer.layout();
renderer.createPDF(os);
os.close();
}
}
Few facts:
- 开发者_如何学C
- Running it standalone (calling main) with JDK 1.6 or 1.5 works perfectly (PDF is generated)
- But when loaded via a URLClassLoader from an existing web application it fails with this error:
Caused by: org.w3c.dom.DOMException: NAMESPACE_ERR: An attempt is made to create or change an object in a way which is incorrect with regard to namespaces. at org.apache.xerces.dom.AttrNSImpl.setName(Unknown Source) at org.apache.xerces.dom.AttrNSImpl.(Unknown Source) at org.apache.xerces.dom.CoreDocumentImpl.createAttributeNS(Unknown Source) at org.apache.xerces.dom.ElementImpl.setAttributeNS(Unknown Source) at org.apache.xml.utils.DOMBuilder.startElement(DOMBuilder.java:307) ... 19 more
After looking for a while in the wrong place (for example, I created a child-first / parent-last class loader suspecting xalan / xerces jars, but it still fails), I finally narrowed down the root cause:
It seems that the web application that loads my code, has an old xalan.jar, specification version 1.2
I did a little test, I ran the code above as standalone (which worked fine before) but this time I added the xalan.jar from the web app to it's classpath, and bingo, the same error as in the web app scenario
So I inspected that old xalan.jar and wondered, what can cause the JVM to load it's old xalan implementation instead of the JDK's? after all my child-first class loader is also parent-last e.g. system in the middle, to say: searching the system classloader before the parent (to avoid loading parent overriden JDK jars, just like this case of the parent's xalan.jar overriding the JDK's xalan implementation)
Then something cought my eyes - a file in: xalan.jar/META-INF/services/ named javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory with this content:
org.apache.xalan.processor.TransformerFactoryImpl
So I imediately pressed Ctrl+T in eclipse and looked for the full qualified name... only in xalan.jar!
Then I searched only for "TransformerFactoryImpl", and this is what the JDK has:
com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.xsltc.trax.TransformerFactoryImpl
Easy to see the difference
So, if you read till here, my bottom line question is: How do I make my TransformerFactory use the JDK's implementation and not the old Xalan's one? (I can't remove that jar from the web app my code will be loaded from)
It seems the answer is simpler than I thought.
In your classloader, add to the classpath (jar not required) this folder:
/META-INF/services/
In it, create a file named
javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory
Edit it and set this as it's content to:
com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.xsltc.trax.TransformerFactoryImpl
Thats it!
Why does it work? see this class used by Java for loading the Xalan implementation.
Notice that it seems de-facto a parent-last (or child-first) loader for that specific "META-INF" entry (the oposite of how regular Java class loaders work, e.g. parent-first / child-last) but feel free to correct me if I'm wrong
Snippet from javax.xml.datatype.FactoryFinder
/*
* Try to find provider using Jar Service Provider Mechanism
*
* @return instance of provider class if found or null
*/
private static Object findJarServiceProvider(String factoryId)
throws ConfigurationError
{
String serviceId = "META-INF/services/" + factoryId;
InputStream is = null;
// First try the Context ClassLoader
ClassLoader cl = ss.getContextClassLoader();
if (cl != null) {
is = ss.getResourceAsStream(cl, serviceId);
// If no provider found then try the current ClassLoader
if (is == null) {
cl = FactoryFinder.class.getClassLoader();
is = ss.getResourceAsStream(cl, serviceId);
}
} else {
// No Context ClassLoader, try the current
// ClassLoader
cl = FactoryFinder.class.getClassLoader();
is = ss.getResourceAsStream(cl, serviceId);
}
if (is == null) {
// No provider found
return null;
}
...
You should also note that you aren't required to use the SPI mechanism at all.
You can use http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/xml/xpath/XPathFactory.html#newInstance(java.lang.String, java.lang.String, java.lang.ClassLoader) to use a copy of xalan in your own isolated class loader once you know the name of the relevant class.
If you are developing a web application and thus can't set a system property, then the most direct way is to explicitly request the JDK transformer. Here is an example for the internal XSLTC transformer (has StAXSupport).
TransformerFactory tf = TransformerFactory.newInstance(
"com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.xsltc.trax.TransformerFactoryImpl", null);
I'm using wildfly application server and 3rd jar which uses TransformerFactory.
Overriding TransformerFactory using file resources\META-INF\services\javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory. Didn't work for me.
When I looked to FactoryFinder implementation (JDK8u201). I found the following code fragment
String systemProp = ss.getSystemProperty(factoryId);
if (systemProp != null) {
dPrint("found system property, value=" + systemProp);
return newInstance(type, systemProp, null, true);
}
Thus, solution was to set system property javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory to com.sun.org.apache.xalan.internal.xsltc.trax.TransformerFactoryImpl.
Cheers
精彩评论