Revision e9755bc7c1b6e5fd2556e308e4e9f94be2bd698d authored by Brad King on 15 August 2022, 17:49:17 UTC, committed by Brad King on 15 August 2022, 17:57:58 UTC
Since commit 55ba10dcfd (MSYS/MinGW Makefiles: Simplify selection of
windres as Resource Compiler, 2022-05-26, v3.24.0-rc1~82^2) the `MinGW
Makefiles` and `MSYS Makefiles` generators no longer specify the plain
`windres` name for the MinGW resource compiler.  Instead, the name is
specified in our MinGW platform information module. After the change in
commit af4adf6aa9 (MinGW: Fix default windres selection when
cross-compiling, 2020-03-25, v3.18.0-rc1~492^2), when cross-compiling,
we only specify the toolchain-prefixed name of the tool, which may not
be available in all environments.

If the toolchain-prefixed name is not available, fall back to the plain
`windres` name.  We already use this approach for other binutils.

Fixes: #23841
1 parent 732cad4
Raw File
ResourceNS.java
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;

class ResourceNS
{
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        ResourceNS res = new ResourceNS();
        res.displayResourceText();
    }

    public void displayResourceText()
    {
        /*
         * Since Java SE 9, invoking getResourceXXX on a class in a named
         * module will only locate the resource in that module, it will
         * not search the class path as it did in previous release. So when
         * you use Class.getClassLoader().getResource() it will attempt to
         * locate the resource in the module containing the ClassLoader,
         * possibly something like:
         *      jdk.internal.loader.ClassLoaders.AppClassLoader
         * which is probably not the module that your resource is in, so it
         * returns null.
         *
         * You have to make java 9+ search for the file in your module.
         * Do that by changing Class to any class defined in your module in
         * order to make java use the proper class loader.
        */

        // Namespaces are relative, use leading '/' for full namespace
        InputStream is =
            ResourceNS.class.getResourceAsStream("/ns/ns1/HelloWorld.txt");
        // C++:    cout << is.readline();    // oh, well !
        InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
        BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(isr);
        String out = "";
        try{
            out = reader.readLine();
        } catch(IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
            System.out.println(e);
        }

        System.out.println(out);
    }
}
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