by
Version 1.1 - 2000/07/18
Ant is a Java based build tool. In theory it is kind of like make without make's wrinkles.
Why another build tool when there is already make, gnumake, nmake, jam, and others? Because all of those tools have limitations that its original author couldn't live with when developing software across multiple platforms. Make like tools are inherently shell based. They evaluate a set of dependencies and then execute commands not unlike what you would issue on a shell. This means that you can easily extend these tools by using or writing any program for the OS that you are working on. However, this also means that you limit yourself to the OS, or at least the OS type such as Unix, that you are working on.
Makefiles are inherently evil as well. Anybody who has worked on them for any time has run into the dreaded tab problem. "Is my command not executing because I have a space in front of my tab!!!" said the original author of Ant way too many times. Tools like Jam took care of this to a great degree, but still use yet another format to use and remember.
Ant is different. Instead a model where it is extended with shell based commands, it is extended using Java classes. Instead of writing shell commands, the configuration files are XML based calling out a target tree where various tasks get executed. Each task is run by an object which implements a particular Task interface.
Granted, this removes some of the expressive power that is inherent by being able to construct a shell command such as `find . -name foo -exec rm {}` but it gives you the ability to be cross platform. To work anywhere and everywhere. And hey, if you really need to execute a shell command, Ant has an exec rule that allows different commands to be executed based on the OS that it is executing on.
The latest stable version of Ant can be downloaded from http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/tomcat/release/v3.0/ant.zip. If you like living on the edge, you can download the latest version from http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/tomcat/nightly/ant.zip.
If you prefer the source edition, you can download Ant from http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/tomcat/release/v3.0/src/jakarta-tools.src.zip (latest stable) or from http://jakarta.apache.org/from-cvs/jakarta-tools/ (current). See the section Building Ant on how to build Ant from the source code.
To build and use ant you must have a JAXP compilant XML parser installed and available on your classpath.
If you do not have a JAXP compliant XML parse installed, you may use the reference implementation available from Sun. It is available from http://java.sun.com/xml. Once installed make sure the "jaxp.jar" and "parser.jar" files are in your classpath.
You will also need the JDK installed on your system, version 1.1 or later.
Go to the directory jakarta-ant
.
Make sure the JDK is in you path.
Run bootstrap.bat
(Windows) or bootstrap.sh
(UNIX)
to build a bootstrap version of Ant.
When finished, use
build.bat -Dant.dist.dir=<directory to install Ant> dist
for Windows, and
build.sh -Dant.dist.dir=<directory to install Ant> dist
for UNIX, to create a binary distribution of Ant. This distribution can be found in the directory you specified.
The binary distribution of Ant consists of three directories:
bin
, docs
and lib
. Only the
bin
and lib
directory are crucial for running Ant. To
run Ant, the following must be done:
bin
directory to your path.
bin
and lib
directory.
Assume Ant is installed in c:\ant\
. The following sets up the
environment:
set ANT_HOME=c:\ant set JAVA_HOME=c:\jdk1.2.2 set PATH=%PATH%;%ANT_HOME%\bin
Assume Ant is installed in /usr/local/ant
. The following sets up
the environment:
export ANT_HOME=/usr/local/ant export JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/jdk-1.2.2 export PATH=${PATH}:${ANT_HOME}/bin
There are lots of variants that can be used to run Ant. What you need is at least the following:
The classpath for Ant must contain ant.jar
and any jars/classes
needed for your chosen JAXP compliant XML parser.
When you need JDK functionality (like a javac task, or a rmic task), then for JDK 1.1, the
classes.zip
file of the JDK must be added to the classpath; for JDK
1.2, tools.jar
must be added. The scripts supplied with ant, in the
bin directory, will add tools.jar
automatically if the JAVA_HOME
environment variable is set.
When you are executing platform specific applications (like the exec task, or the cvs task), the property
ant.home
must be set to the directory containing a bin directory,
which contains the antRun
shell script necessary to run execs on
Unix.
Running Ant is simple, when you installed it as described in the previous
section. Just type ant
.
When nothing is specified, Ant looks for a build.xml
file in the
current directory. When found, it uses that file as a buildfile. To make Ant use
another buildfile, use the commandline option -buildfile <file>,
where <file> is the buildfile you want to use.
You can also set properties which override properties specified in the buildfile (see the property task). This can be done with the -D<property>=<value> option, where <property> is the name of the property and <value> the value.
To more options are -quiet which instructs Ant to print less information on the console when running. The option -verbose on the other hand makes Ant print more information on the console.
It is also possible to specify the target that should be executed. Default the target that is mentioned in the default attribute of the project is used. This can be overridden by adding the target name to the end of the commandline.
Commandline option summary:
ant [options] [target] Options: -help print this message -version print the version information and exit -quiet be extra quiet -verbose be extra verbose -logfile <file> use given file for log -listener <classname> add an instance of class as a project listener -buildfile <file> use given buildfile -D<property>=<value> use value for given property
ant
runs Ant using the build.xml
file in the current directory, on
the default target.
ant -buildfile test.xml
runs Ant using the test.xml
file in the current directory, on
the default target.
ant -buildfile test.xml dist
runs Ant using the test.xml
file in the current directory, on a
target called dist
.
ant -buildfile test.xml -Dbuild=build/classes dist
runs Ant using the test.xml
file in the current directory, on a
target called dist
. It also sets the build property to the
value build/classes.
When you have installed Ant in the do-it-yourself way, Ant can be started with:
java -Dant.home=c:\ant org.apache.tools.ant.Main [options] [target]
These instructions actually do exactly the same as the ant
command. The options and target are the same as when running Ant with the
ant
command. This example assumes you have set up your classpath to
include
The buildfile is written in XML. Each buildfile contains one project.
A project has three attributes:
Attribute | Description | Required |
name | the name of the project. | Yes |
default | the default target to use when no target is supplied. | Yes |
basedir | the base directory from which all path calculations are done. This attribute might be overridden by setting the "basedir" property on forehand. When this is done, it might be ommitted in the project tag. | Yes |
Each project defines one or more targets. A target is a set of tasks you want to be executed. When starting Ant, you can select which target you want to have executed. When no target is given, the project's default is used.
A target can depend on other targets. You might have a target for compiling, for instance, and a target for creating a distributable. You can only build a distributable when you have compiled first, so the distribute target depends on the compile target. Ant resolves all these dependencies.
Ant tries to execute the targets in the depends attribute in the order they appear (from left to right). Keep in mind that it is possible that a target can get executed earlier when an earlier target depends on it:
<target name="A"/> <target name="B" depends="A"/> <target name="C" depends="B"/> <target name="D" depends="C,B,A"/>
Suppose we want to execute target D. From its depends attribute, you might think that first target C, then B and then A is executed. Wrong! C depends on B, and B depends on A, so first A is executed, then B, then C, and finally D.
A target gets executed only once. Even when more targets depend on it (see the previous example).
