xjc(1) Java Web Services Tools xjc(1)NAMExjc - Compiles an XML schema file into fully annotated Java classes.
SYNOPSISxjc [ options ] schema file/URL/dir/jar ... [-b bindinfo ] ...
options
The command-line options. See Options.
schema file/URL/dir/jar ...
The location of the XML schema file. If dir is specified, then
all schema files in it are compiled. If jar is specified, then
the /META-INF/sun-jaxb.episode binding file is compiled.
-b bindinfo
The location of the bindings files.
DESCRIPTION
Start the binding compiler with the appropriate xjc shell script in the
bin directory for your platform. There is also an Ant task to run the
binding complier. See Using the XJC with Ant at
http://jaxb.java.net/nonav/2.1.3/docs/xjcTask.html
OPTIONS
· See also Nonstandard Options
· See also Deprecated and Removed Options
-nv
By default, the XJC binding compiler performs strict validation of
the source schema before processing it. Use this option to disable
strict schema validation. This does not mean that the binding
compiler will not perform any validation, but means that it will
perform a less-strict validation.
-extension
By default, the XJC binding compiler strictly enforces the rules
outlined in the Compatibility chapter of the JAXB Specification.
Appendix E.2 defines a set of W3C XML Schema features that are not
completely supported by JAXB v1.0. In some cases, you may be allowed
to use them in the -extension mode enabled by this switch. In the
default (strict) mode, you are also limited to using only the binding
customization defined in the specification. By using the -extension
switch, you will be allowed to use the JAXB Vendor Extensions.
-b file
Specifies one or more external binding files to process. Each binding
file must have its own -b switch. The syntax of the external binding
files is flexible. You can have a single binding file that contains
customization for multiple schemas or you can break the customization
into multiple bindings files: xjc schema1.xsd schema2.xsd schema3.xsd
-b bindings123.xjbxjc schema1.xsd schema2.xsd schema3.xsd -b
bindings1.xjb -b bindings2.xjb -b bindings3.xjb. In addition, the
ordering of the schema files and binding files on the command line
does not matter.
-d dir
By default, the XJC binding compiler generates the Java content
classes in the current directory. Use this option to specify an
alternate output directory. The output directory must already exist.
The XJC binding compiler does not create it for you.
-p pkg
When you specify a target package with this command-line option, it
overrides any binding customization for the package name and the
default package name algorithm defined in the specification.
-httpproxy proxy
Specifies the HTTP or HTTPS proxy in the format
[user[:password]@]proxyHost[:proxyPort]. The old -host and -port
options are still supported by the RI for backward compatibility, but
they were deprecated. The password specified with this option is an
argument that is visible to other users who use the top command. For
greater security, use the -httpproxyfile option.
-httpproxyfile file
Specifies the HTTP or HTTPS proxy with a file. The same format as the
-httpproxy option, but the password specified in the file is not
visible to other users.
-classpath arg
Specifies where to find client application class files used by the
jxb:javaType and xjc:superClass customization.
-catalog file
Specifies catalog files to resolve external entity references.
Supports the TR9401, XCatalog, and OASIS XML Catalog formats. See XML
Entity and URI Resolvers at http://xerces.apache.org/xml-
commons/components/resolver/resolver-article.html
-readOnly
By default, the XJC binding compiler does not write-protect the Java
source files it generates. Use this option to force the XJC binding
compiler to mark the generated Java sources as read-only.
-npa
Suppresses the generation of package level annotations into
**/package-info.java. Using this switch causes the generated code to
internalize those annotations into the other generated classes.
-no-header
Suppresses the generation of a file header comment that includes some
note and time stamp. Using this makes the generated code more
compatible with the diff command.
-target 2.0
Avoids generating code that relies on any JAXB 2.1 features. This
will allow the generated code to run with JAXB 2.0 runtime
environment (such as Java SE 6).
-xmlschema
Treats input schemas as W3C XML Schema (default). If you do not
specify this switch, then your input schemas are treated as though
they are W3C XML Schemas.
-relaxing
Treats input schemas as RELAX NG (experimental and unsupported).
Support for RELAX NG schemas is provided as a JAXB Vendor Extension.
-relaxing-compact
Treat input schemas as RELAX NG compact syntax (experimental and
unsupported). Support for RELAX NG schemas is provided as a JAXB
Vendor Extension.
-dtd
Treats input schemas as XML DTD (experimental and unsupported).
Support for RELAX NG schemas is provided as a JAXB Vendor Extension.
-wsdl
Treats input as WSDL and compiles schemas inside it (experimental and
unsupported).
-quiet
Suppress compiler output, such as progress information and warnings.
-verbose
Be extra verbose, such as printing informational messages or
displaying stack traces upon some errors.
-help
Displays a brief summary of the compiler switches.
-version
Displays the compiler version information.
schema file/URL/dir
Specifies one or more schema files to compile. If you specify a
directory, then the xjc command scans it for all schema files and
compiles them.
NONSTANDARD OPTIONS
-XLocator
Causes the generated code to expose SAX Locator information
about the source XML in the Java bean instances after
unmarshalling.
-Xsync-methods
Causes all of the generated method signatures to include the
synchronized keyword.
-mark-generated
Marks the generated code with the annotation
@javax.annotation.Generated.
-episode file
Generates the specified episode file for separate compilation.
DEPRECATED AND REMOVED OPTIONS
-host & -port
These options are replaced with the -httpproxy option. For
backward compatibility, these options are supported, but will
not be documented and might be removed from future releases.
-use-runtime
Because the JAXB 2.0 specification has defined a portable
runtime environment, it is no longer necessary for the JAXB RI
to generate **/impl/runtimepackages. Therefore, this switch is
obsolete and was removed.
-source
The -source compatibility switch was introduced in the first
JAXB 2.0 Early Access release. This switch is removed from
future releases of JAXB 2.0. If you need to generate 1.0.x code,
then use an installation of the 1.0.x code base.
COMPILER RESTRICTIONS
In general, it is safest to compile all related schemas as a single
unit with the same binding compiler switches. Keep the following list
of restrictions in mind when running the xjc command. Most of these
issues only apply when you compile multiple schemas with multiple
invocations of the xjc command.
To compile multiple schemas at the same time, keep the following
precedence rules for the target Java package name in mind:
1. The -p option has the highest precedence.
2. jaxb:package customization.
3. If targetNamespace is declared, then apply the targetNamespace to
the Java package name algorithm defined in the specification.
4. If no targetNamespace is declared, then use a hard coded package
named generated.
You cannot have more than one jaxb:schemaBindings per name space, so it
is impossible to have two schemas in the same target name space
compiled into different Java packages.
All schemas being compiled into the same Java package must be submitted
to the XJC binding compiler at the same time. They cannot be compiled
independently and work as expected.
Element substitution groups that are spread across multiple schema
files must be compiled at the same time.
SEE ALSO
· Binding Compiler (xjc) at
http://jaxb.java.net/nonav/2.2.3u1/docs/xjc.html
· Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) at
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/articles/javase/index-140168.html
JDK 8 21 November 2013 xjc(1)