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  1. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  2. <document>
  3. <properties>
  4. <author email="bodewig@apache.org">Stefan Bodewig</author>
  5. <title>Frequently Asked Questions</title>
  6. </properties>
  7. <faqsection title="General">
  8. <faq id="what-is-ant">
  9. <question>What is Apache Ant?</question>
  10. <answer>
  11. <p> Ant is a Java based build tool. In theory it is kind of
  12. like &quot;make&quot; without makes wrinkles and with the full
  13. portability of pure Java code.</p>
  14. </answer>
  15. </faq>
  16. <faq id="ant-name">
  17. <question>Why do you call it Ant?</question>
  18. <answer>
  19. <p>According to Ant&apos;s original author James Duncan
  20. Davidson, the name is an acronym for &quot;Another Neat
  21. Tool&quot;.</p>
  22. <p>Later explanations go along the lines of &quot;Ants are
  23. doing an extremely good job at building things&quot; or
  24. &quot;Ants are very small and can carry a weight a dozen times
  25. of their own&quot; - describing what Ant is intended to
  26. be.</p>
  27. </answer>
  28. </faq>
  29. <faq id="history">
  30. <question>Tell us a little bit about Ant&apos;s history.</question>
  31. <answer>
  32. <p>Initially Ant was part of the Tomcat code base when it was
  33. donated to the Apache Software Foundation - it has been
  34. created by James Duncan Davidson, who also is the original
  35. author of Tomcat. Ant was there to build Tomcat, nothing
  36. else.</p>
  37. <p>Soon thereafter several open source Java projects realized
  38. that Ant could solve the problems they had with makefiles.
  39. Starting with the projects hosted at Jakarta and the old Java
  40. Apache project, Ant spread like a virus and now is the build
  41. tool of choice for a lot of projects.</p>
  42. <p>In January 2000 Ant was moved to a separate CVS module and
  43. was promoted to a project of its own, independent of
  44. Tomcat. Ant became Apache Ant.</p>
  45. <p>The first version of Ant that was exposed a lager audience
  46. was the one that shipped with Tomcat&apos;s 3.1 release on 19 April
  47. 2000. This version has later been referenced to as Ant
  48. 0.3.1.</p>
  49. <p>The first official release of Ant as a stand alone product was
  50. Ant 1.1 released on 19 July 2000. The complete release
  51. history:</p>
  52. <table>
  53. <tr>
  54. <th>Ant Version</th>
  55. <th>Release Date</th>
  56. </tr>
  57. <tr>
  58. <td>1.1</td>
  59. <td>19 July 2000</td>
  60. </tr>
  61. <tr>
  62. <td>1.2</td>
  63. <td>24 October 2000</td>
  64. </tr>
  65. <tr>
  66. <td>1.3</td>
  67. <td>3 March 2001</td>
  68. </tr>
  69. <tr>
  70. <td>1.4</td>
  71. <td>3 September 2001</td>
  72. </tr>
  73. <tr>
  74. <td>1.4.1</td>
  75. <td>11 October 2001</td>
  76. </tr>
  77. </table>
  78. </answer>
  79. </faq>
  80. </faqsection>
  81. <faqsection title="Installation">
  82. <faq id="no-gnu-tar">
  83. <question>I get checksum errors when I try to extract the
  84. <code>tar.gz</code> distribution file. Why?</question>
  85. <answer>
  86. <p>Ant&apos;s distribution contains file names that are longer
  87. than 100 characters, which is not supported by the standard
  88. tar file format. Several different implementations of tar use
  89. different and incompatible ways to work around this
  90. restriction.</p>
  91. <p>Ant&apos;s &lt;tar&gt; task can create tar archives that use
  92. the GNU tar extension, and this has been used when putting
  93. together the distribution. If you are using a different
  94. version of tar (for example, the one shipping with Solaris),
  95. you cannot use it to extract the archive.</p>
  96. <p>The solution is to either install GNU tar, which can be
  97. found <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/tar.html">here</a>
  98. or use the zip archive instead (you can extract it using
  99. <code>jar xf</code>).</p>
  100. </answer>
  101. </faq>
  102. </faqsection>
  103. <faqsection title="Using Ant">
  104. <faq id="always-recompiles">
  105. <question>Why does Ant always recompile all my Java files?</question>
  106. <answer>
  107. <p>In order to find out which files should be compiled, Ant
  108. compares the timestamps of the source files to those of the
  109. resulting <code>.class</code> files. Opening all source files
  110. to find out which package they belong to would be very
  111. inefficient - instead of this, Ant expects you to place your
  112. source files in a directory hierarchy that mirrors your
  113. package hierarchy and to point Ant to the root of this
  114. directory tree with the <code>srcdir</code> attribute.</p>
  115. <p>Say you have <code>&lt;javac srcdir=&quot;src&quot;
  116. destdir=&quot;dest&quot; /&gt;</code>. If Ant finds a file
  117. <code>src/a/b/C.java</code> it expects it to be in package
  118. <code>a.b</code> so that the resulting <code>.class</code>