A target has also the ability to perform its execution if (or unless) a property has been set. This allows, for example, better control on the building process depending on the state of the system (java version, OS, command line properties, etc...). To make target sense this property you should add the if (or unless) attribute with the name of the property that the target should react to, for example
<target name="build-module-A" if="module-A-present"/><target name="build-own-fake-module-A" unless="module-A-present"/>
If no if and no unless attribute is present, the target will always be executed.
It is a good practice to place your tstamp tasks in a so called initialization target, on which all other targets depend. Make sure that that target is always the first one in the depends list of the other targets. In this manual, most initialization targets have the name "init".
A target has the following attributes:
Attribute | Description | Required |
name | the name of the project. | Yes |
depends | a comma separated list of names of targets on which this target depends. | No |
if | the name of the property that must be set in order for this target to execute. | No |
unless | the name of the property that must not be set in order for this target to execute. | No |
A task is a piece of code that can be executed.
A task can have multiple attributes (or arguments if you prefer). The value of an attribute might contain references to a property. These references will be resolved before the task is executed.
Tasks have a common structure:
<name attribute1="value1" attribute2="value2" ... />
where name is the name of the task, attribute-x the attribute name, and value-x the value of this attribute.
There is a set of built in tasks, but it is also very easy to write your own.
All tasks share a taskname
attribute. The value of this
attribute will be used in the logging messages generated by Ant.
A project can have a set of properties. These might be set in the buildfile by the property task, or might be set outside Ant. A property has a name and a value. Properties might be used in in the value of task attributes. This is done by placing the property name between "${" and "}" in the attribute value.
If there is a property called "builddir" with the value "build", then this could be used in an attribute like this: "${builddir}/classes". This is resolved as "build/classes".
A project can have a set of tokens that might be automatically expanded if found when a file is copied, when the filtering-copy behavior is selected in the tasks that support this. These might be set in the buildfile by the filter task.
Since this can be a very harmful behavior, the tokens in the files must be of the form @token@ where token is the token name that is set in the filter task. This token syntax matches the syntax of other build systems that perform such filtering and remains sufficiently orthogonal to most programming and scripting languages, as well with documentation systems.
Note: in case a token with the format @token@ if found in a file but no filter is associated with that token, no changes take place. So, no escaping method is present, but as long as you choose appropriate names for your tokens, this should not cause problems.
<project name="foo" default="dist" basedir="."> <target name="init"> <tstamp/> <property name="build" value="build" /> <property name="dist" value="dist" /> <filter token="version" value="1.0.3" /> <filter token="year" value="2000" /> </target> <target name="prepare" depends="init"> <mkdir dir="${build}" /> </target> <target name="compile" depends="prepare"> <javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}" filtering="on"/> </target> <target name="dist" depends="compile"> <mkdir dir="${dist}/lib" /> <jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/foo${DSTAMP}.jar" basedir="${build}" items="com"/> </target> <target name="clean" depends="init"> <deltree dir="${build}" /> <deltree dir="${dist}" /> </target> </project>
You can specify PATH and CLASSPATH variables using both ":" and ";" as separator characters, Ant will convert it to the correct character of the current operating system.
Wherever PATH like values need to be specified a nested element can be used. This takes the general form of
<classpath> <pathelement path="${classpath}" /> <pathelement location="lib/helper.jar" /> </classpath>
The location
attribute specifies a single file or directory
relative to the project's base directory (or an absolute filename), while the
path
attribute accepts ":" or ";" separated lists of locations. The
path
attribute is intended to be used with predefined paths - in
any other case multiple elements with location
attributes should be
preferred.
As a shortcut the surrounding PATH element supports path and location attributes of its own, so
<classpath> <pathelement path="${classpath}" /> </classpath>
can be abreviated to
<classpath path="${classpath}" />
Some tasks use directory trees for the task they perform. For instance, the Javac task which works upon a directory tree with .java files. Sometimes it can be very useful to work on a subset of that directory tree. This section describes how you can select a subset of such a directory tree.
Ant gives you two ways to create a subset, both of which can be used at the same time:
When both inclusion and exclusion are used, only files/directories that match the include patterns, and don't match the exclude patterns are used.
Patterns can be specified inside the buildfile via task attributes or nested elements and via external files. Each line of the external file is taken as pattern that is added to the list of include or exclude patterns.
As described earlier, patterns are used for the inclusion and exclusion. These patterns look very much like the patterns used in DOS and UNIX:
'*' matches zero or more characters, '?' matches one character.
Examples:
'*.java' matches '.java', 'x.java' and 'FooBar.java', but not 'FooBar.xml' (does not end with '.java').
'?.java' matches 'x.java', 'A.java', but not '.java' or 'xyz.java' (both don't have one character before '.java').
Combinations of '*'s and '?'s are allowed.
Matching is done per-directory. This means that first the first directory in the pattern is matched against the first directory in the path to match. Then the second directories are matched, and so on. E.g. when we have the pattern '/?abc/*/*.java' and the path '/xabc/foobar/test.java', then first '?abc' is matched with 'xabc', then '*' is matched with 'foobar' and finally '*.java' is matched with 'test.java'. They all match so the path matches the pattern.
Too make things a bit more flexible, we add one extra feature, which makes it possible to match multiple directory levels. This can be used to match a complete directory tree, or a file anywhere in the directory tree. To do this, '**' must be used as the name of a directory. When '**' is used as the name of a directory in the pattern, it matches zero or more directories. For instance: '/test/**' matches all files/directories under '/test/', such as '/test/x.java', or '/test/foo/bar/xyz.html', but not '/xyz.xml'.
There is one "shorthand", if a pattern ends with '/' or '\', then '**' is appended. E.g. "mypackage/test/" is interpreted as were it "mypackage/test/**".
Examples:
**/CVS/* | Matches all files in CVS directories, that can be located
anywhere in the directory tree.
Matches: CVS/Repository But not: org/apache/CVS/foo/bar/Entries ('foo/bar/' part does not match) |
org/apache/jakarta/** | Matches all files in the org/apache/jakarta directory tree.
Matches: org/apache/jakarta/tools/ant/docs/index.html But not: org/apache/xyz.java ('jakarta'/' part is missing) |
org/apache/**/CVS/* | Matches all files in CVS directories, that are located
anywhere in the directory tree under org/apache.
Matches: org/apache/CVS/Entries But not: org/apache/CVS/foo/bar/Entries ('foo/bar/' part does not match) |
**/test/** | Matches all files which have a directory 'test' in their path, including 'test' as a filename. |
When these patterns are used in inclusion and exclusion, you have a powerful way to select just the files you want.
<copydir src="${src}" dest="${dist}" includes="**/images/*" excludes="**/*.gif" />
This copies all files in directories called "images", that are located in the directory tree "${src}" to the destination "${dist}", but excludes all "*.gif" files from the copy.
