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  1. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  2. <!--
  3. Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
  4. contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
  5. this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
  6. The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
  7. (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
  8. the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
  9. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  10. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  11. distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  12. WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  13. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  14. limitations under the License.
  15. -->
  16. <document>
  17. <properties>
  18. <author email="bodewig@apache.org">Stefan Bodewig</author>
  19. <title>Frequently Asked Questions</title>
  20. </properties>
  21. <faqsection title="About this FAQ">
  22. <faq id="latest-version">
  23. <question>Where do I find the latest version of this
  24. document?</question>
  25. <answer>
  26. <p>The latest version can always be found at Ant&apos;s homepage
  27. <a href="http://ant.apache.org/faq.html">http://ant.apache.org/faq.html</a>.</p>
  28. </answer>
  29. </faq>
  30. <faq id="adding-faqs">
  31. <question>How can I contribute to this FAQ?</question>
  32. <answer>
  33. <p>The page you are looking it is generated from
  34. <a href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/ant/core/trunk/xdocs/faq.xml">this</a>
  35. document. If you want to add a new question, please submit
  36. a patch against this document to one of Ant&apos;s mailing lists;
  37. hopefully, the structure is self-explanatory.</p>
  38. <p>If you don&apos;t know how to create a patch, see the patches
  39. section of <a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/site/source.html">this
  40. page</a>.</p>
  41. </answer>
  42. </faq>
  43. <faq id="creating-faq">
  44. <question>How do you create the HTML version of this
  45. FAQ?</question>
  46. <answer>
  47. <p>We use
  48. <a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/velocity/anakia.html">Anakia</a>
  49. to render the HTML version from the original XML file.</p>
  50. <p>The Velocity stylesheets used to process the XML files can
  51. be found in the <code>xdocs/stylesheets</code> subdirectory of
  52. Ant&apos;s SVN repository - the build file
  53. <code>docs.xml</code> at the top level of the ant SVN
  54. module (trunk) is used to drive Anakia.</p>
  55. <p>This file assumes that you have the
  56. <code>jakarta-site2</code> CVS module checked out as well, but
  57. if you follow the instruction from Anakia&apos;s homepage, you
  58. should get it to work without that. Just make sure all
  59. required jars are in the task&apos;s classpath.</p>
  60. </answer>
  61. </faq>
  62. </faqsection>
  63. <faqsection title="General">
  64. <faq id="what-is-ant">
  65. <question>What is Apache Ant?</question>
  66. <answer>
  67. <p> Ant is a Java-based build tool. In theory, it is kind of
  68. like Make, without Make&apos;s wrinkles and with the full
  69. portability of pure Java code.</p>
  70. </answer>
  71. </faq>
  72. <faq id="ant-name">
  73. <question>Why do you call it Ant?</question>
  74. <answer>
  75. <p>According to Ant&apos;s original author, James Duncan
  76. Davidson, the name is an acronym for &quot;Another Neat
  77. Tool&quot;.</p>
  78. <p>Later explanations go along the lines of &quot;ants
  79. do an extremely good job at building things&quot;, or
  80. &quot;ants are very small and can carry a weight dozens of times
  81. their own&quot; - describing what Ant is intended to
  82. be.</p>
  83. </answer>
  84. </faq>
  85. <faq id="history">
  86. <question>Tell us a little bit about Ant&apos;s history.</question>
  87. <answer>
  88. <p>Initially, Ant was part of the Tomcat code base, when it was
  89. donated to the Apache Software Foundation. It was
  90. created by James Duncan Davidson, who is also the original
  91. author of Tomcat. Ant was there to build Tomcat, nothing
  92. else.</p>
  93. <p>Soon thereafter, several open source Java projects realized
  94. that Ant could solve the problems they had with Makefiles.
  95. Starting with the projects hosted at Jakarta and the old Java
  96. Apache project, Ant spread like a virus and is now the build
  97. tool of choice for a lot of projects.</p>
  98. <p>In January 2000, Ant was moved to a separate CVS module and
  99. was promoted to a project of its own, independent of
  100. Tomcat, and became Apache Ant.</p>
  101. <p>The first version of Ant that was exposed to a larger audience
  102. was the one that shipped with Tomcat&apos;s 3.1 release on 19 April
  103. 2000. This version has later been referred to as Ant
  104. 0.3.1.</p>
  105. <p>The first official release of Ant as a stand-alone product was
  106. Ant 1.1, released on 19 July 2000. The complete release
  107. history:</p>
  108. <table>
  109. <tr>
  110. <th>Ant Version</th>
  111. <th>Release Date</th>
  112. </tr>
  113. <tr>
  114. <td>1.1</td>
  115. <td>19 July 2000</td>
  116. </tr>
  117. <tr>
  118. <td>1.2</td>
  119. <td>24 October 2000</td>
  120. </tr>
  121. <tr>
  122. <td>1.3</td>
  123. <td>3 March 2001</td>
  124. </tr>
  125. <tr>
  126. <td>1.4</td>
  127. <td>3 September 2001</td>
  128. </tr>
  129. <tr>
  130. <td>1.4.1</td>
  131. <td>11 October 2001</td>
  132. </tr>
  133. <tr>
  134. <td>1.5</td>
  135. <td>10 July 2002</td>
  136. </tr>
  137. <tr>
  138. <td>1.5.1</td>
  139. <td>3 October 2002</td>
  140. </tr>
  141. <tr>
  142. <td>1.5.2</td>
  143. <td>3 March 2003</td>
  144. </tr>
  145. <tr>
  146. <td>1.5.3</td>
  147. <td>9 April 2003</td>
  148. </tr>
  149. <tr>
  150. <td>1.5.4</td>
  151. <td>12 August 2003</td>
  152. </tr>
  153. <tr>
  154. <td>1.6.0</td>
  155. <td>18 December 2003</td>
  156. </tr>
  157. <tr>
  158. <td>1.6.1</td>
  159. <td>12 February 2004</td>
  160. </tr>
  161. <tr>
  162. <td>1.6.2</td>
  163. <td>16 July 2004</td>
  164. </tr>
  165. <tr>
  166. <td>1.6.3</td>
  167. <td>28 April 2005</td>
  168. </tr>
  169. <tr>
  170. <td>1.6.4</td>
  171. <td>19 May 2005</td>
  172. </tr>
  173. <tr>
  174. <td>1.6.5</td>
  175. <td>2 June 2005</td>
  176. </tr>
  177. <tr>
  178. <td>1.7.0</td>
  179. <td>19 December 2006</td>
  180. </tr>
  181. <tr>
  182. <td>1.7.1</td>
  183. <td>27 June 2008</td>
  184. </tr>
  185. </table>
  186. </answer>
  187. </faq>
  188. </faqsection>
  189. <faqsection title="Installation">
  190. <faq id="java-version">
  191. <question>Which version of Java is required to run
  192. Ant?</question>
  193. <answer>
  194. <p>You will need Java installed on your system, version 1.3 or
  195. later required, 1.5 or later strongly recommended. The later
  196. the version of Java, the more Ant tasks you get.</p>
  197. <p>If only the JRE is present but not a full JDK then many
  198. tasks will not work.</p>
  199. <p>Ant 1.6.* works with jdk 1.2 and higher, Ant 1.1 to Ant
  200. 1.5.* work with jdk 1.1 and higher.</p>
  201. </answer>
  202. </faq>
  203. <faq id="no-gnu-tar">
  204. <question>I get checksum errors when I try to extract the
