# Java {#sec-language-java} Ant-based Java packages are typically built from source as follows: ```nix stdenv.mkDerivation { pname = "..."; version = "..."; src = fetchurl { /* ... */ }; nativeBuildInputs = [ ant jdk stripJavaArchivesHook # removes timestamp metadata from jar files ]; buildPhase = '' runHook preBuild ant # build the project using ant runHook postBuild ''; installPhase = '' runHook preInstall # copy generated jar file(s) to an appropriate location in $out install -Dm644 build/foo.jar $out/share/java/foo.jar runHook postInstall ''; } ``` Note that `jdk` is an alias for the OpenJDK (self-built where available, or pre-built via Zulu). Platforms with OpenJDK not (yet) in Nixpkgs (`Aarch32`, `Aarch64`) point to the (unfree) `oraclejdk`. Also note that not using `stripJavaArchivesHook` will likely cause the generated `.jar` files to be non-deterministic, which is not optimal. Using it, however, does not always guarantee reproducibility. JAR files that are intended to be used by other packages should be installed in `$out/share/java`. JDKs have a stdenv setup hook that add any JARs in the `share/java` directories of the build inputs to the `CLASSPATH` environment variable. For instance, if the package `libfoo` installs a JAR named `foo.jar` in its `share/java` directory, and another package declares the attribute ```nix { buildInputs = [ libfoo ]; nativeBuildInputs = [ jdk ]; } ``` then `CLASSPATH` will be set to `/nix/store/...-libfoo/share/java/foo.jar`. Private JARs should be installed in a location like `$out/share/package-name`. If your Java package provides a program, you need to generate a wrapper script to run it using a JRE. You can use `makeWrapper` for this: ```nix { nativeBuildInputs = [ makeWrapper ]; installPhase = '' mkdir -p $out/bin makeWrapper ${jre}/bin/java $out/bin/foo \ --add-flags "-cp $out/share/java/foo.jar org.foo.Main" ''; } ``` Since the introduction of the Java Platform Module System in Java 9, Java distributions typically no longer ship with a general-purpose JRE: instead, they allow generating a JRE with only the modules required for your application(s). Because we can't predict what modules will be needed on a general-purpose system, the default jre package is the full JDK. When building a minimal system/image, you can override the `modules` parameter on `jre_minimal` to build a JRE with only the modules relevant for you: ```nix let my_jre = pkgs.jre_minimal.override { modules = [ # The modules used by 'something' and 'other' combined: "java.base" "java.logging" ]; }; something = (pkgs.something.override { jre = my_jre; }); other = (pkgs.other.override { jre = my_jre; }); in <...> ``` You can also specify what JDK your JRE should be based on, for example selecting a 'headless' build to avoid including a link to GTK+: ```nix { my_jre = pkgs.jre_minimal.override { jdk = jdk11_headless; }; } ``` Note all JDKs passthru `home`, so if your application requires environment variables like `JAVA_HOME` being set, that can be done in a generic fashion with the `--set` argument of `makeWrapper`: ```bash --set JAVA_HOME ${jdk.home} ``` It is possible to use a different Java compiler than `javac` from the OpenJDK. For instance, to use the GNU Java Compiler: ```nix { nativeBuildInputs = [ gcj ant ]; } ``` Here, Ant will automatically use `gij` (the GNU Java Runtime) instead of the OpenJRE.