This example can also be expressed using nested elements as
<copydir src="${src}" dest="${dist}"> <include name="**/images/*"/> <exclude name="**/*.gif" /> </copydir>
There are a set of definitions which are excluded by default from all directory based tasks. They are:
"**/*~", "**/#*#", "**/%*%", "**/CVS", "**/CVS/*", "**/.cvsignore"If you do not want these default excludes applied, you may disable them with the
defaultexcludes="no"
attribute.
Runs Ant on a supplied buildfile. This can be used to build subprojects.
When the antfile attribute is omitted, the file "build.xml" in the supplied directory (dir attribute) is used.
If no target attribute is supplied, the default target of the new project is used.
The properties of the current project will be available in the new project. These properties will override the properties that are set in the new project. (See also the properties task).
Attribute | Description | Required |
antfile | the buildfile to use. | No |
dir | the directory to use as a basedir for the new Ant project. | Yes |
target | the target of the new Ant project that should be executed. | No |
output | Filename to write the ant output to. | No |
<ant antfile="subproject/subbuild.xml" dir="subproject" target="compile" />
<ant dir="subproject" />
Sets a property if a resource is available at runtime. This resource can be a file resource, a class in classpath or a JVM system resource.
The value part of the properties being set is true if the resource is present, otherwise, the property is not set.
Normally, this task is used to set properties that are useful to avoid target execution depending on system parameters.
Attribute | Description | Required |
property | the name of the property to set. | Yes |
classname | the class to look for in classpath. | Yes |
resource | the resource to look for in the JVM | |
file | the file to look for. |
<available classname="org.whatever.Myclass" property="Myclass.present" />
sets the property Myclass.present
to the value "true" if
the org.whatever.Myclass is found in Ant's classpath.
Changes the permissions of a file or all files inside a specified directory. Right now it has efect only under Unix. The permissions are also UNIX style, like the argument for the chmod command.
It is possible to refine the set of files whose permissions are changed. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the dir directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
file | the file or single directory of which the permissions must be changed. | exactly one of the two |
dir | the directory which holds the files whose permissions must be changed. | |
src | the file or single directory of which the permissions must be changed (deprecated, use file instead). | No |
perm | the new permissions. | Yes |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
<chmod file="${dist}/start.sh" perm="ugo+rx" />
makes the "start.sh" file readable and executable for anyone on a UNIX system.
<chmod dir="${dist}/bin" perm="ugo+rx" includes="**/*.sh" />
makes all ".sh" files below ${dist}/bin
readable and executable
for anyone on a UNIX system.
Copies a directory tree from the source to the destination.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being copied. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the src directory.
The ignore attribute contains the names of the files/directories that must be excluded from the copy. The names specified in the ignore attribute are just names, they do not contain any path information! Note that this attribute has been replaced by the excludes attribute.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the directory to copy. | Yes |
dest | the directory to copy to. | Yes |
ignore | comma separated list of filenames/directorynames to ignore. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. (deprecated, use excludes instead). | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
filtering | indicates whether token filtering should take place during the copy | No |
forceoverwrite | overwrite existing files even if the destination files are newer (default is false). | No |
<copydir src="${src}/resources" dest="${dist}" />
copies the directory ${src}/resources
to
${dist}
.
<copydir src="${src}/resources" dest="${dist}" includes="**/*.java" excludes="**/Test.java" />
copies the directory ${src}/resources
to ${dist}
recursively. All java files are copied, except for files with the name
Test.java
.
<copydir src="${src}/resources" dest="${dist}" includes="**/*.java" excludes="mypackage/test/**" />
copies the directory ${src}/resources
to ${dist}
recursively. All java files are copied, except for the files under the
mypackage/test
directory.
Copies a file from the source to the destination. The file is only copied if the source file is newer than the destination file, or when the destination file does not exist.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the filename of the file to copy. | Yes |
dest | the filename of the file where to copy to. | Yes |
filtering | indicates whether token filtering should take place during the copy | No |
<copyfile src="test.java" dest="subdir/test.java" />
<copyfile src="${src}/index.html" dest="${dist}/help/index.html" />
Handles packages/modules retrieved from a CVS repository.
When doing automated builds, the get task should be preferred over the checkout command, because of speed.
Attribute | Description | Required |
command | the CVS command to execute. | No, default "checkout" |
cvsRoot | the CVSROOT variable. | No |
dest | the directory where the checked out files should be placed. | Yes |
package | the package/module to check out. | No |
tag | the tag of the package/module to check out. | No |
date | Use the most recent revision no later than the given date | No |
quiet | supress informational messages. | No, default "false" |
noexec | report only, don't change any files. | No, default "false" |
failonerror | Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. | No |
<cvs cvsRoot=":pserver:anoncvs@jakarta.apache.org:/home/cvspublic" package="jakarta-tools" dest="${ws.dir}" />
checks out the package/module "jakarta-tools" from the CVS repository pointed to by the cvsRoot attribute, and stores the files in "${ws.dir}".
<cvs dest="${ws.dir}" command="update" />
updates the package/module that has previously been checked out into "${ws.dir}".
Deletes either a single file or all files in a specified directory and its sub-directories.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being deleted. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included in the deletion process by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded from the deletion process. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the dir directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
file | The file to delete. | at least one of the two |
dir | The directory to delete files from. | |
includes | Comma separated list of patterns of files that must be deleted. All files are in the current directory and any sub-directories are deleted when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | Comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded from the deletion list. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | Indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
verbose | Show name of each deleted file ("true"/"false"). Default is "false" when omitted. | No |
<delete file="/lib/ant.jar" />
deletes the file /lib/ant.jar
.
<delete dir="lib" />
deletes all files in the /lib
directory.
<delete dir="." include="**/*.bak" />
deletes all files with the extension ".bak
" from the current
directory and any sub-directories.
Deletes a directory with all its files and subdirectories.
Attribute | Description | Required |
dir | the directory to delete. | Yes |
<deltree dir="dist" />
deletes the directory dist
, including its files and
subdirectories.
<deltree dir="${dist}" />
deletes the directory ${dist}
, including its files and
subdirectories.
Echoes a message to System.out.
Attribute | Description | Required |
message | the message to echo. | Yes |
<echo message="Hello world" />
Executes a system command. When the os attribute is specified, then the command is only executed when Ant is run on one of the specified operating systems.
Attribute | Description | Required |
command | the command to execute. | Yes |
dir | the directory in which the command should be executed. | Yes |
os | list of Operating Systems on which the command may be executed. | No |
output | the file to which the output of the command should be redirected. | Yes |
failonerror | Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. | No |
<exec dir="${src}" command="dir" os="windows" output="dir.txt" />
Unzips a zip- or jarfile.
For JDK 1.1 "last modified time" field is set to current time instead of being carried from zipfile.
