Note: Java Extensions are also referred to as Optional Packages.
This section covers the following topics:
Java applets may use various Java Extensions to provide certain functions to users. Deploying Java Extensions dynamically with Java applets in Java Plug-in has been a challenge to developers, especially those with thousands of machines in an intranet/Internet environment.
Java Extensions Installation enables various Java Extensions (e.g., JavaHelp, Java3D ...) to be deployed and installed easily along with Java applets in the Java 2 Runtime Environment. This document outlines the basic steps for deploying Installed Java Extensions in Java Plug-in. For details about how Java Extensions works, please see the Java Extensions Mechanism documentation in Java 2.
To use Java Extensions Installation in Java Plug-in, information about the extensions must be specified in three places:
\lib\ext
directory)lib/ext
) to the extension the applet
requests; and Java Plug-in will then be able to determine if the extensions
need to be installed/upgraded.
To deploy Java Extensions with applets, the applet must be packaged as a JAR file. The MANIFEST file of the applet must contain proper information about the Java Extensions to be installed, according to the Optional Package Versioning. For example,
Extension-List: RectangleArea RectanglePerimeter RectangleArea-Extension-Name: com.mycompany.RectangleArea RectangleArea-Specification-Version: 1.2 RectangleArea-Implementation-Version: 1.2 RectangleArea-Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.mycompany RectangleArea-Implementation-URL: http://mycompany.com/RectangleArea.jar RectanglePerimeter-Extension-Name: com.mycompany.RectanglePerimeter RectanglePerimeter-Specification-Version: 1.2 RectanglePerimeter-Implementation-Version: 1.2 RectanglePerimeter-Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.mycompany RectanglePerimeter-Implementation-URL: http://mycompany.com/RectanglePerimeter.jar
In this example, two extensions are deployed with the appletRectangleArea
and RectanglePerimeter. If they have not been installed or if updates
are needed, the proper versions will be downloaded from the Implementation-URL
specifications. Notice that an Implementation-URL
must point to
a JAR file which is the Java Extensions Installation.
Note that the extension name in the Extension-List
and the prefix of the other manifest attributes must be the name of an extension
JAR file that is installed in the extension directory (<jre_location>/lib/ext
).
Some Java Extensions consist of several JAR files. For example, optional package
Java3D installs the following JAR files in the extension directory: j3daudio.jar
,
j3dcore.jar
, j3dutils.jar
, and vecmath.jar
.
For these Java Extensions only one of the Java Extensions JAR file names must
be used in the Extension-List
and the prefix of the other manifest
attributes. Usually the optional package has a main JAR file; if so, that is
the one you should use in the Extension-List
and the prefix of
the other manifest attributes.
Here is an example of the applet's manifest using optional package Java 3D.
Extension-List: j3dcore
j3dcore-Extension-Name: javax.media.j3d
j3dcore-Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun
j3dcore-Implementation-Version: 1.2.1_03
j3dcore-Implementation-Title: Java 3D Core Runtime Environment
j3dcore-Specification-Title: Java 3D API Specification
j3dcore-Specification-Version: 1.2
j3dcore-Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc
j3dcore-Implementation-URL: http://<some server>/native/java3d-$(os.name)$.jar
Note on Proper JAR Extension Identification:Note that Java Plug-in checks four
Sun-Supported
|
Three types of Java Extensions Installation are supported in Java Plug-in:
Implementation-URL
.
During installation, these Java Extensions JAR files will be downloaded and
verified, and copied into the Java 2 Runtime lib/ext
directory.
Implementation-URL
in the applet's MANIFEST file. During
installation, the JAR file will be downloaded and verified, and the main-class
of the Java installer inside the JAR file will be executed to start the installer.
It is the job of the Java installer to copy the Java Extensions inside the
installer into the right location of the Java 2 Runtime (i.e., lib/ext
).
