JNet is a comprehensive suite of libraries and tools to use Java/JVM APIs (Java, Scala, Kotlin, ...) and .NET side-by-side.
JNet | JNet.Templates | JNetPSCore | JNetCLI | JNetReflector | JNetPS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JNet is a suite, curated by MASES Group, can be supported by the open-source community.
Its primary scope is to support other, public or internal, MASES Group projects: open-source community and commercial entities can use it for their needs and support this project, moreover there are dedicated community and commercial subscription plans.
The repository code and releases may contain bugs, the release cycle depends from critical discovered issues and/or enhancement requested from this or other projects.
Looking for the help of experts? MASES Group can help you design, build, deploy, and manage applications mixing .NET and JVM enabled languages.
This project aims to create a set of libraries and tools to direct access, from .NET, all the features available in the Java Platform, this is the counterpart of JCOReflector.
There are many client libraries written to manage communication with Java. Conversely, this project use directly the Java packages giving more than one benefit:
- all implemented features are availables at no extra implementation costs, see JNet usage;
- avoids any third party communication protocol implementation;
- access all features made available from Java platform.
So, for example, do you want an ArrayList
? Just write in C# a line of code like this:
Java.Util.ArrayList<string> alist = new Java.Util.ArrayList<string>();
See JNet usage for a comprehensive example.
Do you like the project?
- Request your free community subscription.
Do you want to help us?
- put a ⭐ on this project
- open issues to request features or report bugs 🐛
- improves the project with Pull Requests
This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to [email protected].
- Roadmap
- Current state
- JNet usage
- JNet performance tips
- JNet APIs extensibility
- JNet JVM callbacks
- JNet CLI usage
- JNet Docker usage
- JNet Reflector usage
- JNet PowerShell usage
- JNet Command-line switches
- V1.4.8+: From version 1.4.8 there is a new project, named JNetReflector (still in development phase), able to build C# gateway classes from JARs containing the JVM classes, exactly the same JCOReflector does for .NET in JVM.
- V1.4.9+: From version 1.4.9 there are two new projects:
- JNetPSCore: the core library for PowerShell development, it can be extended in other projects based on JNet;
- JNetPS: a PowerShell module to use JNet within a PowerShell shell.
- V1.5.2+: strong improvement of JNetReflector; it is used to generate almost all Java 11 classes available in the corresponding JNet version
- V1.5.3+: JNetReflector manages generics and almost all classes of Java SE 11 are covered: see JNet Reflector usage
- V2.0.0+: the most notable changes in this version are in:
- JNet: complete review of all classes based on automatic generation done using JNetReflector
- JNetReflector: improvements in many areas from generation of .NET interfaces to generics and where clauses, full story in masesgroup#178
- V2.3.0+: the most notable changes in this version are in:
- JNet: review of classes based on latest updates of JNetReflector
- JNetReflector: use
Java.Lang.String
, by default, instead ofstring
(System.String
) (see masesgroup#363)
- V2.4.0+: the most notable changes in this version are in:
- JNet: review of classes based on latest updates of JNetReflector
- JNetReflector: use native types only when JVM counter-part is a native type (see masesgroup#371)
- JNetReflector: can use signature to invoke JVM methods (see masesgroup#374) or fallback to current behavior
- V2.5.0+: the most notable changes in this version are in:
- Tools and Docker images update to .NET 8
- JNetReflector: create side-by-side class on each listener used in case of pure JVM interface (see masesgroup#393)
- JNet:
- review of classes based on latest updates of JNetReflector
- enhanced ByteBuffer management
- speed-up array/list conversion
JNet uses JCOBridge, and its features, to obtain many benefits:
- Cyber-security:
- JVM and CLR, or CoreCLR, runs in the same process, but are insulated from each other;
- JCOBridge does not make any code injection into JVM;
- JCOBridge does not use any other communication mechanism than JNI;
- .NET (CLR) inherently inherits the cyber-security levels of running JVM;
- Direct access the JVM from any .NET application:
- Any Java/Scala/Kotlin/... class can be directly managed;
- No need to learn new APIs: we try to expose the same APIs in C# style;
- No extra validation cycle on protocol and functionality: bug fix, improvements, new features are immediately available;
- Documentation is shared;
- Dynamic code: it helps to write a Java/Scala/Kotlin/etc seamless language code directly inside a standard .NET application written in C#/VB.NET: look at this simple example and JNet APIs extensibility.
Have a look at the following JCOBridge resources:
- Release notes
- Community Edition
- Commercial Edition
- Latest release: