Have you ever found yourself editing a file, using an IDE or another editor, and a dialog box appears to inform you that one of the open files has changed on the file system and needs to be reloaded? Or perhaps, like the NetBeans IDE, the application just quietly updates the file without notifying you. The following sample dialog box shows how this notification looks with the free editor, jEdit:
To implement this functionality, called file change notification, a program must be able to detect what is happening to the relevant directory on the file system. One way to do so is to poll the file system looking for changes, but this approach is inefficient. It does not scale to applications that have hundreds of open files or directories to monitor.
The java.nio.file
package provides a file change notification API, called the Watch Service API. This API enables you to register a directory (or directories) with the watch service. When registering, you tell the service which types of events you are interested in: file creation, file deletion, or file modification. When the service detects an event of interest, it is forwarded to the registered process. The registered process has a thread (or a pool of threads) dedicated to watching for any events it has registered for. When an event comes in, it is handled as needed.
This section covers the following:
The WatchService
API is fairly low level, allowing you to customize it. You can use it as is, or you can choose to create a high-level API on top of this mechanism so that it is suited to your particular needs.
Here are the basic steps required to implement a watch service:
WatchService
"watcher" for the file system.WatchKey
instance for each directory that you register.closed
method).WatchKeys
are thread-safe and can be used with the java.nio.concurrent
package. You can dedicate a
thread pool to this effort.
Because this API is more advanced, try it out before proceeding. Save the
example to your computer, and compile it. Create a WatchDir
test
directory that will be passed to the example. WatchDir
uses a single thread to process all events, so it blocks keyboard input while waiting for events. Either run the program in a separate window, or in the background, as follows:
java WatchDir test &
Play with creating, deleting, and editing files in the test
directory. When any of these events occurs, a message is printed to the console. When you have finished, delete the test
directory and WatchDir
exits. Or, if you prefer, you can manually kill the process.
You can also watch an entire file tree by specifying the -r
option. When you specify -r
, WatchDir
walks the file tree, registering each directory with the watch service.
The first step is to create a new
WatchService
by using the
newWatchService
method in the FileSystem
class, as follows:
WatchService watcher = FileSystems.getDefault().newWatchService();
Next, register one or more objects with the watch service. Any object that implements the
Watchable
interface can be registered. The Path
class implements the Watchable
interface, so each directory to be monitored is registered as a Path
object.
As with any Watchable
, the Path
class implements two register
methods. This page uses the two-argument version,
register(WatchService, WatchEvent.Kind<?>...)
. (The three-argument version takes a WatchEvent.Modifier
, which is not currently implemented.)
When registering an object with the watch service, you specify the types of events that you want to monitor. The supported
StandardWatchEventKinds
event types follow:
ENTRY_CREATE
– A directory entry is created.ENTRY_DELETE
– A directory entry is deleted.ENTRY_MODIFY
– A directory entry is modified.OVERFLOW
– Indicates that events might have been lost or discarded. You do not have to register for the OVERFLOW
event to receive it.The following code snippet shows how to register a Path
instance for all three event types:
import static java.nio.file.StandardWatchEventKinds.*; Path dir = ...; try { WatchKey key = dir.register(watcher, ENTRY_CREATE, ENTRY_DELETE, ENTRY_MODIFY); } catch (IOException x) { System.err.println(x); }
The order of events in an event processing loop follow:
poll
– Returns a queued key, if available. Returns immediately with a null
value, if unavailable.poll(long, TimeUnit)
– Returns a queued key, if one is available. If a queued key is not immediately available, the program waits until the specified time. The TimeUnit
argument determines whether the specified time is nanoseconds, milliseconds, or some other unit of time.take
– Returns a queued key. If no queued key is available, this method waits.List
of
WatchEvents
from the
pollEvents
method.kind
method. No matter what events the key has registered for, it is possible to receive an OVERFLOW
event. You can choose to handle the overflow or ignore it, but you should test for it.context
method is used to retrieve it.ready
state by invoking
reset
. If this method returns false
, the key is no longer valid and the loop can exit. This step is very important. If you fail to invoke reset
, this key will not receive any further events.A watch key has a state. At any given time, its state might be one of the following:
Ready
indicates that the key is ready to accept events. When first created, a key is in the ready state.Signaled
indicates that one or more events are queued. Once the key has been signaled, it is no longer in the ready state until the
reset
method is invoked.Invalid
indicates that the key is no longer active. This state happens when one of the following events occurs:
Here is an example of an event processing loop. It is taken from the
example, which watches a directory, waiting for new files to appear. When a new file becomes available, it is examined to determine if it is a Email
text/plain
file by using the
probeContentType(Path)
method. The intention is that text/plain
files will be emailed to an alias, but that implementation detail is left to the reader.
The methods specific to the watch service API are shown in bold:
for (;;) { // wait for key to be signaled WatchKey key; try { key = watcher.take(); } catch (InterruptedException x) { return; } for (WatchEvent<?> event: key.pollEvents()) { WatchEvent.Kind<?> kind = event.kind(); // This key is registered only // for ENTRY_CREATE events, // but an OVERFLOW event can // occur regardless if events // are lost or discarded. if (kind == OVERFLOW) { continue; } // The filename is the // context of the event. WatchEvent<Path> ev = (WatchEvent<Path>)event; Path filename = ev.context(); // Verify that the new // file is a text file. try { // Resolve the filename against the directory. // If the filename is "test" and the directory is "foo", // the resolved name is "test/foo". Path child = dir.resolve(filename); if (!Files.probeContentType(child).equals("text/plain")) { System.err.format("New file '%s'" + " is not a plain text file.%n", filename); continue; } } catch (IOException x) { System.err.println(x); continue; } // Email the file to the // specified email alias. System.out.format("Emailing file %s%n", filename); //Details left to reader.... } // Reset the key -- this step is critical if you want to // receive further watch events. If the key is no longer valid, // the directory is inaccessible so exit the loop. boolean valid = key.reset(); if (!valid) { break; } }
The file name is retrieved from the event context. The
example retrieves the file name with this code:Email
WatchEvent<Path> ev = (WatchEvent<Path>)event; Path filename = ev.context();
When you compile the Email
example, it generates the following error:
Note: Email.java uses unchecked or unsafe operations. Note: Recompile with -Xlint:unchecked for details.
This error is a result of the line of code that casts the WatchEvent<T>
to a WatchEvent<Path>
. The
example avoids this error by creating a utility WatchDir
cast
method that suppresses the unchecked warning, as follows:
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked") static <T> WatchEvent<T> cast(WatchEvent<?> event) { return (WatchEvent<Path>)event; }
If you are unfamiliar with the @SuppressWarnings
syntax, see
Annotations.
The Watch Service API is designed for applications that need to be notified about file change events. It is well suited for any application, like an editor or IDE, that potentially has many open files and needs to ensure that the files are synchronized with the file system. It is also well suited for an application server that watches a directory, perhaps waiting for .jsp
or .jar
files to drop, in order to deploy them.
This API is not designed for indexing a hard drive. Most file system implementations have native support for file change notification. The Watch Service API takes advantage of this support where available. However, when a file system does not support this mechanism, the Watch Service will poll the file system, waiting for events.