Implementation-URL
in the applet's MANIFEST file. During
installation, the JAR file will be downloaded and verified, and the native
installer will be started. It is the job of the native installer to copy the
Java Extensions inside the installer into the right location of the Java 2
Runtime (i.e., lib/ext
). To ensure the Java Extensions Installations are downloaded and installed properly, they must be bundled as JAR files and be specified as Implementation-URL in the applet's MANIFEST. Each Java Extension itself must be bundled as a JAR files and contain proper versioning information in its own MANIFEST file according to Optional Package Versioning. For example,
Extension-Name: javax.help Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Specification-Version: 1.4 Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Implementation-Version: 1.4.0_01In this case, it will be recognized as a raw Java Extension, and will be copied into the
lib/ext
directory directly.
Extension-Name: javax.help Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Specification-Version: 1.4 Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Implementation-Version: 1.4.0-beta2 Main-Class: com.sun.javahelp.installerIn this case, because
Main-Class
is present in the MANIFEST,
it will be treated as Java Installer, and Main-class
will be
invoked. It is the job of the Java Installer to copy the Java Extensions into
the proper lib/ext
directory. However, each Java Extension being
copied into the lib/ext
directory must contain proper versioning
information as well. For example,
Extension-Name: javax.help Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Specification-Version: 1.4 Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Implementation-Version: 1.4.0-beta2
This ensures the versioning information of the extensions can be determined
by looking in the MANIFEST file of all the JAR files in the lib/ext
directory.
Extension-Name: javax.help Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Specification-Version: 1.4 Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Implementation-Version: 1.4.0-rc1 Extension-Installation: installer.exeIn this case, because
Extension-Installation
is present in the
MANIFEST, it will be treated as a native Installer; and the installer itself
will be launched. It is the job of the native Installer to copy the Java Extensions
into the proper lib/ext
directory. However, similar
to the Java installer case, each Java Extension being copied into the lib/ext
directory must contain proper versioning information as well. For example,
Extension-Name: javax.help Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Specification-Version: 1.4 Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc Implementation-Version: 1.4.0-rc1
This ensures the versioning information of the extensions can be determined
by looking in the MANIFEST file of all the JAR files in the lib/ext
directory.
To deploy optional packages with Java applets using the Java Plug-in, follow these steps:
A. Obtain the optional package installer.The Java Plug-in supports three types of installersJava, Native, and Raw. Be sure to use the correct manifest attribute for the install type
Java:
Main-Class
Native:Extension-Installation
Raw: No manifest attributeB. Make the manifest file for the optional package. Here is an example of the optional package Java Advanced Imaging API (
jai_win.jar
) manifest, which uses a native installer (jai-1_1_1-lib-win-jre.exe
). The reason it is recognized as a native installer is because the manifest attributeExtension-Installation
is used.
Manifest-Version: 1.0
Extension-Name: javax.media.jai
Extension-Installation: jai-1_1_1-lib-win-jre.exe
Specification-Version: 1.1
Specification-Vendor: Sun Microsystems. Inc
Implementation-Version: 1.1.1
Implementation-Vendor: Sun Microsystems, Inc
Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sunC. JAR up the the installer, together with the optional package manifest file, to make the optional package installation JAR file. Be sure to include the .jar extension in the jar file name. Also, depending on the optional package and the type of installation, you may have to include the optional package JAR file(s) in the optional package installation JAR file or stage the optional package JAR file(s) on your web server. Both the optional package installation and the optional package themselves must be bundled as JAR files and contain proper versioning information.
jar cmfv manifest-addition jar-file.jar input-file(s)
D. Sign the JAR file.
You have to obtain an RSA certificate from a certificate authority (Thawte, VeriSign ...) to be able to sign your JAR file. Below are some tools and commands to use to sign a JAR file. They are not inclusive.
See How to Sign Applets Using RSA Certificates in the Plug-in document and other related documents for more information on this topic.
Usekeytool
to generate an RSAkeypair
and yourkeystore
:
keytool -genkey -keyalg rsa -alias MyCert -validity 360
Use
keytool
to import the certificate into yourkeystore
:
keytool -import -file <path>/mycerts/my_veri.p12
Use
jarsigner
to sign your JAR file:
jarsigner InstallMyOptPkg.jar MyCert
Use
jarsigner
to verify that the JAR file was signed properly:
jarsigner -verify -verbose -certs InstallMyOptPkg.jar
E. Put the resulting JAR file (and any other needed JAR files) on your web server so it can be downloaded by users. The URL is specified in the manifest attribute
<extension>-Implementation-URL
in the test applet's manifest file.