  205. <code>tar.gz</code> distribution file. Why?</question>
  206. <answer>
  207. <p>Ant&apos;s distribution contains file names that are longer
  208. than 100 characters, which is not supported by the standard
  209. tar file format. Several different implementations of tar use
  210. different and incompatible ways to work around this
  211. restriction.</p>
  212. <p>Ant&apos;s &lt;tar&gt; task can create tar archives that use
  213. the GNU tar extension, and this has been used when putting
  214. together the distribution. If you are using a different
  215. version of tar (for example, the one shipping with Solaris),
  216. you cannot use it to extract the archive.</p>
  217. <p>The solution is to either install GNU tar, which can be
  218. found <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/tar.html">here</a>,
  219. or use the zip archive instead (you can extract it using
  220. <code>jar xf</code>).</p>
  221. </answer>
  222. </faq>
  223. <faq id="RedHat_ES_3">
  224. <question>How do you get ant-1.6.x (or any version later than
  225. 1.5.2) to work on on RedHat ES 3?</question>
  226. <answer>
  227. <p>Redhat ES 3.0 comes installed with ant 1.5.2. Even if you
  228. have your PATH and ANT_HOME variables set correctly to a later
  229. version of ant, you will always be forced to use the
  230. preinstalled version.</p>
  231. <p>To use a later version of ant on this OS you could do the
  232. following:</p>
  233. <source><![CDATA[
  234. $ ant -version
  235. Apache Ant version 1.5.2-23 compiled on November 12 2003
  236. $ su -
  237. # rpm -e ant ant-libs
  238. # exit
  239. $ hash -r
  240. $ ant -version
  241. Apache Ant version 1.6.2 compiled on July 16 2004
  242. ]]></source></answer>
  243. </faq>
  244. </faqsection>
  245. <faqsection title="How do I ...">
  246. <faq id="implement-os-specific-configuration">
  247. <question>How do I realize os--specific configurations?</question>
  248. <answer>
  249. <p>The core idea is using property files which name accords to the
  250. os-name. Then simply use the build-in property <tt>os.name</tt>.</p>
  251. <p>For better use you should also provide a file with default values.
  252. But be careful with the correct os-names. For test simply &lt;echo&gt;
  253. the ${os.name} on all machines and you can be sure to use the right
  254. file names.</p>
  255. <source><![CDATA[
  256. <property file="${os.name}.properties"/>
  257. <property file="default.properties"/>
  258. ]]></source>
  259. </answer>
  260. </faq>
  261. <faq id="adding-external-tasks">
  262. <question>How do I add an external task that I&apos;ve written to the
  263. page &quot;External Tools and Tasks&quot;?</question>
  264. <answer>
  265. <p>Join and post a message to the dev or user mailing
  266. list (one list is enough), including the following
  267. information:</p>
  268. <ul>
  269. <li>the name of the task/tool</li>
  270. <li>a short description of the task/tool</li>
  271. <li>a Compatibility: entry stating with which version(s) of
  272. Ant the tool/task is compatible to</li>
  273. <li>a URL: entry linking to the main page of the tool/task</li>
  274. <li>a Contact: entry containing the email address or the URL
  275. of a webpage for the person or list to contact for issues
  276. related to the tool/task. <strong>Note that we&apos;ll add a
  277. link on the page, so any email address added there is not
  278. obfuscated and can (and probably will) be abused by robots
  279. harvesting websites for addresses to spam.</strong></li>
  280. <li>a License: entry containing the type of license for the
  281. tool/task</li>
  282. </ul>
  283. <p>The preferred format for this information is a patch to <a
  284. href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/ant/core/trunk/xdocs/external.xml">this</a>
  285. document.</p>
  286. <p>If you have written something bigger than a 'simple plugin' to Ant it
  287. may be better to add the link to <a href="projects.html">projects.html</a>.
  288. The procedure to add it is the same. The file to patch is <a
  289. href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/ant/core/trunk/xdocs/projects.xml">this</a>
  290. document. The syntax of that file is the same.</p>
  291. </answer>
  292. </faq>
  293. <faq id="create-extensions">
  294. <question>How do I create new tasks?</question>
  295. <answer>
  296. <p>Apart from a lot of information on using Ant, the
  297. <a href="manual/index.html">Manual</a> also contains information
  298. on how to extend Ant with new tasks. This information
  299. can be found under &quot;Developing with Ant&quot;.</p>
  300. <p>Chances are that someone else already created the task you
  301. want to create, it may be wise to see
  302. <a href="external.html">External Tools and Tasks</a> and
  303. <a href="projects.html">Related Projects</a> first.</p>
  304. </answer>
  305. </faq>
  306. <faq id="passing-cli-args">
  307. <question>How do I pass parameters from the command line to my
  308. build file?</question>
  309. <answer>
  310. <p>Use properties. Using <code>ant
  311. -D<em>name</em>=<em>value</em></code> lets you define values for
  312. properties on the Ant command line. These properties can then be
  313. used within your build file as
  314. any normal property: <code>${<em>name</em>}</code> will put in
  315. <code><em>value</em></code>.</p>
  316. </answer>
  317. </faq>
  318. <faq id="jikes-switches">
  319. <question>How can I use Jikes-specific command-line
  320. switches?</question>
  321. <answer>
  322. <p>A couple of switches are supported via &quot;magic&quot;
  323. properties:</p>
  324. <table>
  325. <tr>
  326. <th>switch</th>
  327. <th>property</th>
  328. <th>default</th>
  329. </tr>
  330. <tr>
  331. <td>+E</td>
  332. <td>build.compiler.emacs</td>
  333. <td>false == not set</td>
  334. </tr>
  335. <tr>
  336. <td>+P</td>
  337. <td>build.compiler.pedantic</td>
  338. <td>false == not set</td>
  339. </tr>
  340. <tr>
  341. <td>+F</td>
  342. <td>build.compiler.fulldepend</td>
  343. <td>false == not set</td>
  344. </tr>
  345. <tr>
  346. <td><strong>(Only for Ant &lt; 1.4; replaced by the
  347. <code><strong>nowarn</strong></code>
  348. attribute of the <code><strong>&lt;javac&gt;</strong></code>
  349. task after that.)</strong><br></br>-nowarn</td>
  350. <td>build.compiler.warnings</td>
  351. <td>true == not set</td>
  352. </tr>
  353. </table>
  354. <p>With Ant &gt;= 1.5, you can also use nested
  355. <code>&lt;compilerarg&gt;</code> elements with the
  356. <code>&lt;javac&gt;</code> task.</p>
  357. </answer>
  358. </faq>
  359. <faq id="shell-redirect-1">
  360. <question>How do I include a &lt; character in my command-line arguments?</question>
  361. <answer>
  362. <p>The short answer is "Use: <code>&amp;lt;</code>".</p>
  363. <p>The long answer is that this probably won&apos;t do what you
  364. want anyway (see <a href="#shell-redirect-2">the next
  365. section</a>).</p>
  366. </answer>
  367. </faq>
  368. <faq id="shell-redirect-2">
  369. <question>How do I redirect standard input or standard output
  370. in the <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> task?</question>
  371. <answer>
  372. <p>Say you want to redirect the standard output stream of the
  373. <code>m4</code> command to write to a file, something
