How to construct a relative path in Java from two absolute paths (or URLs)?
At the time of writing (June 2010), this was the only solution that passed my test cases. I can't guarantee that this solution is bug-free, but it does pass the included test cases. The method and tests I've written depend on the FilenameUtils
class from Apache commons IO.
The solution was tested with Java 1.4. If you're using Java 1.5 (or higher) you should consider replacing StringBuffer
with StringBuilder
(if you're still using Java 1.4 you should consider a change of employer instead).
import java.io.File;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import org.apache.commons.io.FilenameUtils;
public class ResourceUtils {
/**
* Get the relative path from one file to another, specifying the directory separator.
* If one of the provided resources does not exist, it is assumed to be a file unless it ends with '/' or
* '\'.
*
* @param targetPath targetPath is calculated to this file
* @param basePath basePath is calculated from this file
* @param pathSeparator directory separator. The platform default is not assumed so that we can test Unix behaviour when running on Windows (for example)
* @return
*/
public static String getRelativePath(String targetPath, String basePath, String pathSeparator) {
// Normalize the paths
String normalizedTargetPath = FilenameUtils.normalizeNoEndSeparator(targetPath);
String normalizedBasePath = FilenameUtils.normalizeNoEndSeparator(basePath);
// Undo the changes to the separators made by normalization
if (pathSeparator.equals("/")) {
normalizedTargetPath = FilenameUtils.separatorsToUnix(normalizedTargetPath);
normalizedBasePath = FilenameUtils.separatorsToUnix(normalizedBasePath);
} else if (pathSeparator.equals("\\")) {
normalizedTargetPath = FilenameUtils.separatorsToWindows(normalizedTargetPath);
normalizedBasePath = FilenameUtils.separatorsToWindows(normalizedBasePath);
} else {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Unrecognised dir separator '" + pathSeparator + "'");
}
String[] base = normalizedBasePath.split(Pattern.quote(pathSeparator));
String[] target = normalizedTargetPath.split(Pattern.quote(pathSeparator));
// First get all the common elements. Store them as a string,
// and also count how many of them there are.
StringBuffer common = new StringBuffer();
int commonIndex = 0;
while (commonIndex < target.length && commonIndex < base.length
&& target[commonIndex].equals(base[commonIndex])) {
common.append(target[commonIndex] + pathSeparator);
commonIndex++;
}
if (commonIndex == 0) {
// No single common path element. This most
// likely indicates differing drive letters, like C: and D:.
// These paths cannot be relativized.
throw new PathResolutionException("No common path element found for '" + normalizedTargetPath + "' and '" + normalizedBasePath
+ "'");
}
// The number of directories we have to backtrack depends on whether the base is a file or a dir
// For example, the relative path from
//
// /foo/bar/baz/gg/ff to /foo/bar/baz
//
// ".." if ff is a file
// "../.." if ff is a directory
//
// The following is a heuristic to figure out if the base refers to a file or dir. It's not perfect, because
// the resource referred to by this path may not actually exist, but it's the best I can do
boolean baseIsFile = true;
File baseResource = new File(normalizedBasePath);
if (baseResource.exists()) {
baseIsFile = baseResource.isFile();
} else if (basePath.endsWith(pathSeparator)) {
baseIsFile = false;
}
StringBuffer relative = new StringBuffer();
if (base.length != commonIndex) {
int numDirsUp = baseIsFile ? base.length - commonIndex - 1 : base.length - commonIndex;
for (int i = 0; i < numDirsUp; i++) {
relative.append(".." + pathSeparator);
}
}
relative.append(normalizedTargetPath.substring(common.length()));
return relative.toString();
}
static class PathResolutionException extends RuntimeException {
PathResolutionException(String msg) {
super(msg);
}
}
}
The test cases that this passes are
public void testGetRelativePathsUnix() {
assertEquals("stuff/xyz.dat", ResourceUtils.getRelativePath("/var/data/stuff/xyz.dat", "/var/data/", "/"));
assertEquals("../../b/c", ResourceUtils.getRelativePath("/a/b/c", "/a/x/y/", "/"));
assertEquals("../../b/c", ResourceUtils.getRelativePath("/m/n/o/a/b/c", "/m/n/o/a/x/y/", "/"));
}
public void testGetRelativePathFileToFile() {
String target = "C:\\Windows\\Boot\\Fonts\\chs_boot.ttf";
String base = "C:\\Windows\\Speech\\Common\\sapisvr.exe";
String relPath = ResourceUtils.getRelativePath(target, base, "\\");
assertEquals("..\\..\\Boot\\Fonts\\chs_boot.ttf", relPath);
}
public void testGetRelativePathDirectoryToFile() {
String target = "C:\\Windows\\Boot\\Fonts\\chs_boot.ttf";
String base = "C:\\Windows\\Speech\\Common\\";
String relPath = ResourceUtils.getRelativePath(target, base, "\\");
assertEquals("..\\..\\Boot\\Fonts\\chs_boot.ttf", relPath);
}
public void testGetRelativePathFileToDirectory() {
String target = "C:\\Windows\\Boot\\Fonts";
String base = "C:\\Windows\\Speech\\Common\\foo.txt";
String relPath = ResourceUtils.getRelativePath(target, base, "\\");
assertEquals("..\\..\\Boot\\Fonts", relPath);
}
public void testGetRelativePathDirectoryToDirectory() {
String target = "C:\\Windows\\Boot\\";
String base = "C:\\Windows\\Speech\\Common\\";
String expected = "..\\..\\Boot";
String relPath = ResourceUtils.getRelativePath(target, base, "\\");
assertEquals(expected, relPath);
}
public void testGetRelativePathDifferentDriveLetters() {
String target = "D:\\sources\\recovery\\RecEnv.exe";
String base = "C:\\Java\\workspace\\AcceptanceTests\\Standard test data\\geo\\";
try {
ResourceUtils.getRelativePath(target, base, "\\");
fail();
} catch (PathResolutionException ex) {
// expected exception
}
}
It's a little roundabout, but why not use URI? It has a relativize method which does all the necessary checks for you.
String path = "/var/data/stuff/xyz.dat";
String base = "/var/data";
String relative = new File(base).toURI().relativize(new File(path).toURI()).getPath();
// relative == "stuff/xyz.dat"
Please note that for file path there's java.nio.file.Path#relativize
since Java 1.7, as pointed out by @Jirka Meluzin in the other answer.
Since Java 7 you can use the relativize method:
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Path pathAbsolute = Paths.get("/var/data/stuff/xyz.dat");
Path pathBase = Paths.get("/var/data");
Path pathRelative = pathBase.relativize(pathAbsolute);
System.out.println(pathRelative);
}
}
Output:
stuff/xyz.dat