Java Scripting and JRuby Examples
Author: Martin Kuba
- Installation of JRuby
- JRuby Example 1 - calling Ruby code
- Example 2 - Ruby classes in Java
- JRuby in TomCat
The new JDK 6.0 has a new API for scripting languages, which seems to be a good idea. I decided this is a good opportunity to learn the Ruby language :-) But I haven't found a simple example of it using Google, so here it is.
Installation of JRuby
Download and install JDK 6.0. You need version 6, as the scripting support was added in version 6. Then you need to put five files in your classpath:- jruby.jar - download jruby-bin-1.0.tar.gz file from JRuby website and extract the files
jruby.jar, asm-2.2.3.jar, asm-commons-2.2.3.jar, backport-util-concurrent.jar
from directoryjruby-1.0/lib/
. You don't need the other files. - jruby-engine.jar - download jsr223-engines.tar.gz file from scripting.dev.java.net and extract the file
jruby/build/jruby-engine.jar
(If you don't know how to do that, please read the Java tutorial first. Don't forget to include the current directory into the CLASSPATH. On Linux, you can do:
export CLASSPATH=. for i in *.jar ; do CLASSPATH=$CLASSPATH:$i; done).
JRuby Example 1 - calling Ruby code
Here is a simple Java code that executes a Ruby script defining some functions and the executing them:package cz.cesnet.meta.jruby; import javax.script.ScriptEngine; import javax.script.ScriptEngineFactory; import javax.script.ScriptEngineManager; import javax.script.ScriptException; import javax.script.ScriptContext; import java.io.BufferedReader; import java.io.FileNotFoundException; import java.io.FileReader; public class JRubyExample1 { public static void main(String[] args) throws ScriptException, FileNotFoundException { //list all available scripting engines listScriptingEngines(); //get jruby engine ScriptEngine jruby = new ScriptEngineManager().getEngineByName("jruby"); //process a ruby file jruby.eval(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("myruby.rb"))); //call a method defined in the ruby source jruby.put("number", 6); jruby.put("title", "My Swing App"); long fact = (Long) jruby.eval("showFactInWindow($title,$number)"); System.out.println("fact: " + fact); jruby.eval("$myglobalvar = fact($number)"); long myglob = (Long) jruby.getBindings(ScriptContext.ENGINE_SCOPE).get("myglobalvar"); System.out.println("myglob: " + myglob); } public static void listScriptingEngines() { ScriptEngineManager mgr = new ScriptEngineManager(); for (ScriptEngineFactory factory : mgr.getEngineFactories()) { System.out.println("ScriptEngineFactory Info"); System.out.printf("\tScript Engine: %s (%s)\n", factory.getEngineName(), factory.getEngineVersion()); System.out.printf("\tLanguage: %s (%s)\n", factory.getLanguageName(), factory.getLanguageVersion()); for (String name : factory.getNames()) { System.out.printf("\tEngine Alias: %s\n", name); } } } }
And here is the Ruby code in file myruby.rb:
def fact(n) if n==0 return 1 else return n*fact(n-1) end end class CloseListener include java.awt.event.ActionListener def actionPerformed(event) puts "CloseListere.actionPerformed() called" java.lang.System.exit(0) end end def showFactInWindow(title,number) f = fact(number) frame = javax.swing.JFrame.new(title) frame.setLayout(java.awt.FlowLayout.new()) button = javax.swing.JButton.new("Close") button.addActionListener(CloseListener.new) frame.contentPane.add(javax.swing.JLabel.new(number.to_s+"! = "+f.to_s)) frame.contentPane.add(button) frame.defaultCloseOperation=javax.swing.WindowConstants::EXIT_ON_CLOSE frame.pack() frame.visible=true return f end
The Ruby script defines a function fact(n) which computes the factorial of a given number. Then it defines a (Ruby) class CloseListener, which extend a (Java) class java.awt.event.ActionListener. And finaly it defines a function showFactInWindow, which builds a GUI window displaying a label and a close button, assigns the CloseListener class as a listener for the button action, and returns the value of n! :
Please note that a Ruby and Java classes can be mixed together.