  374. like:</p>
  375. <source><![CDATA[
  376. shell-prompt> m4 foo.m4 > foo
  377. ]]></source>
  378. <p>and try to translate it into</p>
  379. <source><![CDATA[
  380. <exec executable="m4">
  381. <arg value="foo.m4"/>
  382. <arg value="&gt;"/>
  383. <arg value="foo"/>
  384. </exec>
  385. ]]></source>
  386. <p>This will not do what you expect. The output redirection is
  387. performed by your shell, not the command itself, so this
  388. should read:</p>
  389. <source><![CDATA[
  390. <exec executable="/bin/sh">
  391. <arg value="-c" />
  392. <arg value="m4 foo.m4 &gt; foo" />
  393. </exec>
  394. ]]></source>
  395. <p>Note that you must use the <code>value</code> attribute of
  396. <code>&lt;arg&gt;</code> in the last element, in order to have
  397. the command passed as a single, quoted argument. Alternatively,
  398. you can use:</p>
  399. <source><![CDATA[
  400. <exec executable="/bin/sh">
  401. <arg line='-c "m4 foo.m4 &gt; foo"'/>
  402. </exec>
  403. ]]></source>
  404. <p>Note the double-quotes nested inside the single-quotes.</p>
  405. </answer>
  406. </faq>
  407. <faq id="batch-shell-execute">
  408. <question>How do I execute a batch file or shell script from Ant?</question>
  409. <answer>
  410. <p>On native Unix systems, you should be able to run shell scripts
  411. directly. On systems running a Unix-type shell (for example, Cygwin
  412. on Windows) execute the (command) shell instead - <code>cmd</code>
  413. for batch files, <code>sh</code> for shell scripts - then pass the
  414. batch file or shell script (plus any arguments to the script)
  415. as a single command, using the <code>/c</code> or
  416. <code>-c</code> switch, respectively. See
  417. <a href="#shell-redirect-2">the above section</a>
  418. for example <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> tasks
  419. executing <code>sh</code>. For batch files, use something like:</p>
  420. <source><![CDATA[
  421. <exec dir="." executable="cmd" os="Windows NT">
  422. <arg line="/c test.bat"/>
  423. </exec>
  424. ]]></source>
  425. </answer>
  426. </faq>
  427. <faq id="multi-conditions">
  428. <question>I want to execute a particular target only if
  429. multiple conditions are true.</question>
  430. <answer>
  431. <p>There are actually several answers to this question.</p>
  432. <p>If you have only one set and one unset property to test,
  433. you can specify both an <code>if</code> and an <code>unless</code>
  434. attribute for the target, and they will act as if they
  435. are &quot;anded&quot; together.</p>
  436. <p>If you are using a version of Ant 1.3 or earlier, the
  437. way to work with all other cases is to chain targets together
  438. to determine the specific state you want to test for.</p>
  439. <p>To see how this works, assume you have three properties:
  440. <code>prop1</code>, <code>prop2</code>, and <code>prop3</code>.
  441. You want to test that <code>prop1</code> and <code>prop2</code>
  442. are set, and that <code>prop3</code> is not. If the condition
  443. holds true you want to echo &quot;yes&quot;.</p>
  444. <p>Here is the implementation in Ant 1.3 and earlier:</p>
  445. <source><![CDATA[
  446. <target name="cond" depends="cond-if"/>
  447. <target name="cond-if" if="prop1">
  448. <antcall target="cond-if-2"/>
  449. </target>
  450. <target name="cond-if-2" if="prop2">
  451. <antcall target="cond-if-3"/>
  452. </target>
  453. <target name="cond-if-3" unless="prop3">
  454. <echo message="yes"/>
  455. </target>
  456. ]]></source>
  457. <p>Note: <code>&lt;antcall&gt;</code> tasks do <em>not</em> pass
  458. property changes back up to the environment they were called
  459. from, so you wouldn&apos;t be able to, for example, set a
  460. <code>result</code> property in the <code>cond-if-3</code> target,
  461. then do
  462. <code>&lt;echo message=&quot;result is ${result}&quot;/&gt;</code>
  463. in the <code>cond</code> target.</p>
  464. <p>Starting with Ant 1.4, you can use the
  465. <code>&lt;condition&gt;</code> task.</p>
  466. <source><![CDATA[
  467. <target name="cond" depends="cond-if,cond-else"/>
  468. <target name="check-cond">
  469. <condition property="cond-is-true">
  470. <and>
  471. <not>
  472. <equals arg1="${prop1}" arg2="$${prop1}" />
  473. </not>
  474. <not>
  475. <equals arg1="${prop2}" arg2="$${prop2}" />
  476. </not>
  477. <equals arg1="${prop3}" arg2="$${prop3}" />
  478. </and>
  479. </condition>
  480. </target>
  481. <target name="cond-if" depends="check-cond" if="cond-is-true">
  482. <echo message="yes"/>
  483. </target>
  484. <target name="cond-else" depends="check-cond" unless="cond-is-true">
  485. <echo message="no"/>
  486. </target>
  487. ]]></source>
  488. <p>This version takes advantage of two things:</p>
  489. <ul>
  490. <li>If a property <code>a</code> has not been set,
  491. <code>${a}</code> will evaluate to <code>${a}</code>.</li>
  492. <li>To get a literal <code>$</code> in Ant, you have to
  493. escape it with another <code>$</code> - this will also break
  494. the special treatment of the <code>${</code> sequence.</li>
  495. </ul>
  496. <p>Because testing for a literal <code>${property}</code> string
  497. isn&apos;t all that readable or easy to understand,
  498. post-1.4.1 Ant introduces the <code>&lt;isset&gt;</code> element
  499. to the <code>&lt;condition&gt;</code> task.</p>
  500. <p>Here is the previous example done using
  501. <code>&lt;isset&gt;</code>:</p>
  502. <source><![CDATA[
  503. <target name="check-cond">
  504. <condition property="cond-is-true">
  505. <and>
  506. <isset property="prop1"/>
  507. <isset property="prop2"/>
  508. <not>
  509. <isset property="prop3"/>
  510. </not>
  511. </and>
  512. </condition>
  513. </target>
  514. ]]></source>
  515. <p>The last option is to use a scripting language to set the
  516. properties. This can be particularly handy when you need much
  517. finer control than the simple conditions shown here but, of
  518. course, comes with the overhead of adding JAR files to support
  519. the language, to say nothing of the added maintenance in requiring
  520. two languages to implement a single system. See the
  521. <a href="manual/OptionalTasks/script.html">
  522. <code>&lt;script&gt;</code> task documentation</a> for more
  523. details.</p>
  524. </answer>
  525. </faq>
  526. <faq id="encoding">
  527. <question>How can I include national characters like German
  528. umlauts in my build file?</question>
  529. <answer>
  530. <p>You need to tell the XML parser which character encoding
  531. your build file uses, this is done inside the <a
  532. href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xml-20001006#sec-prolog-dtd">XML
  533. declaration</a>.</p>
  534. <p>By default the parser assumes you are using the UTF-8
  535. encoding instead of your platform&apos;s default. For most Western
  536. European countries you should set the encoding to
  537. <code>ISO-8859-1</code>. To do so, make the very first line
  538. of you build file read like</p>
  539. <source><![CDATA[
  540. <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?>
  541. ]]></source>
  542. </answer>
  543. </faq>
  544. <faq id="use-zip-instead-of-jar">
  545. <question>How do I use <code>jar</code>&apos;s <code>M</code> switch?
