At work, I use a Java application (I have located compiled/executable jars on the C-drive). I want to be able to grab some information from this application through code. The application itself probably does not store information, so it must communicate with legacy systems some way, I am not sure how, I have seen traces of a Servlet(?) Hence, I suspect the application also has built-in "encryption"(?)
I do not want to get involved in encryption and login procedures etc., so I am thinking I could just build a Java project around the current executable jars, and launch the application as I usually do (through the "main" entry point, "Start.jar", but then after execution call the functions that I want to (i.e. the application just runs as usual in the background)...
Would that be possible? Is there another way? Can one, for example, hook up to an already executed Java application and issue commands?
What I have tried so far
- Downloaded Eclipse, and created a new project
- Made Eclipse "reference" external jars (there was a wizard in Eclipse)
- Created a new class in my new project, in which I launch the "main" entry point of the "main" executable jar (the structure of all the jars pops up with "IntelliSense"). I have also found out which argument I need to supply to the main procedure using JD-GUI (Java Decompiler)...
It seems that from inside the main procedure a call is made to another procedure, which resides in a different jar, in the debug window of Eclipse I just see an error, which made me doubt that my current approach is viable... Maybe the problem arises because the command is issued from a compiled jar? Could there be an issue with the "class path"? Does this at all seem like a solution? But then again, I have no experience with Java (mostly VBA and some C#)...
Thanks in advance DE