DEPRECATION: the expand task simply points to the unzip task and it's there for back compatibility reasons.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | zipfile to expand. | Yes |
dest | directory where to store the expanded files. | Yes |
<unzip src="${tomcat_src}/tools-src.zip" dest="${tools.home}" />
Sets a token filter for this project. Token filters are used by all tasks that perform file copying operations through the Project commodity methods.
Note: the token string must not contain the separators chars (@).
Attribute | Description | Required |
token | the token string without @ | Yes |
value | the string that should be put to replace the token when the file is copied | Yes |
<filter token="year" value="2000" /> <copydir src="${src.dir}" dest="${dest.dir}"/>
will copy recursively all the files from the src.dir directory into the dest.dir directory replacing all the occurencies of the string @year@ with 2000.
Adjusts a text file to local.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being adjusted. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the src directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
srcDir | Where to find the files to be fixed up. | Yes |
destDir | Where to place the corrected files. Defaults to srcDir (replacing the original file) | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
cr | Specifies how carriage return (CR) characters are to be
handled. Valid values for this property are:
Note: Unless this property is specified as "asis", extra CR characters which do not preceed a LF will be removed. |
No |
tab | Specifies how tab characters are to be handled. Valid
values for this property are:
Note: Unless this property is specified as "asis", extra spaces and tabs after the last non-whitespace character on the line will be removed. |
No |
tablength | The number of characters a TAB stop corresponds to. Must be a positive power of 2, default for this parameter is 8. | No |
eof | Specifies how DOS end of file (control-Z) characters are to
be handled. Valid values for this property are:
|
No |
<fixcrlf srcdir="${src}" cr="remove" eof="remove" includes="**/*.sh" />
Removes carriage return and eof characters from the shell scripts. Tabs and spaces are left as is.
<fixcrlf srcdir="${src}" cr="add" includes="**/*.bat" />
Ensures that there are carriage return characters prior to evey line feed. Tabs and spaces are left as is. EOF characters are left alone if run on DOS systems, and are removed if run on Unix systems.
<fixcrlf srcdir="${src}" tabs="add" includes="**/Makefile" />
Adds or removes CR characters to match local OS conventions, and converts spaces to tabs when appropriate. EOF characters are left alone if run on DOS systems, and are removed if run on Unix systems. Many versions of make require tabs prior to commands.
<fixcrlf srcdir="${src}" tabs="remove" includes="**/README*" />
Adds or removes CR characters to match local OS conventions, and converts all tabs to spaces. EOF characters are left alone if run on DOS systems, and are removed if run on Unix systems. You never know what editor a user will use to browse README's.
Gets a file from an URL. When the verbose option is "on", this task displays a '.' for every 100 Kb retrieved.
This task should be preferred above the CVS task when doing automated builds. CVS is significant slower than loading a compressed archive with http/ftp.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the URL from which to retrieve a file. | Yes |
dest | the file where to store the retrieved file. | Yes |
verbose | show verbose information ("on"/"off"). | No |
ignoreerrors | Log errors but don't treat as fatal. | No |
<get src="http://jakarta.apache.org/" dest="help/index.html" />
gets the index page of http://jakarta.apache.org/, and stores it in the file
help/index.html
.
Expands a GZip file.
If dest is a directory the name of the destination file is the same as src (with the ".gz" extension removed if present). If dest is ommited, the parent dir of src is taken. The file is only expanded if the source file is newer than the destination file, or when the destination file does not exist.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the file to expand. | Yes |
dest | the destination file or directory. | No |
<gunzip src="test.tar.gz"/>
expands test.tar.gz to test.tar
<gunzip src="test.tar.gz" dest="test2.tar"/>
expands test.tar.gz to test2.tar
<gunzip src="test.tar.gz" dest="subdir"/>
expands test.tar.gz to subdir/test.tar (assuming subdir is a directory).
GZips a file.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the file to gzip. | Yes |
zipfile | the destination file. | Yes |
<gzip src="test.tar" zipfile="test.tar.gz" />
Jars a set of files.
The basedir attribute is the reference directory from where to jar.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being jarred. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the basedir directory.
The includes, excludes and defaultexcludes attributes replace the items and ignore attributes. The following explains how the deprecated items and ignore attribute behave.
When "*" is used for items, all files in the basedir, and its subdirectories, will be jarred. Otherwise all the files and directories mentioned in the items list will jarred. When a directory is specified, then all files within it are also jarred.
With the ignore attribute, you can specify files or directories to ignore. These files will not be jarred. The items in the ignore attribute override the items in the items attribute. The names specified in the ignore attribute are just names, they do not contain any path information!
Attribute | Description | Required |
jarfile | the jar-file to create. | Yes |
basedir | the directory from which to jar the files. | Yes |
compress | Not only store data but also compress them, defaults to true | No |
items | a comma separated list of the files/directories to jar. All files are included when omitted. (deprecated, use includes instead). | No |
ignore | comma separated list of filenames/directorynames to exclude from the jar. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. (deprecated, use excludes instead). | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
manifest | the manifest file to use. | No |
<jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory in a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory.
<jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" excludes="**/Test.class" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory in a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory. Files
with the name Test.class
are excluded.
<jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" includes="mypackage/test/**" excludes="**/Test.class" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory in a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory. Only
files under the directory mypackage/test
are used, and files with
the name Test.class
are excluded.
<jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" items="*" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory in a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory.
<jar jarfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" items="*" ignore="Test.class" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory in a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory.
Files/directories with the name Test.class
are excluded.
Executes a Java class within the running (Ant) VM or forks another VM if specified.
Be careful that the executed class doesn't call System.exit(), because it will terminate the VM and thus Ant. In case this happens, it's highly suggested that you set the fork attribute so that System.exit() stops the other VM and not the one that is currently running Ant.
Attribute | Description | Required |
classname | the Java class to execute. | Yes |
args | the arguments for the class that is executed. | No |
classpath | the classpath to use. | No |
fork | if enabled triggers the class execution in another VM (disabled by default) | No |
jvm | the command used to invoke the Java Virtual Machine, default is 'java'. The command is resolved by java.lang.Runtime.exec(). Ignored if fork is disabled. | No |
jvmargs | the arguments to pass to the forked VM (ignored if fork is disabled) | No |
failonerror | Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. Only available if fork is true. | No |
Java
's classpath attribute is a PATH like structure and can also
be set via a nested classpath element.
<java classname="test.Main" args="-h" > <classpath> <pathelement location="\test.jar" /> <pathelement path="${java.class.path}" /> </classpath> </java>
<java classname="test.Main" />
<java classname="test.Main" args="-h" />
<java classname="test.Main" args="-h" fork="yes" jvmargs="-Xrunhprof:cpu=samples,file=log.txt,depth=3" />
Compiles a source tree within the running (Ant) VM.
The source and destination directory will be recursively scanned for Java source files to compile. Only Java files that have no corresponding class file or where the class file is older than the java file will be compiled.
