Users of junixsocket are strongly advised to upgrade to version 2.8.1 or newer (changelog)
junixsocket is a Java/JNI library that allows the use of Unix Domain Sockets (AF_UNIX sockets), and other address/protocol families (such as AF_TIPC, AF_VSOCK, and AF_SYSTEM), from Java.
- junixsocket is the most complete implementation of AF_UNIX sockets for the Java ecosystem.
- Supports other socket types, such as TIPC (on Linux), VSOCK (on Linux, and certain macOS VMs), and AF_SYSTEM (on macOS) as well!
- Comes with pre-built native libraries for most operating systems and platforms, including macOS, Linux, Android, Windows, Solaris, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, DragonFlyBSD, AIX, IBM i.
- Additionally, you can build and run junixsocket natively on IBM z/OS (experimental).
- Supports all Java versions since Java 8* (with common AF_UNIX support available for Java 7 and newer)
- Supports both the Java Socket API and NIO (
java.net.Socket
,java.net.SocketChannel
, etc.) - Supports streams and datagrams.
- Supports Remote Method Invocation (RMI) over AF_UNIX.
- Supports JDBC database connectors (connect to a local database server via Unix sockets).
- Generic AFUNIXSocketFactory for databases like PostgreSQL
- Custom socket factory for MySQL Connector/J, as recommended by Oracle
- Supports peer credentials.
- Supports sending and receiving file descriptors.
- Supports the abstract namespace on Linux.
- Supports socketpair, and instantiating socket classes from file descriptors.
- Supports HTTP over UNIX sockets (using NanoHTTPD, OkHttp, and jetty).
- Supports JPMS/Jigsaw modules. The project is modularized so you can install only what you need.
- Supports GraalVM native-image AOT/ahead-of-time compilation (since 2.6.0)
- Provides a selftest package with 300+ tests to ensure compatibility with any target platform.
- Apache 2.0 licensed.
*
(Tested up to Java 22; basic support for Java 7 was dropped in version 2.5.0 and reintroduced in version 2.8.0).
- Project website and Github project
- Changelog
- Getting started
- Demo code (Java source)
- Sockets (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo
) - RMI over Unix Sockets (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.rmi
andorg.newsclub.net.unix.demo.rmi.services
) - MySQL over Unix Sockets (
org.newsclub.net.mysql.demo
) - Postgres over Unix Sockets (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.jdbc
) - Apache Mina (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.mina
) - NanoHttpd (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.nanohttpd
) - Netty (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.netty
) - OkHttp (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.okhttp
) - SSL (
org.newsclub.net.unix.demo.ssl
)
- Sockets (
- API Javadocs
- Unix Domain Socket Reference
- TIPC documentation
- VSOCK documentation
- AF_SYSTEM documentation
junixsocket is released under the Apache 2.0 License.
Commercial support is available through Kohlschütter Search Intelligence.
To verify that the software works as expected on your platform, you can run the junixsocket-selftest program, which is located in the "junixsocket-dist" distribution package, and also released on GitHub.
java -jar junixsocket-selftest-VERSION-jar-with-dependencies.jar
(with VERSION being the corresponding junixsocket version).
To include the core junixsocket functionality in your project, add the following Maven dependency
NOTE Since version 2.4.0,
junixsocket-core
is POM-only (that's why you need to specify<type>pom</type>
)
<dependency>
<groupId>com.kohlschutter.junixsocket</groupId>
<artifactId>junixsocket-core</artifactId>
<version>2.8.1</version>
<type>pom</type>
</dependency>
While you should definitely pin your dependency to a specific version, you are very much encouraged to keep updating to the most recent version. Check back frequently.
For more, optional packages (RMI, MySQL, Jetty, TIPC, VSOCK, server, Darwin, SSL, GraalVM, etc.) and Gradle instructions see here
When you're testing a -SNAPSHOT
version, make sure that the Sonatype snapshot repository is
enabled in your POM:
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>sonatype.snapshots</id>
<name>Sonatype snapshot repository</name>
<url>https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/</url>
<layout>default</layout>
<snapshots>
<enabled>true</enabled>
</snapshots>
</repository>
</repositories>
To update to the latest SNAPSHOT (which is currently not being built for every commit), run the following command from within your own project:
mvn -U dependency:resolve
or (for Gradle)
./gradlew refreshVersions