JAR to LHA Converter

Convert JAR to LHA archive format — free and online

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Niche Format Coverage

Need LHA for Amiga or retro computing? Converting from JAR gives you a properly formatted LHA archive from any Java container — a rare capability offered through convertio.tools.

Quick Turnaround

Our cloud servers process the JAR to LHA conversion rapidly. Even on a slow internet connection, the archive itself is repackaged in seconds server-side.

Secure and Temporary

Your uploaded JAR files are removed immediately after the conversion completes. LHA outputs are deleted within 24 hours — your data never persists on our systems.

How to convert JAR to LHA

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose lha or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your lha file right afterwards

About formats

JAR (Java Archive) is a package file format based on ZIP, developed by Sun Microsystems and introduced with JDK 1.1 in January 1996 for distributing Java class files, associated metadata, and resources as a single deployable unit. A JAR file is structurally a ZIP archive with an added META-INF/MANIFEST.MF file — a text manifest that declares the archive's main class entry point, classpath dependencies, package versioning, and digital signature information. The Java runtime loads classes directly from JAR files without extraction, using the ZIP directory for efficient random access to individual entries. JAR archives can be made executable: specifying a Main-Class attribute in the manifest allows launching the application with a simple java -jar command. The format supports code signing through the JDK's jarsigner tool, embedding digital signatures that verify the authenticity and integrity of the archive's contents. One advantage is the Java ecosystem's native integration — the JVM, build tools (Maven, Gradle), application servers, and IDEs all treat JAR files as first-class artifacts, enabling a unified build-deploy-run pipeline. The format's backward compatibility with standard ZIP tools is another practical strength: any ZIP utility can inspect JAR contents, while the manifest and signing layers add Java-specific capabilities on top. JAR remains the fundamental distribution unit for Java libraries and applications across enterprise, mobile, and embedded deployments.
Developer: Sun Microsystems
Initial release: January 23, 1996
LHA (originally LHarc) is a compressed archive format created by Haruyasu Yoshizaki (known online as Yoshi) in May 1988, combining Lempel-Ziv sliding-window compression with Huffman coding for efficient data reduction. The format achieved enormous popularity in Japan, where it became the dominant archiving standard throughout the late 1980s and 1990s — virtually all Japanese software distribution, from commercial applications to BBS file sharing, relied on LHA archives. The format stores files with per-entry headers containing filename, timestamps, OS-specific attributes, and CRC-16 checksums, using various compression methods designated by two-character codes (lh0 through lh7, with lh5 being the most common general-purpose algorithm). LHA's compression algorithms were influential beyond the format itself: the lh5 method's approach to combining LZSS with static Huffman coding was adopted by the Deflate algorithm used in ZIP, gzip, and PNG. One advantage is the format's historical efficiency — LHA offered strong compression ratios with modest CPU requirements, critical on the relatively slow processors of its era. The format's deep cultural impact in Japanese computing is another notable aspect: LHA was freely distributed, contributing to its ubiquitous adoption across the Japanese software ecosystem. While modern formats have superseded LHA for new archives, it remains relevant for accessing Japanese software archives and retro computing collections, with extraction supported by 7-Zip and other contemporary tools.
Developer: Haruyasu Yoshizaki
Initial release: May 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert JAR to LHA?

LHA is the expected archive format on Amiga systems and in certain Japanese computing contexts. Converting a JAR to LHA ensures the contents are accessible on these specialized platforms.

What programs open LHA files?

The lha command extracts LHA on Unix/Linux. On Windows, 7-Zip and PeaZip handle LHA. Classic Amiga tools like LhA are still used on vintage hardware.

Does conversion affect the file contents?

Not at all. All Java classes, resources, manifests, and directory structures from the JAR are preserved identically in the LHA output.

Is this service browser-based?

Entirely. No downloads, no plugins — just open convertio.tools in your web browser and the full converter is available immediately.

Can I process several JARs at once?

Yes, batch mode is supported. Upload multiple JAR archives simultaneously and convert them all to LHA in a single session.

Is JAR to LHA conversion free?

Basic conversion is free on convertio.tools. Upgrade to a premium plan for larger file allowances and expedited processing.

JAR to LHA Quality Rating

4.5 (4 votes)
You need to convert and download at least 1 file to provide feedback!