Files in the source tree, that are no java files, are copied to the destination directory, allowing support files to be located properly in the classpath.
The directory structure of the source tree should follow the package hierarchy.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being compiled/copied. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the srcdir directory.
It is possible to use different compilers. This can be selected with the "build.compiler" property. There are three choices:
For JDK 1.1/1.2 is classic the default. For JDK 1.3 is modern the default.
Attribute | Description | Required |
srcdir | location of the java files. | Yes, unless nested <src>
elements are present. |
destdir | location where to store the class files. | Yes |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
classpath | the classpath to use. | No |
bootclasspath | location of bootstrap class files. | No |
extdirs | location of installed extensions. | No |
debug | indicates whether there should be compiled with debug information ("on"). | No |
optimize | indicates whether there should be compiled with optimization ("on"). | No |
deprecation | indicates whether there should be compiled with deprecation information ("on"). | No |
filtering | indicates whether token filtering should take place | No |
target | Generate class files for specific VM version, e.g. "1.1" or "1.2". | No |
<include>
and <exclude>
nested elements common to a number of Ant tasks. Javac also supports a nested
<src>
element. This is used to specify multiple source paths.
Multiple src
elements may be present and each specifies a source
path which will be searched by Javac for classes to compile.
Javac
's srcdir, classpath,
bootclasspath and extdirs attributes are PATH like structure and can also
be set via nested src, classpath, bootclasspath and
extdirs elements respectively.
<javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}" classpath="xyz.jar" debug="on" />
compiles all .java files under the directory ${src}
, and stores
the .class files in the directory ${build}
. It also copies the
non-java files from the tree under ${src}
to the tree under
${build}
. The classpath used contains xyz.jar
, and
debug information is on.
<javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}" includes="mypackage/p1/**,mypackage/p2/**" excludes="mypackage/p1/testpackage/**" classpath="xyz.jar" debug="on" />
compiles .java files under the directory ${src}
, and stores the
.class files in the directory ${build}
. It also copies the non-java
files from the tree under ${src}
to the tree under
${build}
. The classpath used contains xyz.jar
, and
debug information is on. Only files under mypackage/p1
and
mypackage/p2
are used. Files in the
mypackage/p1/testpackage
directory are excluded form compilation
and copy.
<javac srcdir="${src}:${src2}" destdir="${build}" includes="mypackage/p1/**,mypackage/p2/**" excludes="mypackage/p1/testpackage/**" classpath="xyz.jar" debug="on" />
is the same as the previous example with the addition of a second source
path, defined by the propery src2
. This can also be represented
using nested elements as follows
<javac destdir="${build}" classpath="xyz.jar" debug="on"> <src path="${src}" /> <src path="${src2}" /> <include name="mypackage/p1/**,mypackage/p2/**" /> <exclude name="mypackage/p1/testpackage/**" /> </javac>
Generates code documentation using the javadoc tool.
The source directory will be recursively scanned for Java source files to process but only those matching the inclusion rules will be passed to the javadoc tool. This allows wildcards to be used to choose between package names, reducing verbosity and management costs over time. This task, however, has no notion of "changed" files, unlike the javac task. This means all packages will be processed each time this task is run. In general, however, this task is used much less frequently.
This task works seamlessly between different javadoc versions (1.1 and 1.2), with the obvious restriction that the 1.2 attributes will be ignored if run in a 1.1 VM.
NOTE: since javadoc calls System.exit(), javadoc cannot be run inside the same VM as ant without breaking functionality. For this reason, this task always forks the VM. This overhead is not significant since javadoc is normally a heavy application and will be called infrequently.
NOTE: the packagelist attribute allows you to specify the list of packages to document outside of the Ant file. It's a much better practice to include everything inside the build.xml file. This option was added in order to make it easier to migrate from regular makefiles, where you would use this option of javadoc. The packages listed in packagelist are not checked, so the task performs even if some packages are missing or broken. Use this option if you wish to convert from an existing makefile. Once things are running you should then switch to the regular notation.
DEPRECATION: the javadoc2 task simply points to the javadoc task and it's there for back compatibility reasons. Since this task will be removed in future versions, you are strongly encouraged to use javadoc instead.
Attribute | Description | Availability | Required |
sourcepath | Specify where to find source files | all | Yes |
destdir | Destination directory for output files | all | Yes |
maxmemory | Max amount of memory to allocate to the javadoc VM | all | No |
sourcefiles | Space separated list of source files | all | at least one of the two |
packagenames | Space separated list of package files (with terminating wildcard) | all | |
packageList | The name of a file containing the packages to process | all | No |
classpath | Specify where to find user class files | all | No |
Bootclasspath | Override location of class files loaded by the bootstrap class loader | 1.2 | No |
Extdirs | Override location of installed extensions | 1.2 | No |
Overview | Read overview documentation from HTML file | 1.2 | No |
Public | Show only public classes and members | all | No |
Protected | Show protected/public classes and members (default) | all | No |
Package | Show package/protected/public classes and members | all | No |
Private | Show all classes and members | all | No |
Old | Generate output using JDK 1.1 emulating doclet | 1.2 | No |
Verbose | Output messages about what Javadoc is doing | 1.2 | No |
Locale | Locale to be used, e.g. en_US or en_US_WIN | 1.2 | No |
Encoding | Source file encoding name | all | No |
Version | Include @version paragraphs | all | No |
Use | Create class and package usage pages | 1.2 | No |
Author | Include @author paragraphs | all | No |
Splitindex | Split index into one file per letter | 1.2 | No |
Windowtitle | Browser window title for the documenation (text) | 1.2 | No |
Doctitle | Include title for the package index(first) page (html-code) | 1.2 | No |
Header | Include header text for each page (html-code) | 1.2 | No |
Footer | Include footer text for each page (html-code) | 1.2 | No |
bottom | Include bottom text for each page (html-code) | 1.2 | No |
link | Create links to javadoc output at the given URL | 1.2 | No |
linkoffline | Link to docs at <url> using package list at <url2> | 1.2 | No |
group | Group specified packages together in overview page | 1.2 | No |
nodeprecated | Do not include @deprecated information | all | No |
nodeprecatedlist | Do not generate deprecated list | 1.2 | No |
notree | Do not generate class hierarchy | all | No |
noindex | Do not generate index | all | No |
nohelp | Do not generate help link | 1.2 | No |
nonavbar | Do not generate navigation bar | 1.2 | No |
serialwarn | FUTURE: Generate warning about @serial tag | 1.2 | No |
helpfile | FUTURE: Specifies the HTML help file to use | 1.2 | No |
stylesheetfile | Specifies the CSS stylesheet to use | 1.2 | No |
charset | FUTURE: Charset for cross-platform viewing of generated documentation | 1.2 | No |
docencoding | Output file encoding name | 1.1 | No |
doclet | Specifies the class file that starts the doclet used in generating the documentation. | 1.2 | No |
docletpath | Specifies the path to the doclet class file that is specified with the -doclet option. | 1.2 | No |
additionalparam | Lets you add additional parameters to the javadoc command line. Useful for doclets | 1.2 | No |
failonerror | Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. | all | No |
Attribute | Description | Required |
href | The URL for the external documentation you wish to link to | Yes |
offline | True if this link is not available online at the time of generating the documentation | No |
packagelistLoc | The location to the directory containing the package-list file for the external documentation | Only if the offline attribute is true |
Attribute | Description | Required |
title | Title of the group | Yes |
packages | List of packages to include in that group | Yes |
Javadoc
's sourcepath, classpath and
bootclasspath attributes are PATH like structure and can also
be set via nested sourcepath, classpath and
bootclasspath elements respectively.