  119. file is going to be <code>dest/a/b/C.class</code>.</p>
  120. <p>If your setup is different, Ant&apos;s heuristic won&apos;t work and
  121. it will recompile classes that are up to date. Ant is not the
  122. only tool, that expects a source tree layout like this.</p>
  123. </answer>
  124. </faq>
  125. <faq id="passing-cli-args">
  126. <question>How do I pass parameters from the command line to my
  127. build file?</question>
  128. <answer>
  129. <p>Use properties: <code>ant
  130. -D&lt;name&gt;=&lt;value&gt;</code> lets you define values for
  131. properties. These can then be used within your build file as
  132. any normal property: <code>${&lt;name&gt;}</code> will put in
  133. <code>&lt;value&gt;</code>.</p>
  134. </answer>
  135. </faq>
  136. <faq id="jikes-switches">
  137. <question>How can I use Jikes specific command line
  138. switches?</question>
  139. <answer>
  140. <p>A couple of switches are supported via magic
  141. properties:</p>
  142. <table>
  143. <tr>
  144. <th>switch</th>
  145. <th>property</th>
  146. <th>default</th>
  147. </tr>
  148. <tr>
  149. <td>+E</td>
  150. <td>build.compiler.emacs</td>
  151. <td>false == not set</td>
  152. </tr>
  153. <tr>
  154. <td>+P</td>
  155. <td>build.compiler.pedantic</td>
  156. <td>false == not set</td>
  157. </tr>
  158. <tr>
  159. <td>+F</td>
  160. <td>build.compiler.fulldepend</td>
  161. <td>false == not set</td>
  162. </tr>
  163. <tr>
  164. <td><strong>only for Ant &lt; 1.4, replaced by the nowarn
  165. attribute of javac after that</strong> -nowarn</td>
  166. <td>build.compiler.warnings</td>
  167. <td>true == not set</td>
  168. </tr>
  169. </table>
  170. </answer>
  171. </faq>
  172. <faq id="shell-redirect-1">
  173. <question>How do I include a &lt; character in my command line arguments?</question>
  174. <answer>
  175. <p>The short answer is "Use <code>&amp;lt;</code>".</p>
  176. <p>The long answer is, that this probably won't do what you
  177. want anyway, see <a href="#shell-redirect-2">the next
  178. section</a>.</p>
  179. </answer>
  180. </faq>
  181. <faq id="shell-redirect-2">
  182. <question>How do I redirect standard input or standard output
  183. in the <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> task?</question>
  184. <answer>
  185. <p>Say you want to redirect the standard input stream of the
  186. <code>cat</code> command to read from a file, something
  187. like</p>
  188. <source><![CDATA[
  189. shell-prompt> cat < foo
  190. ]]></source>
  191. <p>and try to translate it into</p>
  192. <source><![CDATA[
  193. <exec executable="cat">
  194. <arg value="&lt;" />
  195. <arg value="foo" />
  196. </exec>
  197. ]]></source>
  198. <p>This will not do what you expect. The input-redirection is
  199. performed by your shell, not the command itself, so this
  200. should read:</p>
  201. <source><![CDATA[
  202. <exec executable="/bin/sh">
  203. <arg value="-c" />
  204. <arg value="cat &lt; foo" />
  205. </exec>
  206. ]]></source>
  207. <p>Note, that you must use the <code>value</code> attribute of
  208. <code>&lt;arg&gt;</code> in the last element.</p>
  209. </answer>
  210. </faq>
  211. </faqsection>
  212. <faqsection title="Ant and IDEs/Editors">
  213. <faq id="integration">
  214. <question>Is Ant supported by my IDE/Editor?</question>
  215. <answer>
  216. <p>See the <a href="external.html#IDE and Editor Integration">section
  217. on IDE integration</a> on our external tools page.</p>
  218. </answer>
  219. </faq>
  220. <faq id="emacs-mode">
  221. <question>Why doesn&apos;t (X)Emacs/vi/MacOS X's project builder
  222. parse the error messages generated by Ant correctly?</question>
  223. <answer>
  224. <p>Ant adds a &quot;banner&quot; with the name of the current
  225. task in front of all messages - and there are no built-in
  226. regular expressions in your Editor that would account for
  227. this.</p>
  228. <p>You can disable this banner by invoking Ant with the
  229. <code>-emacs</code> switch. Alternatively you can add the
  230. following snippet to your <code>.emacs</code> to make Emacs
  231. understand Ant&apos;s output.</p>
  232. <source><![CDATA[
  233. (require 'compile)
  234. (setq compilation-error-regexp-alist
  235. (append (list
  236. ;; works for jikes
  237. '("^\\s-*\\[[^]]*\\]\\s-*\\(.+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):[0-9]+:[0-9]+:" 1 2 3)
  238. ;; works for javac
  239. '("^\\s-*\\[[^]]*\\]\\s-*\\(.+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):" 1 2))
  240. compilation-error-regexp-alist))
  241. ]]></source>
  242. <p>Yet another alternative that preserves most of Ant's
  243. formatting is to pipe Ant's output through the following Perl
  244. script by Dirk-Willem van Gulik:</p>
  245. <source><![CDATA[
  246. #!/usr/bin/perl
  247. #
  248. # May 2001 dirkx@apache.org - remove any
  249. # [foo] lines from the output; keeping
  250. # spacing more or less there.
