I have the following code that works in Scala 2.10 to compile external classes at runtime in Scala
/**
* Compile scala files and keep them loaded in memory
* @param classDir Directory storing the generated scala files
* @throws IOException if there is problem reading the source files
* @return Classloader that contains the compiled external classes
*/
@throws[IOException]
def compileFiles(classDir: String): AbstractFileClassLoader = {
val files = recursiveListFiles(new File(classDir))
.filter(_.getName.endsWith("scala"))
println("Loaded files: \n" + files.mkString("[", ",\n", "]"))
val settings: GenericRunnerSettings = new GenericRunnerSettings(err => println("Interpretor error: " + err))
settings.usejavacp.value = true
val interpreter: IMain = new IMain(settings)
files.foreach(f => {
interpreter.compileSources(new BatchSourceFile(AbstractFile.getFile(f)))
})
interpreter.getInterpreterClassLoader()
}
And then elsewhere, I could use the classloader reference to instantiate classes e.g.
val personClass = classLoader.findClass("com.example.dynacsv.PersonData")
val ctor = personClass.getDeclaredConstructors()(0)
val instance = ctor.newInstance("Mr", "John", "Doe", 25: java.lang.Integer, 165: java.lang.Integer, 1: java.lang.Integer)
println("Instantiated class: " + instance.getClass.getCanonicalName)
println(instance.toString)
However the above no longer works as getInterpreterClassLoader
method has been removed from scala.tools.nsc.interpreter.IMain
. Also, AbstractFileClassLoader has been moved and deprecated. It is no longer allowed to call findClass
method in the class loader from an external package.
What is the recommended way to do the above in Scala 2.11? Thanks!
If your goal is to run external scala classes in runtime, I'd suggest using eval with
scala.tools.reflect.ToolBox
(it is included in REPL, but for normal usage you have to add scala-reflect.jar):You also can compile files, using
tb.compile
.Modified with example: assume you have external file with
So you do
Additional possibilities are (almost) unlimited, you can get full tree AST and work with it as you want:
See official documentation for these tricks:
http://docs.scala-lang.org/overviews/reflection/symbols-trees-types.html
http://docs.scala-lang.org/overviews/quasiquotes/intro.html