<javadoc packagenames="com.dummy.test.*" sourcepath="src" destdir="docs/api" author="true" version="true" use="true" windowtitle="Test API" doctitle="<h1>Test</h1>" bottom="<i>Copyright © 2000 Dummy Corp. All Rights Reserved.</i>"> <group title="Group 1 Packages" packages="com.dummy.test.a*"/> <group title="Group 2 Packages" packages="com.dummy.test.b*"/> <link offline="true" href="http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/1.2/docs/api/" packagelistLoc="C:\tmp"/> <link href="http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/products/xml/docs/api/"/> </javadoc>
Performs keyword substitution in the source file, and writes the result to the destination file.
Keys in the source file are of the form ${keyname}. The keys attribute contains key/value pairs. When a key is found in the keys attribute, then "${keyname}" is replaced by the corresponding value.
The keys attribute is of the form "name1=value1*name2=value2*name3=value3". The '*' is called the separator, which might we changed with the sep attribute.
Note: the source file and destination file may not be the same.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | the source file. | Yes |
dest | the destination file. | Yes |
sep | the separator for the name/value pairs. | No |
keys | name/value pairs for replacement. | Yes |
<keysubst src="abc.txt" dest="def.txt" keys="VERSION=1.0.3*DATE=2000-01-10" />
Creates a directory. Also non-existent parent directories are created, when necessary.
Attribute | Description | Required |
dir | the directory to create. | Yes |
<mkdir dir="${dist}" />
creates a directory ${dist}
.
<mkdir dir="${dist}/lib" />
creates a directory ${dist}/lib
.
Applies a diff file to originals.
Attribute | Description | Required |
dir | the directory in which the command should be executed. | Yes |
os | list of Operating Systems on which the command may be executed. | No |
output | the file to which the output of the patch command should be redirected. | No |
patchfile | the file that includes the diff output | Yes |
originalfile | the file to patch | No, tries to guess it from the diff file |
backups | Keep backups of the unpatched files | No |
quiet | Work silently unless an error occurs | No |
reverse | Assume patch was created with old and new files swapped. | No |
ignorewhitespace | Ignore whitespace differences. | No |
strip | Strip the smallest prefix containing num leading slashes from filenames. | No |
failonerror | Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. | No |
<patch patchfile="module.1.0-1.1.patch" />
applies the diff included in module.1.0-1.1.patch to the files in base directory guessing the filename(s) from the diff output.
<patch patchfile="module.1.0-1.1.patch" strip="1" />
like above but one leading directory part will be removed. i.e. if the diff output looked like
--- a/mod1.0/A Mon Jun 5 17:28:41 2000 +++ a/mod1.1/A Mon Jun 5 17:28:49 2000the leading a/ will be stripped.
Sets a property (by name and value), or set of properties (from file or resource) in the project.
When a property was set by the user, or was a property in a parent project (that started this project with the ant task), then this property cannot be set, and will be ignored. This means that properties set outside the current project always override the properties of the current project.
There are three ways to set properties:
Although combinations of the three ways are possible, only one should be used at a time. Problems might occur with the order in which properties are set, for instance.
The value part of the properties being set, might contain references to other properties. These references are resolved at the time these properties are set. This also holds for properties loaded from a property file.
Attribute | Description | Required |
name | the name of the property to set. | Yes |
value | the value of the property. | Yes |
resource | the resource name of the property file. | |
file | the filename of the property file . |
<property name="foo.dist" value="dist" />
sets the property foo.dist
to the value "dist".
<property file="foo.properties" />
reads a set of properties from a file called "foo.properties".
<property resource="foo.properties" />
reads a set of properties from a resource called "foo.properties".
Note that you can reference a global properties file for all of your Ant builds using the following:
<property file="${user.home}/.ant-global.properties" />
since the "user.home" property is defined by the Java virtual machine to be your home directory. This technique is more appropriate for Unix than Windows since the notion of a home directory doesn't exist on Windows. On the JVM that I tested, the home directory on Windows is "C:\". Different JVM implementations may use other values for the home directory on Windows.
Renames a given file.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | file to rename. | Yes |
dest | new name of the file. | Yes |
replace | Enable replacing of existing file (default: on). | No |
<rename src="foo.jar" dest="${name}-${version}.jar" />
Renames the file foo.jar
to ${name}-${version}.jar
(assuming name
and version
being predefined
properties). If a file named ${name}-${version}.jar
already exists,
it will be removed prior to renameing foo.jar
.
Replace is a directory based task for replacing the occurrence of a given string with another string in selected file.
Attribute | Description | Required |
file | file for which the token should be replaced. If not present the dir attribute must be specified | No |
dir | The base directory to use when replacing a token in multiple files. If not present the file attribute must be specified | No |
token | the token which must be replaced. | Yes |
value | the new value for the token. When omitted, an empty string ("") is used. | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
<replace file="${src}/index.html" token="@@@" value="wombat" />
replaces occurrences of the string "@@@" with the string "wombat", in the
file ${src}/index.html
.
Runs the rmic compiler for a certain class.
Rmic can be run on a single class (as specified with the classname attribute) or a number of classes at once (all classes below base that are neither _Stub nor _Skel classes).
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being rmiced. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the base directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
base | the location to store the compiled files. | Yes |
classname | the class for which to run rmic . |
No |
filtering | indicates whether token filtering should take place | No |
sourcebase | Pass the "-keepgenerated" flag to rmic and move the generated source file to the base directory. | No |
stubversion | Specify the JDK version for the generated stub code. Specify "1.1" to pass the "-v1.1" option to rmic. | No |
classpath | The classpath to use during compilation | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
verify | check that classes implement Remote before handing them to rmic (default is false) | No |
Rmic
's classpath attribute is a PATH like structure and can also
be set via a nested classpath elements.
<rmic classname="com.xyz.FooBar" base="${build}/classes" />
runs the rmic compiler for the class com.xyz.FooBar
. The
compiled files will be stored in the directory
${build}/classes
.
<rmic base="${build}/classes" includes="**/Remote*.class" />
runs the rmic compiler for all classes with .class
files below
${build}/classes
whose classname starts with Remote. The
compiled files will be stored in the directory
${build}/classes
.