  546. I don&apos;t want a MANIFEST.</question>
  547. <answer>
  548. <p>A JAR archive is a ZIP file, so if you don&apos;t want a
  549. MANIFEST you can simply use <code>&lt;zip&gt;</code>.</p>
  550. <p>If your file names contain national characters you should
  551. know that Sun&apos;s <code>jar</code> utility like Ant&apos;s
  552. <code>&lt;jar&gt;</code> uses UTF-8 to encode their names while
  553. <code>&lt;zip&gt;</code> uses your platforms default encoding.
  554. Use the encoding attribute of <code>&lt;zip&gt;</code> if
  555. necessary.</p>
  556. </answer>
  557. </faq>
  558. <faq id="propertyvalue-as-name-for-property">
  559. <question>How can I do something like <code>&lt;property name="prop"
  560. value="${${anotherprop}}"/&gt;</code> (double expanding the property)?</question>
  561. <answer>
  562. <p>Without any external help you can not.</p>
  563. <p>With &lt;script/&gt;, which needs external libraries, you can do</p>
  564. <source><![CDATA[
  565. <script language="javascript">
  566. propname = project.getProperty("anotherprop");
  567. project.setNewProperty("prop", propname);
  568. </script>
  569. ]]></source>
  570. <p>With AntContrib (external task library) you can do <code>
  571. &lt;propertycopy name="prop" from="${anotherprop}"/&gt;</code>.</p>
  572. <p>With Ant 1.6 you can simulate the AntContribs &lt;propertycopy&gt;
  573. and avoid the need of an external library:</p>
  574. <source><![CDATA[
  575. <macrodef name="propertycopy">
  576. <attribute name="name"/>
  577. <attribute name="from"/>
  578. <sequential>
  579. <property name="@{name}" value="${@{from}}"/>
  580. </sequential>
  581. </macrodef>
  582. ]]></source>
  583. </answer>
  584. </faq>
  585. <faq id="delete-directory-children-only">
  586. <question>How can I delete everything beneath a particular directory,
  587. preserving the directory itself?</question>
  588. <answer>
  589. <p>Most users who go down this path have no problem figuring out that
  590. <code>&lt;delete includeemptydirs="true" /&gt;</code> will help them. The
  591. seemingly tricky part is preserving the base directory itself,
  592. which Ant includes in the directory scan. Fortunately the answer is simple:
  593. </p>
  594. <source><![CDATA[
  595. <delete includeemptydirs="true">
  596. <fileset dir="dirtokeep" includes="**/*" />
  597. </delete>
  598. ]]></source>
  599. </answer>
  600. </faq>
  601. <faq id="delete-directory-only-if-empty">
  602. <question>How can I delete a particular directory,
  603. if and only if it is empty?</question>
  604. <answer>
  605. <p>Most users who go down this path have no problem figuring
  606. out that
  607. <code>&lt;delete includeemptydirs="true" /&gt;</code> will
  608. help them. The seemingly tricky part is preserving the
  609. non-empty directories, which Ant includes in the directory
  610. scan. Fortunately the answer is simple:</p>
  611. <source><![CDATA[
  612. <delete includeemptydirs="true">
  613. <fileset dir="dirtokeepifnotempty" excludes="**/*" />
  614. </delete>
  615. ]]></source>
  616. </answer>
  617. </faq>
  618. </faqsection>
  619. <faqsection title="It doesn&apos;t work (as expected)">
  620. <faq id="general-advice">
  621. <question>General Advice</question>
  622. <answer>
  623. <p>There are many reasons why Ant doesn&apos;t behave as
  624. expected, not all of them are due to Ant bugs. See our <a
  625. href="problems.html">Having Problems?</a> page for hints that
  626. may help pinning down the reasons for your problem.</p>
  627. </answer>
  628. </faq>
  629. <faq id="always-recompiles">
  630. <question>Why does Ant always recompile all my Java files?</question>
  631. <answer>
  632. <p>In order to find out which files should be compiled, Ant
  633. compares the timestamps of the source files to those of the
  634. resulting <code>.class</code> files. Opening all source files
  635. to find out which package they belong to would be very
  636. inefficient. Instead, Ant expects you to place your
  637. source files in a directory hierarchy that mirrors your
  638. package hierarchy and to point Ant to the root of this
  639. directory tree with the <code>srcdir</code> attribute.</p>
  640. <p>Say you have <code>&lt;javac srcdir=&quot;src&quot;
  641. destdir=&quot;dest&quot;/&gt;</code>. If Ant finds a file
  642. <code>src/a/b/C.java</code>, it expects it to be in package
  643. <code>a.b</code> so that the resulting <code>.class</code>
  644. file is going to be <code>dest/a/b/C.class</code>.</p>
  645. <p>If your source-tree directory structure does not match your
  646. package structure, Ant&apos;s heuristic won&apos;t work, and
  647. it will recompile classes that are up-to-date. Ant is not the
  648. only tool that expects a source-tree layout like this.</p>
  649. <p>If you have Java source files that aren&apos;t declared to
  650. be part of any package, you can still use the <code>&lt;javac&gt;</code>
  651. task to compile these files correctly - just set the
  652. <code>srcdir</code> and <code>destdir</code> attributes to
  653. the actual directory the source
  654. files live in and the directory the class files should go into,
  655. respectively.</p>
  656. </answer>
  657. </faq>
  658. <faq id="defaultexcludes">
  659. <question>I&apos;ve used a <code>&lt;delete&gt;</code> task to
  660. delete unwanted SourceSafe control files (CVS files, editor
  661. backup files, etc.), but it doesn&apos;t seem to work; the files
  662. never get deleted. What&apos;s wrong?</question>
  663. <answer>
  664. <p>This is probably happening because, by default, Ant excludes
  665. SourceSafe control files (<code>vssver.scc</code>) and certain other
  666. files from FileSets.</p>
  667. <p>Here&apos;s what you probably did:</p>
  668. <source><![CDATA[
  669. <delete>
  670. <fileset dir="${build.src}" includes="**/vssver.scc"/>
  671. </delete>
  672. ]]></source>
  673. <p>You need to switch off the default exclusions,
  674. and it will work:</p>
  675. <source><![CDATA[
  676. <delete>
  677. <fileset dir="${build.src}" includes="**/vssver.scc"
  678. defaultexcludes="no"/>
  679. </delete>
  680. ]]></source>
  681. <p>For a complete listing of the patterns that are excluded
  682. by default, see <a href="manual/dirtasks.html#defaultexcludes">the user
  683. manual</a>.</p>
  684. </answer>
  685. </faq>
  686. <faq id="stop-dependency">
  687. <question>I have a target I want to skip if a property is set,
  688. so I have <code>unless=&quot;property&quot;</code> as an attribute
  689. of the target, but all the targets this target
  690. depends on are still executed. Why?</question>
  691. <answer>
  692. <p>The list of dependencies is generated by Ant before any of the
  693. targets are run. This allows dependent targets, such as an
  694. <code>init</code> target, to set properties that can control the
  695. execution of the targets higher in the dependency graph. This
  696. is a good thing.</p>
  697. <p>However, when your dependencies break down the
  698. higher-level task
  699. into several smaller steps, this behaviour becomes
  700. counter-intuitive. There are a couple of solutions available:
  701. </p>
  702. <ol>
  703. <li>Put the same condition on each of the dependent targets.</li>
  704. <li>Execute the steps using <code>&lt;antcall&gt;</code>,
  705. instead of specifying them inside the <code>depends</code>
  706. attribute.</li>
  707. </ol>
  708. </answer>
  709. </faq>
  710. <faq id="include-order">
  711. <question>In my <code>&lt;fileset&gt;</code>, I&apos;ve put in an
  712. <code>&lt;exclude&gt;</code> of all files followed by an
  713. <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> of just the files I want, but it
  714. isn&apos;t giving me any files at all. What&apos;s wrong?