(To run the example save the codes above into files cz/cesnet/meta/jruby/JRubyExample1.java
and myruby.rb
, and compile them and run using
javac cz/cesnet/meta/jruby/JRubyExample1.java java cz.cesnet.meta.jruby.JRubyExample1)
You can pass any Java object using the put("key",object)
method on the ScriptingEngine class, the key becomes a global variable in Ruby, so you can access it using $key
. The numerical value returned by showFactInWindow is Ruby's Fixnum clas, which is converted into java.lang.Long and returned by the eval() method.
Any additional global variable in the Ruby script can be obtained in Java by getBindings(), as is shown by getting the $myglobalvar RUby global variable.
Example 2 - Ruby classes in Java
In JRuby 0.9.8, it was not possible to override or add methods of Java classes in Ruby and call them in Java. However, in JRuby 1.0 it is possible. If you have read the previous version of this page, please note, that the syntax for extending Java interfaces has changed in JRuby 1.0 to use include instead of <.
This is a Java interface MyJavaInterface.java:
package cz.cesnet.meta.jruby;
public interface MyJavaInterface {
String myMethod(Long num);
}
This is a Java class MyJavaClass.java:
package cz.cesnet.meta.jruby;
public class MyJavaClass implements MyJavaInterface {
public String myMethod(Long num) {
return "I am Java method, num="+num;
}
}
This is a Ruby code example2.rb:
#example2.rb class MyDerivedClass < Java::cz.cesnet.meta.jruby.MyJavaClass def myMethod(num) return "I am Ruby method, num="+num.to_s() end end class MyImplClass include Java::cz.cesnet.meta.jruby.MyJavaInterface def myMethod(num) return "I am Ruby method in interface impl, num="+num.to_s() end def mySecondMethod() return "I am an additonal Ruby method" end end
This is the main code.
package cz.cesnet.meta.jruby; import javax.script.ScriptEngine; import javax.script.ScriptEngineManager; import javax.script.ScriptException; import java.io.BufferedReader; import java.io.FileNotFoundException; import java.io.FileReader; import java.lang.reflect.Method; public class JRubyExample2 { public static void main(String[] args) throws ScriptException, FileNotFoundException { //get jruby engine ScriptEngine jruby = new ScriptEngineManager().getEngineByName("jruby"); //process a ruby file jruby.eval(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("example2.rb"))); //get a Ruby class extended from Java class MyJavaClass mjc = (MyJavaClass) jruby.eval("MyDerivedClass.new"); String s = mjc.myMethod(2l); //WOW! the Ruby method is visible System.out.println("s: " + s); //get a Ruby class implementing a Java interface MyJavaInterface mji = (MyJavaInterface) jruby.eval("MyImplClass.new"); String s2 = mji.myMethod(3l); //WOW ! the Ruby method is visible System.out.println("s2: " + s2); //however the other methods are not visible :-( for (Method m : mji.getClass().getMethods()) { System.out.println("m.getName() = " + m.getName()); } } }
The output is
s: I am Ruby method, num=2 s2: I am Ruby method in interface impl, num=3 m.getName() = myMethod m.getName() = hashCode m.getName() = equals m.getName() = toString m.getName() = isProxyClass m.getName() = getProxyClass m.getName() = getInvocationHandler m.getName() = newProxyInstance m.getName() = getClass m.getName() = wait m.getName() = wait m.getName() = wait m.getName() = notify m.getName() = notifyAll
So you see, a Ruby method overriding a method in a Java class and a Ruby method implementing a method in a Java interface are visible in Java ! However additional methods are not visible in Java.
JRuby in TomCat
A useful usage of JRuby in Java is in web applications, when you need to give your user the option to write some complex user-defined conditions. For example, I needed to allow users to specify conditions for other users to access a chat room, based on attributes of the other users provided by autentization system Shibboleth. So I implemented JRuby scripting in TomCat-deployed web application. I used TomCat 6.0, but 5.5 should work the same way. Here are my findings.