Signs a jar or zip file with the javasign command line tool.
Attribute | Description | Required |
jar | the jar file to sign | Yes. |
alias | the alias to sign under | Yes. |
storepass | password for keystore integrity. | Yes. |
keystore | keystore location | No |
storetype | keystore type | No |
keypass | password for private key (if different) | No |
sigfile | name of .SF/.DSA file | No |
signedjar | name of signed JAR file | No |
verbose | (true | false) verbose output when signing | No |
internalsf | (true | false) include the .SF file inside the signature block | No |
sectionsonly | (true | false) don't compute hash of entire manifest | No |
<signjar jar="${dist}/lib/ant.jar" alias="apache-group" storepass="secret" />
signs the ant.jar with alias "apache-group" accessing the keystore and private key via "secret" password.
Creates a tar archive.
The basedir attribute is the reference directory from where to tar.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being tarred. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the basedir directory.
The includes, excludes and defaultexcludes attributes replace the items and ignore attributes. The following explains how the deprecated items and ignore attribute behave.
When "*" is used for items, all files in the basedir, and its subdirectories, will be tarred. Otherwise all the files and directories mentioned in the items list will tarred. When a directory is specified, then all files within it are also tarred.
With the ignore attribute, you can specify files or directories to ignore. These files will not be tarred. The items in the ignore attribute override the items in the items attribute. The names specified in the ignore attribute are just names, they do not contain any path information!
Note that this task does not perform compression. You might want to use the GZip task to come up with a .tar.gz package.
Attribute | Description | Required |
tarfile | the tar-file to create. | Yes |
basedir | the directory from which to zip the files. | Yes |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
<tar tarfile="${dist}/manual.tar" basedir="htdocs/manual" /> <gzip zipfile="${dist}/manual.tar.gz" src="${dist}/manual.tar" />
tars all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.tar
in the ${dist}
directory, then applies the
gzip task to compress it.
<tar tarfile="${dist}/manual.tar" basedir="htdocs/manual" excludes="mydocs/**, **/todo.html" />
tars all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.tar
in the ${dist}
directory. Files in the
directory mydocs
, or files with the name todo.html
are
excluded.
Adds a task definition to the current project, such that this new task can be used in the current project. Two attributes are needed, the name that identifies this task uniquely, and the full name of the class (including the packages) that implements this task.
Taskdef should be used to add your own tasks to the system. See also "Writing your own task".
Attribute | Description | Required |
name | the name of the task | Yes |
classname | the full class name implementing the task | Yes |
<taskdef name="myjavadoc" classname="com.mydomain.JavadocTask" />
makes a task called myjavadoc
available to Ant. The class
com.mydomain.JavadocTask
implements the task.
Changes the modification time of a file and possibly creates it at the same time.
For JDK 1.1 only the creation of new files with a modification time of now works, all other cases will emit a warning.
Attribute | Description | Required |
file | the name of the file | Yes |
millis | specifies the new modification time of the file in milliseconds since midnight Jan 1 1970 | No |
datetime | specifies the new modification time of the file in the format MM/DD/YYYY HH:MM AM_or_PM. | No |
If both millis
and datetime
are ommited the current
time is assumed.
<touch file="myfile" />
creates myfile
if it doesn't exist and changes the modification
time to the current time.
<touch file="myfile" datetime="06/28/2000 2:02 pm" />
creates myfile
if it doesn't exist and changes the modification
time to Jun, 28 2000 2:02 pm (14:02 for those used to 24 hour times).
Sets the DSTAMP, TSTAMP and TODAY properties in the current project. The DSTAMP is in the "yyyymmdd" format, the TSTAMP is in the "hhmm" format and TODAY is "month day year".
These properties can be used in the buildfile, for instance, to create timestamped filenames or used to replace placeholder tags inside documents to indicate, for example, the release date. The best place for this task is in your initialization target.
Attribute | Description | Required |
<tstamp/>
Process a set of documents via XSLT.
This is useful for building views of XML based documentation, or in generating code.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being copied. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the basedir directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
basedir | where to find the source xml file. | Yes |
destdir | directory where to store the results. | Yes |
extention | desired file extension to be used for the targets. If not specified, the default is "html". | No |
style | name of the stylesheet to use. | Yes |
processor | name of the XSLT processor to use. Permissable values are "xslp" for the XSL:P processor, "xalan" for the Apache XML Xalan processor, or the name of an arbitrary XSLTLiaison class. Defaults to xslp or xalan (in that order), if one is found in your class path | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
<style basedir="doc" destdir="build/doc" extension="html" style="style/apache.xml"/>
Untars a tarfile.
For JDK 1.1 "last modified time" field is set to current time instead of being carried from tarfile.
Attribute | Description | Required |
src | tarfile to expand. | Yes |
dest | directory where to store the expanded files. | Yes |
<gunzip src="tools.tar.gz"/>
<untar src="tools.tar" dest="${tools.home}"/>
Creates a zipfile.
The basedir attribute is the reference directory from where to zip.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being zipped. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the basedir directory.
The includes, excludes and defaultexcludes attributes replace the items and ignore attributes. The following explains how the deprecated items and ignore attribute behave.
When "*" is used for items, all files in the basedir, and its subdirectories, will be zipped. Otherwise all the files and directories mentioned in the items list will zipped. When a directory is specified, then all files within it are also zipped.
With the ignore attribute, you can specify files or directories to ignore. These files will not be zipped. The items in the ignore attribute override the items in the items attribute. The names specified in the ignore attribute are just names, they do not contain any path information!
Attribute | Description | Required |
zipfile | the zip-file to create. | Yes |
basedir | the directory from which to zip the files. | Yes |
compress | Not only store data but also compress them, defaults to true | No |
items | a comma separated list of the files/directories to zip. All files are included when omitted. (deprecated, use includes instead). | No |
ignore | comma separated list of filenames/directorynames to exclude from the zip. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. (deprecated, use excludes instead). | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
<zip zipfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" />
zips all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.zip
in the ${dist}
directory.
<zip zipfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" excludes="mydocs/**, **/todo.html" />
zips all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.zip
in the ${dist}
directory. Files in the
directory mydocs
, or files with the name todo.html
are
excluded.
<zip zipfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" includes="api/**/*.html" excludes="**/todo.html" />
zips all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.zip
in the ${dist}
directory. Only html files
under the directory api
are zipped, and files with the name
todo.html
are excluded.
<zip zipfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" items="*" />
zips all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.zip
in the ${dist}
directory.
<zip zipfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" items="*" ignore="mydocs, todo.html" />
zips all files in the htdocs/manual
directory in a file called
manual.zip
in the ${dist}
directory. Files/directories
with the names mydocs
and todo.html
are excluded.
To use build events you need to create an ant Project
object.