  715. </question>
  716. <answer>
  717. <p>The order of the <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> and
  718. <code>&lt;exclude&gt;</code> tags within a <code>&lt;fileset&gt;</code>
  719. is ignored when the FileSet is created. Instead, all of the
  720. <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> elements are processed together,
  721. followed by all of the <code>&lt;exclude&gt;</code>
  722. elements. This means that the <code>&lt;exclude&gt;</code>
  723. elements only apply to the file list produced by the
  724. <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> elements.</p>
  725. <p>To get the files you want, focus on just the
  726. <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> patterns that would be necessary
  727. to get them. If you find you need to trim the list that the
  728. <code>&lt;include&gt;</code> elements produce, then use
  729. <code>&lt;exclude&gt;</code> elements.</p>
  730. </answer>
  731. </faq>
  732. <faq id="properties-not-trimmed">
  733. <question><code>ant</code> failed to build my program via javac
  734. even when I put the needed jars in an external
  735. <code>build.properties</code> file and reference them by
  736. <code>pathelement</code> or <code>classpath refid</code>.</question>
  737. <answer>
  738. <p>When <code>ant</code> loads properties from an external
  739. file it doesn&apos;t touch the value of properties, trailing blanks
  740. will not be trimmed for example.</p>
  741. <p>If the value represents a file path, like a jar needed to
  742. compile, the task which requires the value, javac for example
  743. would fail to compile since it can&apos;t find the file due to
  744. trailing spaces.</p>
  745. </answer>
  746. </faq>
  747. <faq id="winzip-lies">
  748. <question>Ant creates WAR files with a lower-case
  749. <code>web-inf</code> or JAR files with a lower-case
  750. <code>meta-inf</code> directory.</question>
  751. <answer>
  752. <p>No it doesn&apos;t.</p>
  753. <p>You may have seen these lower-case directory names in
  754. WinZIP, but WinZIP is trying to be helpful (and fails). If
  755. WinZIP encounters a filename that is all upper-case, it
  756. assumes it has come from an old DOS box and changes the case to
  757. all lower-case for you.</p>
  758. <p>If you extract (or just check) the archive with jar, you
  759. will see that the names have the correct case.</p>
  760. <p>With WinZIP (version 8.1 at least), this can be corrected in the
  761. configuration. In the Options/Configuration menu, in the View tab, General
  762. section, check the "Allow all upper case files names" box. The META-INF and
  763. WEB-INF will look correct.</p>
  764. </answer>
  765. </faq>
  766. <faq id="NoClassDefFoundError">
  767. <question>I installed Ant 1.6.x and now get
  768. <code>Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError:
  769. </code>
  770. </question>
  771. <answer>
  772. <p>
  773. The cause of this is that there is an old version of ant somewhere in the
  774. class path or configuration.
  775. </p>
  776. <p>
  777. A version of this problem happens with jars that are in the classpath
  778. that include an embedded copy of ant classes.
  779. An example of this is some copies of weblogic.jar.
  780. </p>
  781. <p>
  782. One can check if this is the case by doing (on unix/sh):
  783. <code><pre>
  784. unset CLASSPATH
  785. ant -version
  786. </pre>
  787. </code>
  788. </p>
  789. </answer>
  790. </faq>
  791. <faq id="InstantiationException">
  792. <question>I installed Ant 1.6.x and now get
  793. <code>java.lang.InstantiationException: org.apache.tools.ant.Main</code>
  794. </question>
  795. <answer>
  796. <p>
  797. The cause of this is that there is an old version of ant somewhere in the
  798. class path or configuration.
  799. </p>
  800. <p>
  801. A version of this problem may be seen on some linux systems.
  802. Some linux systems (Fedora Core 2 for example), comes with a version
  803. of ant pre-installed. There is a configuration file called
  804. <code>/etc/ant.conf</code> which if present, the ant shell
  805. script will 'dot' include. On Fedora Core 2, the /etc/ant.conf
  806. file resets the <code>ANT_HOME</code> environment variable to
  807. <code>/usr/share/ant</code>. This causes the problem that
  808. an old version of ant (1.5.x in this cause) will be used
  809. with a new version of the ant script file.
  810. </p>
  811. <p>
  812. One can check if this is the case by doing
  813. <code>ant --noconfig -version</code>.
  814. </p>
  815. </answer>
  816. </faq>
  817. <faq id="mangled-manifest">
  818. <question>
  819. Whenever I use the Ant jar or manifest related tasks, long lines in
  820. my manifest are wrapped at 70 characters and the resulting jar does
  821. not work in my application server. Why does Ant do this?
  822. </question>
  823. <answer>
  824. <p>
  825. Ant implements the Java
  826. <a href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/guide/jar/jar.html">Jar
  827. file specification</a>. Please refer to the notes section where it
  828. discusses the maximum allowable length of a line and the concept of
  829. continuation characters.
  830. </p>
  831. <p>
  832. If a jar file produced by Ant does not work in your appserver, and
  833. that failure is due to the wrapped manifest, then you need
  834. to consult your appserver provider, as it is a bug in their
  835. appserver. Far more likely, however, is a problem in your
  836. specification of your classpath. It is not Ant's wrapping of your
  837. classpath that is the problem.
  838. </p>
  839. <p>
  840. Do not raise a bug about this issue until you have checked to ensure
  841. that the problem is not due to your classpath specification.
