Basically, you can't. At least not in a reliable way. However, you shouldn't need to.
The can't part
To restart a Java program, you need to restart the JVM. To restart the JVM you need to
Locate the java launcher that was used. You may try with System.getProperty("java.home") but there's no guarantee that this will actually point to the launcher that was used to launch your application. (The value returned may not point to the JRE used to launch the application or it could have been overridden by -Djava.home.)
You would presumably want to honor the original memory settings etc (-Xmx, -Xms, …) so you need to figure out which settings where used to start the first JVM. You could try using ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getInputArguments() but there's no guarantee that this will reflect the settings used. This is even spelled out in the documentation of that method:
Typically, not all command-line options to the 'java' command are passed to the Java virtual machine. Thus, the returned input arguments may not include all command-line options.
If your program reads input from Standard.in the original stdin will be lost in the restart.
Lots of these tricks and hacks will fail in the presence of a SecurityManager.
The shouldn't need part
I recommend you to design your application so that it is easy to clean every thing up and after that create a new instance of your "main" class.
Many applications are designed to do nothing but create an instance in the main-method:
public class MainClass {
...
public static void main(String[] args) {
new MainClass().launch();
}
...
}
By using this pattern, it should be easy enough to do something like:
public class MainClass {
...
public static void main(String[] args) {
boolean restart;
do {
restart = new MainClass().launch();
} while (restart);
}
...
}
and let launch() return true if and only if the application was shut down in a way that it needs to be restarted.
Strictly speaking, a Java program cannot restart itself since to do so it must kill the JVM in which it is running and then start it again, but once the JVM is no longer running (killed) then no action can be taken.
You could do some tricks with custom classloaders to load, pack, and start the AWT components again but this will likely cause lots of headaches with regard to the GUI event loop.
Depending on how the application is launched, you could start the JVM in a wrapper script which contains a do/while loop, which continues while the JVM exits with a particular code, then the AWT app would have to call System.exit(RESTART_CODE). For example, in scripting pseudocode:
DO
# Launch the awt program
EXIT_CODE = # Get the exit code of the last process
WHILE (EXIT_CODE == RESTART_CODE)
The AWT app should exit the JVM with something other than the RESTART_CODE on "normal" termination which doesn't require restart.
Eclipse typically restarts after a plugin is installed. They do this using a wrapper eclipse.exe (launcher app) for windows. This application execs the core eclipse runner jar and if the eclipse java application terminates with a relaunch code, eclipse.exe restarts the workbench. You can build a similar bit of native code, shell script or another java code wrapper to achieve the restart.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.lang.management.ManagementFactory;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException, InterruptedException {
StringBuilder cmd = new StringBuilder();
cmd.append(System.getProperty("java.home") + File.separator + "bin" + File.separator + "java ");
for (String jvmArg : ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getInputArguments()) {
cmd.append(jvmArg + " ");
}
cmd.append("-cp ").append(ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getClassPath()).append(" ");
cmd.append(Main.class.getName()).append(" ");
for (String arg : args) {
cmd.append(arg).append(" ");
}
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(cmd.toString());
System.exit(0);
}
}
Dedicated to all those who say it is impossible.
This program collects all information available to reconstruct the original commandline. Then, it launches it and since it is the very same command, your application starts a second time. Then we exit the original program, the child program remains running (even under Linux) and does the very same thing.
WARNING: If you run this, be aware that it never ends creating new processes, similar to a fork bomb.
Of course it is possible to restart a Java application.
The following method shows a way to restart a Java application:
public void restartApplication()
{
final String javaBin = System.getProperty("java.home") + File.separator + "bin" + File.separator + "java";
final File currentJar = new File(MyClassInTheJar.class.getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toURI());
/* is it a jar file? */
if(!currentJar.getName().endsWith(".jar"))
return;
/* Build command: java -jar application.jar */
final ArrayList<String> command = new ArrayList<String>();
command.add(javaBin);
command.add("-jar");
command.add(currentJar.getPath());
final ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder(command);
builder.start();
System.exit(0);
}
Basically it does the following:
Find the java executable (I used the java binary here, but that depends on your requirements)
Find the application (a jar in my case, using the MyClassInTheJar class to find the jar location itself)
Build a command to restart the jar (using the java binary in this case)
Execute it! (and thus terminating the current application and starting it again)
I was researching the subject myself when came across this question.
Regardless of the fact that the answer is already accepted, I would still like to offer an alternative approach for completeness. Specifically, Apache Ant served as a very flexible solution.
Basically, everything boils down to an Ant script file with a single Java execution task (refer here and here) invoked from a Java code (see here). This Java code, which can be a method launch, could be a part of the application that needs to be restarted. The application needs to have a dependency on the Apache Ant library (jar).
Whenever application needs to be restarted, it should call method launch and exit the VM. The Ant java task should have options fork and spawn set to true.
The code for the launch method may look something like this:
public final void launch(final String antScriptFile) {
/* configure Ant and execute the task */
final File buildFile = new File(antScriptFile);
final Project p = new Project();
p.setUserProperty("ant.file", buildFile.getAbsolutePath());
final DefaultLogger consoleLogger = new DefaultLogger();
consoleLogger.setErrorPrintStream(System.err);
consoleLogger.setOutputPrintStream(System.out);
consoleLogger.setMessageOutputLevel(Project.MSG_INFO);
p.addBuildListener(consoleLogger);
try {
p.fireBuildStarted();
p.init();
final ProjectHelper helper = ProjectHelper.getProjectHelper();
p.addReference("ant.projectHelper", helper);
helper.parse(p, buildFile);
p.executeTarget(p.getDefaultTarget());
p.fireBuildFinished(null);
} catch (final BuildException e) {
p.fireBuildFinished(e);
}
/* exit the current VM */
System.exit(0);
}
A very convenient thing here is that the same script is used for initial application start up as well as for restarts.