You can then call the addBuildListener
method to add your listener
to the project. Your listener must implement the
org.apache.tools.antBuildListener
interface. The listener will
receive BuildEvents for the following events
will run ant with a listener which generates an XML representaion of the build progress. This listener is included with ant as is the default listener which generates the logging to standard output.ant -listener org.apache.tools.ant.XmlLogger
It is very easy to write your own task:
org.apache.tools.ant.Task
.
public void
method that takes a single argument. The name of the
method must begin with "set", followed by the attribute name, with the first
character in uppercase, and the rest in lowercase. The type of the attribute
can be String
, any primitive type, Class
,
File
(in which case the value of the attribute is interpreted
relative to the project's basedir) or any other type that has a constructor
with a single String
argument
public void
addText(String)
method.
public
method that takes no arguments and returns an
Object type. The name of the create method must begin with "create", followed
by the element name. An add method must be a public void
method
that takes a single argument of an Object type with a no argument constructor.
The name of the add method must begin with "add", followed by the element
name.
public void execute
method, with no arguments, that
throws a BuildException
. This method implements the task itself.
It is important to know that Ant first calls the setters for the attributes it encounters for a specific task in the buildfile, before it executes is.
Let's write our own task, that prints a message on the System.out stream. The task has one attribute called "message".
package com.mydomain; import org.apache.tools.ant.BuildException; import org.apache.tools.ant.Task; public class MyVeryOwnTask extends Task { private String msg; // The method executing the task public void execute() throws BuildException { System.out.println(msg); } // The setter for the "message" attribute public void setMessage(String msg) { this.msg = msg; } }
It's really this simple;-)
Adding your task to the system is rather simple too:
<?xml version="1.0"?> <project name="OwnTaskExample" default="main" basedir="."> <target name="init"> <taskdef name="mytask" classname="com.mydomain.MyVeryOwnTask"/> </target> <target name="main" depends="init"> <mytask message="Hello World! MyVeryOwnTask works!" /> </target> </project>
Another way to add a task (more permanently), is to add the task name and
implementing class name to the default.properties
file in the
org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs
package. Then you can use it as if it
were a built in task.
There is an online FAQ for Ant at jakarta.apache.org. This FAQ is interactive, which means you can ask and answer questions online.
One of the questions poping up quite often is "Is there a DTD for buildfiles?". Please refer to the FAQ for an answer.
The FAQ contains lists of known custom tasks that don't ship with Ant and projects that use Ant. Feel free to add your own task or project there.
To provide feedback on this software, please subscribe to the Ant Development Mail List (ant-dev-subscribe@jakarta.apache.org)
Copyright © 2000 Apache Software Foundation. All rights Reserved.
Compiles a NetRexx source tree within the running (Ant) VM.
The source and destination directory will be recursively scanned for NetRexx source files to compile. Only NetRexx files that have no corresponding class file or where the class file is older than the java file will be compiled.
Files in the source tree are copied to the destination directory, allowing support files to be located properly in the classpath. The source files are copied because the NetRexx compiler cannot produce class files in a specific directory via parameters
The directory structure of the source tree should follow the package hierarchy.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being compiled/copied. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the srcDir directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
binary | Whether literals are treated as the java binary type rather than the NetRexx types | No |
classpath | The classpath to use during compilation | No |
comments | Whether comments are passed through to the generated java source | No |
compact | Whether error messages come out in compact or verbose format | No |
compile | Whether the NetRexx compiler should compile the generated java code | No |
console | Whether or not messages should be displayed on the 'console' | No |
crossref | Whether variable cross references are generated | No |
decimal | Whether decimal arithmetic should be used for the NetRexx code | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
destDir | the destination directory into which the NetRexx source files should be copied and then compiled | Yes |
diag | Whether diagnostic information about the compile is generated | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
explicit | Whether variables must be declared explicitly before use | No |
format | Whether the generated java code is formatted nicely or left to match NetRexx line numbers for call stack debugging | No |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
java | Whether the generated java code is produced | No |
keep | Sets whether the generated java source file should be kept after compilation. The generated files will have an extension of .java.keep, not .java | No |
logo | Whether the compiler text logo is displayed when compiling | No |
replace | Whether the generated .java file should be replaced when compiling | No |
savelog | Whether the compiler messages will be written to NetRexxC.log as well as to the console | No |
sourcedir | Tells the NetRexx compiler to store the class files in the same directory as the source files. The alternative is the working directory | No |
srcDir | Set the source dir to find the source Netrexx files | Yes |
strictargs | Tells the NetRexx compiler that method calls always need
parentheses, even if no arguments are needed, e.g.
aStringVar.getBytes vs. aStringVar.getBytes() |
No |
strictassign | Tells the NetRexx compile that assignments must match exactly on type | No |
strictcase | Specifies whether the NetRexx compiler should be case sensitive or not | No |
strictimport | Whether classes need to be imported explicitly using an
import statement. By default the NetRexx compiler will import
certain packages automatically |
No |
strictprops | Whether local properties need to be qualified explicitly
using this |
No |
strictsignal | Whether the compiler should force catching of exceptions by explicitly named types | No |
symbols | Whether debug symbols should be generated into the class file | No |
time | Asks the NetRexx compiler to print compilation times to the console | No |
trace | Turns on or off tracing and directs the resultant trace output | No |
utf8 | Tells the NetRexx compiler that the source is in UTF8 | No |
verbose | Whether lots of warnings and error messages should be generated | Yes |
<netrexxc srcDir="/source/project" includes="vnr/util/*" destDir="/source/project/build" classpath="/source/project2/proj.jar" comments="true" crossref="false" replace="true" keep="true" />
Renames files in the srcDir
directory ending with the
fromExtension
string so that they end with the
toExtension
string. Files are only replaced if replace
is true
See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns. The patterns are relative to the srcDir directory.
Attribute | Description | Required |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
excludes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
fromExtention | The string that files must end in to be renamed | Yes |
includes | comma separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
replace | Whether the file being renamed to should be replaced if it already exists | No |
srcDir | The starting directory for files to search in | Yes |
toExtension | The string that renamed files will end with on completion | Yes |
<renameext srcDir="/source/project1" includes="**" excludes="**/samples/*" fromExtension=".java.keep" toExtension=".java" replace="true" />
Execute a script in a BSF supported language.
All items (tasks, targets, etc) of the running project are accessible from the script.
Attribute | Description | Required |
language | The programming language the script is written in. Must be a supported BSF language | No |
src | The location of the script as a file, if not inline | No |
None yet available
The following attributes are interpretted:
Attribute | Values | Required |
---|---|---|
login | username,password | No |
vsspath | SourceSafe path | Yes |
localpath | Override the working directory and get to the specified path | No |
writable | true or false | No |
recursive | true or false | No |
version | a version number to get | No |
date | a date stamp to get at | No |
label | a label to get for | No |
ssdir | directory where ss.exe resides. By default the task
expects it to be in the PATH. |
No |
Note that only one of version, date or label should be specified
None yet available