  842. </p>
  843. </answer>
  844. </faq>
  845. </faqsection>
  846. <faqsection title="Ant and IDEs/Editors">
  847. <faq id="integration">
  848. <question>Is Ant supported by my IDE/Editor?</question>
  849. <answer>
  850. <p>See the <a href="external.html#IDE and Editor Integration">section
  851. on IDE integration</a> on our External Tools and Tasks page.</p>
  852. </answer>
  853. </faq>
  854. <faq id="emacs-mode">
  855. <question>Why doesn&apos;t (X)Emacs/vi/MacOS X&apos;s project builder
  856. correctly parse the error messages generated by Ant?</question>
  857. <answer>
  858. <p>Ant adds a &quot;banner&quot; with the name of the current
  859. task in front of all logging messages - and there are no built-in
  860. regular expressions in your editor that would account for
  861. this.</p>
  862. <p>You can disable this banner by invoking Ant with the
  863. <code>-emacs</code> switch. To make Ant autodetect
  864. Emacs&apos; compile mode, put this into your
  865. <code>.antrc</code> (contributed by Ville Skytt&#228;).</p>
  866. <source><![CDATA[
  867. # Detect (X)Emacs compile mode
  868. if [ "$EMACS" = "t" ] ; then
  869. ANT_ARGS="$ANT_ARGS -emacs"
  870. ANT_OPTS="$ANT_OPTS -Dbuild.compiler.emacs=true"
  871. fi
  872. ]]></source>
  873. <p>Alternatively, you can add the following snippet to your
  874. <code>.emacs</code> to make Emacs understand Ant&apos;s
  875. output.</p>
  876. <source><![CDATA[
  877. (require 'compile)
  878. (setq compilation-error-regexp-alist
  879. (append (list
  880. ;; works for jikes
  881. '("^\\s-*\\[[^]]*\\]\\s-*\\(.+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):[0-9]+:[0-9]+:" 1 2 3)
  882. ;; works for javac
  883. '("^\\s-*\\[[^]]*\\]\\s-*\\(.+\\):\\([0-9]+\\):" 1 2))
  884. compilation-error-regexp-alist))
  885. ]]></source>
  886. <p>Yet another alternative that preserves most of Ant&apos;s
  887. formatting is to pipe Ant&apos;s output through the following Perl
  888. script by Dirk-Willem van Gulik:</p>
  889. <source><![CDATA[
  890. #!/usr/bin/perl
  891. #
  892. # May 2001 dirkx@apache.org - remove any
  893. # [foo] lines from the output; keeping
  894. # spacing more or less there.
  895. #
  896. $|=1;
  897. while(<STDIN>) {
  898. if (s/^(\s+)\[(\w+)\]//) {
  899. if ($2 ne $last) {
  900. print "$1\[$2\]";
  901. $s = ' ' x length($2);
  902. } else {
  903. print "$1 $s ";
  904. };
  905. $last = $2;
  906. };
  907. print;
  908. };
  909. ]]></source>
  910. </answer>
  911. </faq>
  912. </faqsection>
  913. <faqsection title="Advanced Issues">
  914. <faq id="dtd">
  915. <question>Is there a DTD that I can use to validate my build
  916. files?</question>
  917. <answer>
  918. <p>An incomplete DTD can be created by the
  919. <code>&lt;antstructure&gt;</code> task - but this one
  920. has a few problems:</p>
  921. <ul>
  922. <li>It doesn&apos;t know about required attributes. Only
  923. manual tweaking of this file can help here.</li>
  924. <li>It is not complete - if you add new tasks via
  925. <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> it won&apos;t know about it. See
  926. <a href="http://www.sdv.fr/pages/casa/html/ant-dtd.en.html">this
  927. page</a> by Michel Casabianca for a solution to this
  928. problem. Note that the DTD you can download at this page
  929. is based on Ant 0.3.1.</li>
  930. <li>It may even be an invalid DTD. As Ant allows tasks
  931. writers to define arbitrary elements, name collisions will
  932. happen quite frequently - if your version of Ant contains
  933. the optional <code>&lt;test&gt;</code> and
  934. <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> tasks, there are two XML
  935. elements named <code>test</code> (the task and the nested child
  936. element of <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code>) with different attribute
  937. lists. This problem cannot be solved; DTDs don&apos;t give a
  938. syntax rich enough to support this.</li>
  939. </ul>
  940. </answer>
  941. </faq>
  942. <faq id="xml-entity-include">
  943. <question>How do I include an XML snippet in my build file?</question>
  944. <answer>
  945. <p>You can use XML&apos;s way of including external files and let
  946. the parser do the job for Ant:</p>
  947. <source><![CDATA[
  948. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  949. <!DOCTYPE project [
  950. <!ENTITY common SYSTEM "common.xml">
  951. ]>
  952. <project name="test" default="test" basedir=".">
  953. <target name="setup">
  954. ...
  955. </target>
  956. &common;
  957. ...
  958. </project>
  959. ]]></source>
  960. <p>will literally include the contents of <code>common.xml</code> where
  961. you&apos;ve placed the <code>&amp;common;</code> entity.</p>
  962. <p>(The filename <code>common.xml</code> in this example is resolved
  963. relative to the containing XML file by the XML parser. You may also use
  964. an absolute <code>file:</code> protocol URI.)</p>
  965. <p>In combination with a DTD, this would look like this:</p>
  966. <source><![CDATA[
  967. <!DOCTYPE project PUBLIC "-//ANT//DTD project//EN" "ant.dtd" [
  968. <!ENTITY include SYSTEM "header.xml">
  969. ]>
  970. ]]></source>
  971. <p>Starting with Ant 1.6, there is a new
  972. <code>&lt;import&gt;</code> task that can (also) be used to
  973. include build file fragments. Unlike the snippets used with
  974. entity includes, the referenced files have to be complete Ant
  975. build files, though.</p>
  976. <p>The example above would become:</p>
  977. <source><![CDATA[
  978. <?xml version="1.0"?>
  979. <project name="test" default="test" basedir=".">
  980. <target name="setup">
  981. ...
  982. </target>
  983. <import file="./common.xml"/>
  984. ...
  985. </project>
  986. ]]></source>
  987. <p>Unlike entity includes, <code>&lt;import&gt;</code> will
  988. let you use Ant properties in the file name.</p>
  989. </answer>
  990. </faq>
  991. <faq id="mail-logger">
  992. <question>How do I send an email with the result of my build
  993. process?</question>
  994. <answer>
  995. <p>If you are using a nightly build of Ant 1.5 after
  996. 2001-12-14, you can use the built-in MailLogger:</p>
  997. <source><![CDATA[
  998. ant -logger org.apache.tools.ant.listener.MailLogger
  999. ]]></source>
  1000. <p>See the <a href="http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/ant/core/trunk/docs/manual/listeners.html">Listeners
  1001. &amp; Loggers</a> documentation for details on the properties
  1002. required.</p>
  1003. <p>For older versions of Ant, you can use a custom
  1004. BuildListener that sends out an email
  1005. in the buildFinished() method. Will Glozer
  1006. &lt;will.glozer@jda.com&gt; has written such a listener based
  1007. on <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/javamail/">JavaMail</a>.
