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  1. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  2. <!--
  3. Copyright 2001-2006 The Apache Software Foundation
  4. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  5. you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  6. You may obtain a copy of the License at
  7. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  8. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  9. distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  10. WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  11. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  12. limitations under the License.
  13. -->
  14. <document>
  15. <properties>
  16. <author email="">Conor MacNeill</author>
  17. <author email="stefan.bodewig@freenet.de">Stefan Bodewig</author>
  18. <title>Welcome</title>
  19. </properties>
  20. <body>
  21. <section name="Ant 1.7.0Beta1">
  22. <h3>August 27, 2006 - Ant 1.7.0Beta1 Available</h3>
  23. <p>Apache Ant 1.7.0Beta1 is now available for <a
  24. href="http://ant.apache.org/bindownload.cgi">download</a>.</p>
  25. <p>The manual of the beta version is available <a href="manual-beta">here</a>. </p>
  26. <p>Ant 1.7 introduces a resource framework. Some of the core ant
  27. tasks such as &lt;copy/&gt; are now able to process not only file
  28. system resources but also zip entries, tar entries, paths, ...
  29. Resource collections group resources, and can be further
  30. combined with operators such as union and intersection. This
  31. can be extended by custom resources and custom tasks using resources.</p>
  32. <p>
  33. Ant 1.7 starts outsourcing of optional tasks to Antlibs.
  34. The .NET antlib in preparation will replace the .NET optional tasks which ship in Ant.
  35. Support for the version control system Subversion will be only provided as an antlib to
  36. be released shortly.
  37. </p>
  38. <p>Ant 1.7 fixes also a large number of bugs.</p>
  39. <p>Ant 1.7 has no support for Java6 features, but first tests on Java6
  40. did not fail.</p>
  41. </section>
  42. <section name="Ant 1.6.5">
  43. <h3>June 2, 2005 - Ant 1.6.5 Available</h3>
  44. <p>Apache Ant 1.6.5 is now available for <a
  45. href="http://ant.apache.org/bindownload.cgi">download</a>.</p>
  46. <p>This is a bug fix release.</p>
  47. </section>
  48. <section name="Apache Ant">
  49. <p>
  50. Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool. In theory, it is kind of like
  51. Make, but without Make's wrinkles.
  52. </p>
  53. <p>
  54. Why another build tool when there is already <em>make</em>, <em>gnumake</em>,
  55. <em>nmake</em>, <em>jam</em>, and
  56. others? Because all those tools have limitations that Ant's original author
  57. couldn't live with when developing software across multiple platforms. Make-like
  58. tools are inherently shell-based -- they evaluate a set of dependencies, then
  59. execute commands not unlike what you would issue in a shell. This means that you
  60. can easily extend these tools by using or writing any program for the OS that
  61. you are working on. However, this also means that you limit yourself to the OS,
  62. or at least the OS type such as Unix, that you are working on.
  63. </p>
  64. <p>
  65. Makefiles are inherently evil as well. Anybody who has worked on them for any
  66. time has run into the dreaded tab problem. &quot;Is my command not executing
  67. because I have a space in front of my tab!!!&quot; said the original author of
  68. Ant way too many times. Tools like Jam took care of this to a great degree, but
  69. still have yet another format to use and remember.
  70. </p>
  71. <p>
  72. Ant is different. Instead of a model where it is extended with shell-based
  73. commands, Ant is extended using Java classes. Instead of writing shell commands,
  74. the configuration files are XML-based, calling out a target tree where various
  75. tasks get executed. Each task is run by an object that implements a particular
  76. Task interface.
  77. </p>
  78. <p>
  79. Granted, this removes some of the expressive power that is inherent by being
  80. able to construct a shell command such as
  81. <code>`find . -name foo -exec rm {}`</code>, but it
  82. gives you the ability to be cross platform -- to work anywhere and everywhere.
  83. And hey, if you really need to execute a shell command, Ant has an
  84. <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> task that
  85. allows different commands to be executed based on the OS that it is executing
  86. on.
  87. </p>
  88. </section>
  89. <section name="Documentation">
  90. <p>
  91. You can view the documentation for the current release (Apache Ant 1.6.5)
  92. <a href="manual/index.html">online</a>
  93. </p>
  94. <p>
  95. Comprehensive documentation is included in the source and binary distributions.
  96. </p>
  97. </section>
  98. <!--section name="Nightly Builds">
  99. <p>
  100. If you wish to use the latest Ant features, you can try downloading a nightly
  101. build from <a href="http://brutus.apache.org/~nightlybuild/builds/ant/">here</a>
  102. </p>
  103. </section-->
  104. <section name="Get Involved">
  105. <ul>
  106. <li><a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/getinvolved/getinvolvedindex.html">Get Involved</a></li>
  107. <li><a href="mail.html">Join Mailing Lists</a></li>
  108. <li><a href="http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=ant-dev&amp;r=1&amp;w=2">Search the Dev Mailing List</a>
  109. </li>
  110. <li><a href="http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=ant-user&amp;r=1&amp;w=2">Search the User Mailing List</a>
  111. </li>
  112. </ul>
  113. </section>
  114. </body>
  115. </document>