  251. #
  252. $|=1;
  253. while(<STDIN>) {
  254. if (s/^(\s+)\[(\w+)\]//) {
  255. if ($2 ne $last) {
  256. print "$1\[$2\]";
  257. $s = ' ' x length($2);
  258. } else {
  259. print "$1 $s ";
  260. };
  261. $last = $2;
  262. };
  263. print;
  264. };
  265. ]]></source>
  266. </answer>
  267. </faq>
  268. </faqsection>
  269. <faqsection title="Advanced issues">
  270. <faq id="dtd">
  271. <question>Is there a DTD that I can use to validate my build
  272. files?</question>
  273. <answer>
  274. <p>An incomplete DTD can be created by the
  275. <code>&lt;antstructure&gt;</code> task - but this one
  276. has a few problems:</p>
  277. <ul>
  278. <li>It doesn&apos;t know about required attributes. Only
  279. manual tweaking of this file can help here.</li>
  280. <li>It is not complete - if you add new tasks via
  281. <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> it won&apos;t know about it. See
  282. <a href="http://www.sdv.fr/pages/casa/html/ant-dtd.en.html">this
  283. page</a> by Michel Casabianca for a solution to this
  284. problem. Note that the DTD you can download at this page
  285. is based on Ant 0.3.1.</li>
  286. <li>It may even be an invalid DTD. As Ant allows tasks
  287. writers to define arbitrary elements, name collisions will
  288. happen quite frequently - if your version of Ant contains
  289. the optional <code>&lt;test&gt;</code> and
  290. <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> tasks, there are two XML
  291. elements named test (the task and the nested child element
  292. of <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code>) with different attribute
  293. lists. This problem cannot be solved, DTDs don&apos;t give a
  294. syntax rich enough to support this.</li>
  295. </ul>
  296. </answer>
  297. </faq>
  298. <faq id="xml-entity-include">
  299. <question>How do I include an XML snippet in my build file?</question>
  300. <answer>
  301. <p>You can use XML&apos;s way of including external files and let
  302. the parser do the job for Ant:</p>
  303. <source><![CDATA[
  304. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  305. <!DOCTYPE project [
  306. <!ENTITY common SYSTEM "file:./common.xml">
  307. ]>
  308. <project name="test" default="test" basedir=".">
  309. <target name="setup">
  310. ...
  311. </target>
  312. &common;
  313. ...
  314. </project>
  315. ]]></source>
  316. <p>will literally include the contents of <code>common.xml</code> where
  317. you&apos;ve placed the <code>&amp;common;</code> entity.</p>
  318. <p>In combination with a DTD, this would look like this:</p>
  319. <source><![CDATA[
  320. <!DOCTYPE project PUBLIC "-//ANT//DTD project//EN" "file:./ant.dtd" [
  321. <!ENTITY include SYSTEM "file:./header.xml">
  322. ]>
  323. ]]></source>
  324. </answer>
  325. </faq>
  326. <faq id="mail-logger">
  327. <question>How do I send an email with the result of my build
  328. process?</question>
  329. <answer>
  330. <p>You can use a custom BuildListener, that sends out an email
  331. in the buildFinished() method. Will Glozer
  332. &lt;will.glozer@jda.com&gt; has written such a listener based
  333. on <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/javamail/">JavaMail</a>,
  334. the source is</p>
  335. <source><![CDATA[
  336. import java.io.*;
  337. import java.util.*;
  338. import javax.mail.*;
  339. import javax.mail.internet.*;
  340. import org.apache.tools.ant.*;
  341. /**
  342. * A simple listener that waits for a build to finish and sends an email
  343. * of the results. The settings are stored in "monitor.properties" and
  344. * are fairly self explanatory.
  345. *
  346. * @author Will Glozer
  347. * @version 1.05a 09/06/2000
  348. */
  349. public class BuildMonitor implements BuildListener {
  350. protected Properties props;
  351. /**
  352. * Create a new BuildMonitor.