  1008. The source is:</p>
  1009. <source><![CDATA[
  1010. import java.io.*;
  1011. import java.util.*;
  1012. import javax.mail.*;
  1013. import javax.mail.internet.*;
  1014. import org.apache.tools.ant.*;
  1015. /**
  1016. * A simple listener that waits for a build to finish and sends an email
  1017. * of the results. The settings are stored in "monitor.properties" and
  1018. * are fairly self explanatory.
  1019. *
  1020. * @author Will Glozer
  1021. * @version 1.05a 09/06/2000
  1022. */
  1023. public class BuildMonitor implements BuildListener {
  1024. protected Properties props;
  1025. /**
  1026. * Create a new BuildMonitor.
  1027. */
  1028. public BuildMonitor() throws Exception {
  1029. props = new Properties();
  1030. InputStream is = getClass().getResourceAsStream("monitor.properties");
  1031. props.load(is);
  1032. is.close();
  1033. }
  1034. public void buildStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  1035. }
  1036. /**
  1037. * Determine the status of the build and the actions to follow, now that
  1038. * the build has completed.
  1039. *
  1040. * @param e Event describing the build status.
  1041. */
  1042. public void buildFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  1043. Throwable th = e.getException();
  1044. String status = (th != null) ? "failed" : "succeeded";
  1045. try {
  1046. String key = "build." + status;
  1047. if (props.getProperty(key + ".notify").equalsIgnoreCase("false")) {
  1048. return;
  1049. }
  1050. Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null);
  1051. MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session);
  1052. message.addRecipients(Message.RecipientType.TO, parseAddresses(
  1053. props.getProperty(key + ".email.to")));
  1054. message.setSubject(props.getProperty(key + ".email.subject"));
  1055. BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(
  1056. props.getProperty("build.log")));
  1057. StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
  1058. String line = br.readLine();
  1059. while (line != null) {
  1060. sw.write(line);
  1061. sw.write("\n");
  1062. line = br.readLine();
  1063. }
  1064. br.close();
  1065. message.setText(sw.toString(), "UTF-8");
  1066. sw.close();
  1067. Transport transport = session.getTransport();
  1068. transport.connect();
  1069. transport.send(message);
  1070. transport.close();
  1071. } catch (Exception ex) {
  1072. System.out.println("BuildMonitor failed to send email!");
  1073. ex.printStackTrace();
  1074. }
  1075. }
  1076. /**
  1077. * Parse a comma separated list of internet email addresses.
  1078. *
  1079. * @param s The list of addresses.
  1080. * @return Array of Addresses.
  1081. */
  1082. protected Address[] parseAddresses(String s) throws Exception {
  1083. StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(s, ",");
  1084. Address[] addrs = new Address[st.countTokens()];
  1085. for (int i = 0; i < addrs.length; i++) {
  1086. addrs[i] = new InternetAddress(st.nextToken());
  1087. }
  1088. return addrs;
  1089. }
  1090. public void messageLogged(BuildEvent e) {
  1091. }
  1092. public void targetStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  1093. }
  1094. public void targetFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  1095. }
  1096. public void taskStarted(BuildEvent e) {
  1097. }
  1098. public void taskFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  1099. }
  1100. }
  1101. ]]></source>
  1102. <p>With a <code>monitor.properties</code> like this:</p>
  1103. <source><![CDATA[
  1104. # configuration for build monitor
  1105. mail.transport.protocol=smtp
  1106. mail.smtp.host=<host>
  1107. mail.from=Will Glozer <will.glozer@jda.com>
  1108. build.log=build.log
  1109. build.failed.notify=true
  1110. build.failed.email.to=will.glozer@jda.com
  1111. build.failed.email.subject=Nightly build failed!
  1112. build.succeeded.notify=true
  1113. build.succeeded.email.to=will.glozer@jda.com
  1114. build.succeeded.email.subject=Nightly build succeeded!
  1115. ]]></source>
  1116. <p><code>monitor.properties</code> should be placed right next
  1117. to your compiled <code>BuildMonitor.class</code>. To use it,
  1118. invoke Ant like:</p>
  1119. <source><![CDATA[
  1120. ant -listener BuildMonitor -logfile build.log
  1121. ]]></source>
  1122. <p>Make sure that <code>mail.jar</code> from JavaMail and
  1123. <code>activation.jar</code> from the
  1124. <a href="http://java.sun.com/products/javabeans/glasgow/jaf.html">Java
  1125. Beans Activation Framework</a> are in your <code>CLASSPATH</code>.</p>
  1126. </answer>
  1127. </faq>
  1128. <faq id="listener-properties">
  1129. <question>How do I get at the properties that Ant was running
  1130. with from inside BuildListener?</question>
  1131. <answer>
  1132. <p>You can get at a hashtable with all the properties that Ant
  1133. has been using through the BuildEvent parameter. For
  1134. example:</p>
  1135. <source><![CDATA[
  1136. public void buildFinished(BuildEvent e) {
  1137. Hashtable table = e.getProject().getProperties();
  1138. String buildpath = (String)table.get("build.path");
  1139. ...
  1140. }
  1141. ]]></source>
  1142. <p>This is more accurate than just reading the same property
  1143. files that your project does, since it will give the correct
  1144. results for properties that were specified on the Ant command line.</p>
  1145. </answer>
  1146. </faq>
  1147. </faqsection>
  1148. <faqsection title="Known Problems">
  1149. <faq id="input-makes-exec-hang">
  1150. <question><code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> causes other tasks to hang
  1151. or leads to strange behaviour of <code>&lt;input&gt;</code>
  1152. tasks.</question>
  1153. <answer>
  1154. <p>When Ant forks a new process for example by using the
  1155. <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code>, <code>&lt;apply&gt;</code>
  1156. or <code>&lt;java&gt;</code> tasks, it will also start a
  1157. new thread reading from standard input and sending
  1158. everything that it has read to that process.</p>
  1159. <p>Unfortunately Ant has no way to know whether the forked
  1160. process is ever going to read any input, so it will start such
  1161. a thread even if the process doesn't need one.</p>
  1162. <p>This behaviour leads to strange side effects like the Ant
  1163. process
  1164. being <a href="https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=34461">suspended
  1165. when a build forking new process is run as a background
  1166. process</a> on Unix-like systems or
  1167. <code>&lt;input&gt;</code>
  1168. tasks <a href="https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=41024">requiring
  1169. additional inputs</a> if they come after
  1170. an <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> task.</p>
  1171. <p>Fortunately there is a workaround for this, always specify
  1172. <code>inputstring=""</code> for
  1173. any <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code> task (or one of its sibblings)
  1174. if you know the forked process doesn't consume any
  1175. input.</p>
  1176. </answer>
  1177. </faq>
  1178. <faq id="javac-stackoverflow">
  1179. <question><code>&lt;javac&gt;</code> causes a
  1180. StackOverflowError</question>
  1181. <answer>
  1182. <p>For some Java source files it is possible
  1183. that <a href="https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=45370">causes
  1184. a StackOverlowError</a> is thrown inside Sun's javac
  1185. compiler. As far as we can tell this is not triggered by a
  1186. bug in Ant.</p>
  1187. <p>It is possible to work around this problem by setting
  1188. <code>&lt;javac&gt;</code>'s fork attribute to true.</p>
  1189. </answer>
  1190. </faq>
  1191. <faq id="170-requires-junit">
  1192. <question>Ant 1.7.0 doesn't build from sources without
  1193. JUnit</question>
  1194. <answer>
  1195. <p>When building Ant 1.7.0 from the source release without
  1196. junit.jar the build fails with the message "We cannot build
  1197. the test jar unless JUnit is present".</p>
  1198. <p>With Ant 1.7.0 we've started to add ant-testutil.jar as
  1199. part of the distribution and this causes a hard dependency on
  1200. JUnit - at least in version 1.7.0. Unfortunately the
  1201. installation docs don't say so.</p>
  1202. <p>There are two workarounds:</p>
  1203. <ol>
  1204. <li>Add junit.jar to your CLASSPATH when building Ant.</li>
  1205. <li>Change Ant's buildfile and remove test-jar from the
  1206. depends list of the dist-lite target.</li>
  1207. </ol>
  1208. </answer>
  1209. </faq>
  1210. <faq id="remove-cr">
  1211. <question>&lt;chmod&gt; or &lt;exec&gt; doesn&apos;t work in Ant
  1212. 1.3 on Unix</question>
  1213. <answer>
  1214. <p>The <code>antRun</code> script in <code>ANT_HOME/bin</code>
  1215. has DOS instead of Unix line endings; you must remove the
  1216. carriage-return characters from this file. This can be done by
  1217. using Ant&apos;s <code>&lt;fixcrlf&gt;</code> task
  1218. or something like:</p>
  1219. <source><![CDATA[
  1220. tr -d '\r' < $ANT_HOME/bin/antRun > /tmp/foo
  1221. mv /tmp/foo $ANT_HOME/bin/antRun
  1222. ]]></source>
  1223. </answer>
  1224. </faq>
  1225. <faq id="javadoc-cannot-execute">
  1226. <question>JavaDoc failed: java.io.IOException: javadoc: cannot execute</question>
  1227. <answer>
  1228. <p>There is a bug in the Solaris reference implementation of
  1229. 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>).
