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Home/ Questions/Q 3357388
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T02:37:36+00:00 2026-05-18T02:37:36+00:00

I’m a longtime Java guy, and know that the way to run a JAR

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I’m a longtime Java guy, and know that the way to run a JAR with a main class referenced in a MANIFEST.MF file within the Jar is easy:

java -jar theJar.jar

I was using this to start up the Fabric3 server (contained in bin/server.jar in its standard distribution). I noticed that when I unpacked it from the distribution tarball, it was flagged as executable. On a whim, I tried

./server.jar

from my bash command line (bash version 4.1.5 in Ubuntu 10.10), and lo and behold, the server started up as if I had typed the normal java -jar ... command. The JAR is structured like a normal JAR; I did a head on it, and there was no #! command in the first few bytes, so bash shouldn’t magically know to start a Java VM with it, right? Or has this version of bash grown the ability to start JARs with a proper manifest correctly? Inquiring minds want to know…

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T02:37:37+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 2:37 am

    This may not be a feature of bash at all. If you are running linux (as you have tagged) you may have the binfmt_misc kernel module, which does a little bit of magic, when you try to execute a program. Basically what this does is it extends the binary formats that linux can execute from just elf to also include some user defined formats, with enough instructions to run them.

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