A. Create the applet that uses the features of the optional package.
B. Create a manifest file for the applet. Below is an example of a manifest file of an applet declaring its dependency on the optional package Java Advanced Imaging API.
Extension-List: jai_core
jai_core-Extension-Name: javax.media.jai
jai_core-Specification-Version: 1.1
jai_core-Implementation-Version: 1.1.1
jai_core-Implementation-Vendor-Id: com.sun
jai_core-Implementation-URL: http://myserver.com/jai_win.jarSome optional packages come packaged in different JAR files for different operating systems. If you want your applet to work on the different OS's you can use the
$(os-name)$
construction in theImplementation-URL
manifest attribute. The$(os-name)$
will translate to the target OS that the applet is being run oni.e., SunOS, Linux, Windows-98, Windows-NT, Windows-2000, Windows-Me.
optpkg-Implementation-URL: http://.../optpkg-$(os-name)$.jar
C. JAR up the
*.class
files, and any other supporting files, that the applet uses together with the applet's manifest file. Be sure to include the .jar extension in the jar file name.
jar cmfv manifest-addition jar-file.jar input-file(s)
D. Create the HTML page for the applet. Put the name of the above JAR file in the
ARCHIVE
parameter. See UsingOBJECT
,EMBED
andAPPLET
Tags in Java Plug-in for more information about the required format.
OBJECT classid="clsid:8AD9C840-044E-11D1-B3E9-00805F499D93"
width="200" height="200" align="baseline"
codebase="http://java.sun.com/products/plugin/1.4/jinstall-14-win32.cab#Version=1,4,0,0">
<PARAM NAME="code" VALUE="myapplet.class">
<PARAM NAME ="archive" VALUE = "myapplet.jar">
<PARAM NAME="type" VALUE="application/x-java-applet;version=1.4">
<PARAM NAME="scriptable" VALUE="false">
<COMMENT>
<EMBED type="application/x-java-applet;version=1.4" width="200"
height="200" align="baseline" code="myapplet.class" archive="myapplet.jar"
pluginspage="http://java.sun.com/products/plugin/1.4/plugin-install.html">
<NOEMBED>
</COMMENT>
Optional Package Deployment Using Java Plug-in
</NOEMBED></EMBED>
</OBJECT>E. Use the resulting HTML page to load your applet.
When you run the applet the Java Plug-in will display a Java Security Warning (if the optional package is not already installed) informing you that the applet requires the installation of optional packagename
fromhttp://someserver.com/some.jar
. If you grant the installation of the optional package the installer will install the JAR files in the<jre>\lib\ext
directory. Once the installation is complete your applet will run.
See Appendix 5: Complete ExampleDeploying Java Media Framework as Java Extension for a complete, working example showing how to deploy the Java Media Framework as a Java Extension.
When the applet is deployed with Java Extensions, the Java Extensions information stored in the applet's MANIFEST file will be examined. The extension update algorithm is based on the one described in Optional Package Versioning. If an update is required, the Java Extensions Installation will be downloaded and verified to ensure that the extension is correctly signed. If it is valid, the Plug-in will pop-up a security dialog that provides three options:
Once the user selects the options from the security dialog, the extensions
installation will be executed in the corresponding security context. The applet
will not be started until the extensions are properly installed.
Because Java Extensions are downloaded and installed into the Java 2 Runtime
lib/ext
directory, each Java Extensions Installation must be signed.
Once the Java Extensions are installed, it will have the proper permissions
that are granted to Java Extensions through the policy file.
Extension-Name
,
Specification-Version
, etc.). But if you only specify extensions
information in one, make sure that one is the one used in the Extension-List
of the applet JAR manifest for the Java Extension. For raw extensions installation,
each JAR files must contain the proper extension information. Main-class
until the installation is done. In some cases, Java Installer may create an
AWT window and switch control to a different thread and return immediately
from the Main-class
. Returning control from the Main-class
will force the applets to be loaded and started immediately, even if the Java
Installer is still in the process of installation. This will cause the applet
to fail to load because the extension is not installed yet.