First the easy part. Just add the jar files needed for JRuby to WEB-INF/lib/
directory and it just works. Great ! Now your users can enter any Ruby script, and you can provide it with input data using global variables, execute it and read its output value, in a class called from a servlet. In the following example, I needed a boolean value as the output, so the usual Ruby rules for truth values are simulated:
public boolean evalRubyScript() { ScriptEngine jruby = engineManager.getEngineByName("jruby"); jruby.put("attrs", getWhatEverInputDataYouNeedToProvide()); try { Object retval = jruby.eval(script); if (retval instanceof Boolean) return ((Boolean) retval); return retval != null; } catch (ScriptException e) { throw new RuntimeException(e); } }
However, your users can type anything. Sooner or later, somebody will type something harmful, like java.lang.System.exit(1)
or File.readlines('/etc/passwd')
etc. You have to limit what the users can do. Fortunately, there is a security framework in Java, which is not enabled by default, by you can enable it by starting TomCat with the -security
option:
$CATALINA_BASE/bin/catalina.sh start -security
That runs the JVM for TomCat with SecurityManager enabled. But alas, your web application most likely will not work with security enabled, as your code or the libraries you use now cannot read system properties, read files etc. So you have to allow them to do it. Edit the file $CATALINA_BASE/conf/catalina.prolicy
and add the following code, where you replacemywebapp
with the name of your web application:
//first allow everything for trusted libraries, add you own grant codeBase "jar:file:${catalina.base}/webapps/mywebapp/WEB-INF/lib/stripes.jar!/-" { permission java.security.AllPermission; }; grant codeBase "jar:file:${catalina.base}/webapps/mywebapp/WEB-INF/lib/log4j-1.2.13.jar!/-" { permission java.security.AllPermission; }; //JSP pages don't compile without this grant codeBase "file:${catalina.base}/work/Catalina/localhost/mywebapp/" { permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "defineClassInPackage.org.apache.jasper.runtime"; }; //if you need to read or write temporary file, use this grant codeBase "file:${catalina.base}/webapps/mywebapp/WEB-INF/classes/-" { permission java.io.FilePermission "${java.io.tmpdir}/file.ser", "read,write" ; }; // and now, allow only the basic things, as this applies to all code in your webapp including JRuby grant codeBase "file:${catalina.base}/webapps/mywebapp/-" { permission java.util.PropertyPermission "*", "read"; permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "accessDeclaredMembers"; permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "createClassLoader"; permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "defineClassInPackage.java.lang"; permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "getenv.*"; permission java.util.PropertyPermission "*", "read,write"; permission java.io.FilePermission "${user.home}/.jruby", "read" ; permission java.io.FilePermission "file:${catalina.base}/webapps/mywebapp/WEB-INF/lib/jruby.jar!/-", "read" ; };
Your webapp will probably not work even after you added this code to the policy file, as your code may need permissions to do other things to work. I have found that the easiest way how to find what's missing is to run TomCat with security debuging enabled:
$ rm logs/* $ CATALINA_OPTS=-Djava.security.debug=access,failure bin/catalina.sh run -security ... reproduce the problem by accessing the webapp ... $ bin/catalina.sh run stop $ fgrep -v 'access allowed' logs/catalina.outThis will filter out allowed accesses, so what remains are denied accesses:
access: access denied (java.lang.RuntimePermission accessClassInPackage.sun.misc) java.lang.Exception: Stack trace at java.lang.Thread.dumpStack(Thread.java:1206) at java.security.AccessControlContext.checkPermission(AccessControlContext.java:313) ... access: domain that failed ProtectionDomain (file:/home/joe/tomcat-6.0.13/webapps/mywebapp/WEB-INF/lib/somelib.jar ^lt;no signer certificates>)That means, that the code in somelib.jar need the RuntimePermission to run, so you have to add it to the
catalina.policy
file. Then repeat the steps untill you web application runs without problems.
Now the users cannot do dangerous things. If they try to type java.lang.System.exit(1)
in the JRuby code, the VM will not exit, instead they will get a security exception:
java.security.AccessControlException: access denied (java.lang.RuntimePermission exitVM.1) at java.security.AccessControlContext.checkPermission(AccessControlContext.java:323) at java.security.AccessController.checkPermission(AccessController.java:546) at java.lang.SecurityManager.checkPermission(SecurityManager.java:532)The web application is secured now.