I guess you don't really want to stop the application, but to "Restart" it. For that, you could use this and add your "Reset" before the sleep and after the invisible window.
public void restartApp(){
// This launches a new instance of application dirctly,
// remember to add some sleep to the start of the cmd file to make sure current instance is
// completely terminated, otherwise 2 instances of the application can overlap causing strange
// things:)
new ProcessBuilder("cmd","/c start /min c:/path/to/script/that/launches/my/application.cmd ^& exit").start();
System.exit(0);
}
/min to start script in minimized window
^& exit to close cmd window after finish
a sample cmd script could be
@echo off
rem add some sleep (e.g. 10 seconds) to allow the preceding application instance to release any open resources (like ports) and exit gracefully, otherwise the new instance could fail to start
sleep 10
set path=C:\someFolder\application_lib\libs;%path%
java -jar application.jar
Although this question is old and answered, I've stumbled across a problem with some of the solutions and decided to add my suggestion into the mix.
The problem with some of the solutions is that they build a single command string. This creates issues when some parameters contain spaces, especially java.home.
Might return something like this:C:\Program Files\Java\jre7\bin\java
This string has to be wrapped in quotes or escaped due to the space in Program Files. Not a huge problem, but somewhat annoying and error prone, especially in cross platform applications.
Therefore my solution builds the command as an array of commands:
public static void restart(String[] args) {
ArrayList<String> commands = new ArrayList<String>(4 + jvmArgs.size() + args.length);
List<String> jvmArgs = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getInputArguments();
// Java
commands.add(System.getProperty("java.home") + File.separator + "bin" + File.separator + "java");
// Jvm arguments
for (String jvmArg : jvmArgs) {
commands.add(jvmArg);
}
// Classpath
commands.add("-cp");
commands.add(ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getClassPath());
// Class to be executed
commands.add(BGAgent.class.getName());
// Command line arguments
for (String arg : args) {
commands.add(arg);
}
File workingDir = null; // Null working dir means that the child uses the same working directory
String[] env = null; // Null env means that the child uses the same environment
String[] commandArray = new String[commands.size()];
commandArray = commands.toArray(commandArray);
try {
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(commandArray, env, workingDir);
System.exit(0);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
Just adding information which is not present in other answers.
If procfs/proc/self/cmdline is available
If you are running in an environment which provides procfs and therefore has the /proc file system available (which means this is not a portable solution), you can have Java read /proc/self/cmdline in order to restart itself, like this:
public static void restart() throws IOException {
new ProcessBuilder(getMyOwnCmdLine()).inheritIO().start();
}
public static String[] getMyOwnCmdLine() throws IOException {
return readFirstLine("/proc/self/cmdline").split("\u0000");
}
public static String readFirstLine(final String filename) throws IOException {
try (final BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(filename))) {
return in.readLine();
}
}
On systems with /proc/self/cmdline available, this probably is the most elegant way of how to "restart" the current Java process from Java. No JNI involved, and no guessing of paths and stuff required. This will also take care of all JVM options passed to the java binary. The command line will be exactly identical to the one of the current JVM process.
Many UNIX systems including GNU/Linux (including Android) nowadays have procfs However on some like FreeBSD, it is deprecated and being phased out. Mac OS X is an exception in the sense that it does not have procfs. Windows also does not have procfs. Cygwin has procfs but it's invisible to Java because it's only visible to applications using the Cygwin DLLs instead of Windows system calls, and Java is unaware of Cygwin.
Don't forget to use ProcessBuilder.inheritIO()
The default is that stdin / stdout / stderr (in Java called System.in / System.out / System.err) of the started Process are set to stdout1 which allow the currently running process to communicate with the newly started process. If you want to restart the current process, this is stdout2. Instead you would want that stdin / stdout / stderr are the same as those of the current VM. This is called stdout3. You can do so by calling inheritIO() of your stdout0 instance.
Pitfall on Windows
A frequent use case of a restart() function is to restart the application after an update. The last time I tried this on Windows this was problematic. When overwrote the application's .jar file with the new version, the application started to misbehave and giving exceptions about the .jar file. I'm just telling, in case this is your use case. Back then I solved the issue by wrapping the application in a batch file and using a magic return value from System.exit() that I queried in the batch file and had the batch file restart the application instead.
Old question and all of that. But this is yet another way that offers some advantages.
On Windows, you could ask the task scheduler to start your app again for you. This has the advantage of waiting a specific amount of time before the app is restarted. You can go to task manager and delete the task and it stops repeating.
SimpleDateFormat hhmm = new SimpleDateFormat("kk:mm");
Calendar aCal = Calendar.getInstance();
aCal.add(Calendar.SECOND, 65);
String nextMinute = hhmm.format(aCal.getTime()); //Task Scheduler Doesn't accept seconds and won't do current minute.
String[] create = {"c:\\windows\\system32\\schtasks.exe", "/CREATE", "/F", "/TN", "RestartMyProg", "/SC", "ONCE", "/ST", nextMinute, "/TR", "java -jar c:\\my\\dev\\RestartTest.jar"};
Process proc = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(create, null, null);
System.out.println("Exit Now");
try {Thread.sleep(1000);} catch (Exception e){} // just so you can see it better
System.exit(0);
Similar to Yoda's 'improved' answer, but with further improvements (both functional, readability, and testability). It's now safe to run, and restarts for as as many times as the amount of program arguments given.