  353. */
  354. public BuildMonitor() throws Exception {
  355. props = new Properties();
  356. InputStream is = getClass().getResourceAsStream("monitor.properties");
  357. props.load(is);
  358. is.close();
  359. }
  360. public void buildStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  361. }
  362. /**
  363. * Determine the status of the build and the actions to follow, now that
  364. * the build has completed.
  365. *
  366. * @param e Event describing the build tatus.
  367. */
  368. public void buildFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  369. Throwable th = e.getException();
  370. String status = (th != null) ? "failed" : "succeeded";
  371. try {
  372. String key = "build." + status;
  373. if (props.getProperty(key + ".notify").equalsIgnoreCase("false")) {
  374. return;
  375. }
  376. Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null);
  377. MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session);
  378. message.addRecipients(Message.RecipientType.TO, parseAddresses(
  379. props.getProperty(key + ".email.to")));
  380. message.setSubject(props.getProperty(key + ".email.subject"));
  381. BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(
  382. props.getProperty("build.log")));
  383. StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
  384. String line = br.readLine();
  385. while (line != null) {
  386. sw.write(line);
  387. sw.write("\n");
  388. line = br.readLine();
  389. }
  390. br.close();
  391. message.setText(sw.toString(), "UTF-8");
  392. sw.close();
  393. Transport transport = session.getTransport();
  394. transport.connect();
  395. transport.send(message);
  396. transport.close();
  397. } catch (Exception ex) {
  398. System.out.println("BuildMonitor failed to send email!");
  399. ex.printStackTrace();
  400. }
  401. }
  402. /**
  403. * Parse a comma separated list of internet email addresses.
  404. *
  405. * @param s The list of addresses.
  406. * @return Array of Addresses.
  407. */
  408. protected Address[] parseAddresses(String s) throws Exception {
  409. StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(s, ",");
  410. Address[] addrs = new Address[st.countTokens()];
  411. for (int i = 0; i < addrs.length; i++) {
  412. addrs[i] = new InternetAddress(st.nextToken());
  413. }
  414. return addrs;
  415. }
  416. public void messageLogged(BuildEvent e) {
  417. }
  418. public void targetStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  419. }
  420. public void targetFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  421. }
  422. public void taskStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  423. }
  424. public void taskFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  425. }
  426. }
  427. ]]></source>
  428. <p>With a <code>monitor.properties</code> like this</p>
  429. <source><![CDATA[
  430. # configuration for build monitor
  431. mail.transport.protocol=smtp
  432. mail.smtp.host=<host>
  433. mail.from=Will Glozer <will.glozer@jda.com>
  434. build.log=build.log
  435. build.failed.notify=true
  436. build.failed.email.to=will.glozer@jda.com
  437. build.failed.email.subject=Nightly build failed!
  438. build.succeeded.notify=true
  439. build.succeeded.email.to=will.glozer@jda.com
  440. build.succeeded.email.subject=Nightly build succeeded!
  441. ]]></source>
  442. <p><code>monitor.properties</code> should be placed right next
  443. to your compiled <code>BuildMonitor.class</code>. To use it,
  444. invoke Ant like</p>
  445. <source><![CDATA[
  446. ant -listener BuildMonitor
  447. ]]></source>
  448. <p>Make sure that <code>mail.jar</code> from JavaMail and
  449. <code>activation.jar</code> from the
  450. <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/javabeans/glasgow/jaf.html">Java
  451. Beans Activation Framework</a> in your <code>CLASSPATH</code>.</p>
  452. </answer>
  453. </faq>
  454. </faqsection>
  455. <faqsection title="Known problems">
  456. <faq id="remove-cr">
  457. <question>&lt;chmod&gt; or &lt;exec&gt; don&apos;t work in Ant
  458. 1.3 on Unix</question>
  459. <answer>
  460. <p>The <code>antRun</code> script in <code>ANT_HOME/bin</code>
  461. has DOS instead of Unix line endings, you must remove the
  462. carriage return characters from this file. This can be done by
  463. using Ant&apos;s &lt;fixcrlf&gt; task or something like:</p>
  464. <source><![CDATA[
  465. tr -d '\r' < $ANT_HOME/bin/antRun > /tmp/foo
  466. mv /tmp/foo $ANT_HOME/bin/antRun
  467. ]]></source>
  468. </answer>
  469. </faq>
  470. <faq id="javadoc-cannot-execute">
  471. <question>JavaDoc failed: java.io.IOException: javadoc: cannot execute</question>
  472. <answer>
  473. <p>There is a bug in the Solaris reference implementation of
  474. the JDK, see <a href="http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4230399.html">http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4230399.html</a>.
  475. This also appears to be true under Linux, moving the JDK to
  476. the front of the PATH fixes the problem.</p>
  477. </answer>
  478. </faq>
  479. </faqsection>
  480. </document>