Starting Jetty using JPMS

Jetty modules are proper JPMS modules: each Jetty module has a module-info.class file. This makes possible to run Jetty from the module-path, rather than the class-path.

To start Jetty on the module-path rather than the class-path, it is enough to add the --jpms option to the command line, for example:

$ java -jar $JETTY_HOME/start.jar --jpms

The --jpms option implies the --exec option.

When running on the module-path using the --jpms option, the Jetty start mechanism will fork a second JVM passing it the right JVM options to run on the module-path.

Therefore, you will have two JVMs running: one that runs start.jar and one that runs Jetty on the module-path.

When Jetty is started in JPMS mode, all JPMS modules in the module-path are added to the set of JPMS root modules through the JVM option --add-modules ALL_MODULE_PATH.

For a *.jar file that is not a JPMS module, but is on the module-path, the JVM will assume internally it is an automatic JPMS module, with a JPMS module name derived from the *.jar file name.

Rather than adding the --jpms option to the command line, you can use a custom Jetty module to centralize your JPMS configuration, where you can specify additional JPMS directives.

Create the $JETTY_BASE/modules/jpms.mod file:

jpms.mod
[description]
JPMS Configuration Module

[ini]
--jpms

[jpms]
# Additional JPMS configuration.

The [ini] section with --jpms is equivalent to passing the --jpms option to the command line (see also this section).

The [jpms] section allows you to specify additional JPMS configuration, for example additional --add-modules options, or --add-opens options, etc. (see also this section).

Then enable it:

$ java -jar $JETTY_HOME/start.jar --add-modules=jpms

Now you can start Jetty without extra command line options, and it will start in JPMS mode because you have enabled the jpms module.

Advanced JPMS Configuration

Web applications may need additional services from the Servlet Container, such as JDBC DataSource references or JTA UserTransaction references.

For example, for JDBC it is typical to store, in JNDI, a reference to the connection pool’s DataSource or directly a reference to the JDBC driver’s DataSource (for example, org.postgresql.ds.PGConnectionPoolDataSource). Jetty needs to be able to instantiate those classes and therefore needs to be able to load those classes and all their super-classes, among which includes javax.sql.DataSource.

When Jetty runs on the class-path, this is easily achieved by using a custom module as explained in this section.

However, when running on the module-path, things are quite different.

When Jetty tries to load, for example, class org.postgresql.ds.PGConnectionPoolDataSource, it must be in a JPMS module that is resolved in the run-time module graph. Furthermore, any dependency, for example classes from the java.sql JPMS module, must also be in a module present in the resolved module graph.

Thanks to the fact that when Jetty starts in JPMS mode the --add-modules ALL_MODULE_PATH option is added to the JVM command line, every *.jar file in the module-path is also present in the module graph.

There are now two cases for the postgresql-<version>.jar file: either it is a proper JPMS module, or it is an automatic JPMS module (either an explicit automatic JPMS module with the Automatic-Module-Name attribute in the manifest, or an implicit automatic JPMS module whose name is derived from the *.jar file name).

If the postgresql-<version>.jar file is a proper JPMS module, then there is nothing more that you should do: the postgresql-<version>.jar file is in the module-path, and all the modules in the module-path are in the module graph, and any dependency declared in the module-info.class will be added to the module graph.

Otherwise, postgresql-<version>.jar file is an automatic module, and will likely have a dependency on the JDK-bundled java.sql JPMS module. However, the java.sql JPMS module is not in the module graph, because automatic modules do not have a way to declare their dependencies.

For this reason, you have to manually add the java.sql dependency to the module graph. Using the postgresql.mod introduced in this section as an example, modify your custom module in the following way:

postgresql.mod
...

[jpms]
add-modules: java.sql

The [jpms] section is only used when Jetty is started on the module-path.