  1230. This also appears to be true under Linux. Moving the JDK to
  1231. the front of the PATH fixes the problem.</p>
  1232. </answer>
  1233. </faq>
  1234. <faq id="delegating-classloader">
  1235. <question>&lt;style&gt; or &lt;junit&gt; ignores my
  1236. &lt;classpath&gt;</question>
  1237. <answer>
  1238. <p>Starting with Ant 1.7.0, &lt;junit&gt; will honor your
  1239. nested &lt;classpath&gt;.</p>
  1240. <p>These tasks don&apos;t ignore your classpath setting, you
  1241. are facing a common problem with delegating classloaders.</p>
  1242. <p>This question collects a common type of problem: A task
  1243. needs an external library and it has a nested classpath
  1244. element so that you can point it to this external library, but
  1245. that doesn&apos;t work unless you put the external library
  1246. into the <code>CLASSPATH</code> or place it in
  1247. <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>.</p>
  1248. <p>Some background is necessary before we can discuss
  1249. solutions for <a href="#delegating-classloader-1.5">Ant
  1250. 1.5.x</a> and <a href="#delegating-classloader-1.6">Ant
  1251. 1.6.x</a>.</p>
  1252. <p>When you specify a nested <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> in
  1253. Ant, Ant creates a new class loader that uses the path you
  1254. have specified. It then tries to load additional classes from
  1255. this classloader.</p>
  1256. <p>In most cases - for example using &lt;style&gt; or
  1257. &lt;junit&gt; - Ant doesn&apos;t load the external library
  1258. directly, it is the loaded class that does so.</p>
  1259. <p>In the case of <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> it is the task
  1260. implementation itself and in the case of
  1261. <code>&lt;style&gt;</code> it is the implementation of the
  1262. <code>org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.XSLTLiaison</code>
  1263. class.</p>
  1264. <p><em>As of Ant 1.7</em> <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> no longer
  1265. requires you to have <code>junit.jar</code> in Ant's startup
  1266. classpath even if <code>ant-junit.jar</code> is present there.</p>
  1267. <p>Ant&apos;s class loader implementation uses Java&apos;s
  1268. delegation model, see <a
  1269. href="http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/1.2/docs/api/java/lang/ClassLoader.html">http://java.sun.com/products/jdk/1.2/docs/api/java/lang/ClassLoader.html</a>
  1270. the paragraph</p>
  1271. <blockquote>The <code>ClassLoader</code> class uses a
  1272. delegation model to search for classes and resources. Each
  1273. instance of <code>ClassLoader</code> has an associated parent
  1274. class loader. When called upon to find a class or resource, a
  1275. <code>ClassLoader</code> instance will delegate the search for
  1276. the class or resource to its parent class loader before
  1277. attempting to find the class or resource itself. The virtual
  1278. machine&apos;s built-in class loader, called the bootstrap
  1279. class loader, does not itself have a parent but may serve as
  1280. the parent of a <code>ClassLoader</code>
  1281. instance.</blockquote>
  1282. <p>The possible solutions depend on the version of Ant you
  1283. use, see the next sections.</p>
  1284. </answer>
  1285. </faq>
  1286. <faq id="delegating-classloader-1.5">
  1287. <question>&lt;style&gt; or &lt;junit&gt; ignores my
  1288. &lt;classpath&gt; - Ant 1.5.x version</question>
  1289. <answer>
  1290. <p>Please read <a href="#delegating-classloader">the previous
  1291. entry</a> before you go ahead.</p>
  1292. <p>First of all let&apos;s state that Ant's wrapper script
  1293. (<code>ant</code> or <code>ant.bat</code>) adds all
  1294. <code>.jar</code> files from <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code> to
  1295. <code>CLASSPATH</code>, therefore &quot;in
  1296. <code>CLASSPATH</code>&quot; shall mean &quot;either in your
  1297. <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable or
  1298. <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>&quot; for the rest of this
  1299. answer.</p>
  1300. <p>The root of the problem is that the class that needs the
  1301. external library is on the <code>CLASSPATH</code>.</p>
  1302. <p>Let's see what happens when you load the &lt;junit&gt;
  1303. task. Ant&apos;s class loader will consult the
  1304. bootstrap class loader first, which tries to load classes from
  1305. <code>CLASSPATH</code>. The bootstrap class loader
  1306. doesn&apos;t know anything about Ant&apos;s class loader or
  1307. even the path you have specified.</p>
  1308. <p>If the bootstrap class loader can load the class Ant has
  1309. asked it to load (which it can if <code>optional.jar</code> is
  1310. part of <code>CLASSPATH</code>), this class will try to load
  1311. the external library from <code>CLASSPATH</code> as well - it
  1312. doesn&apos;t know anything else - and will not find it unless
  1313. the library is in <code>CLASSPATH</code> as well.</p>
  1314. <p>To solve this, you have two major options:</p>
  1315. <ol>
  1316. <li>put all external libraries you need in
  1317. <code>CLASSPATH</code> as well this is not what you want,
  1318. otherwise you wouldn&apos;t have found this FAQ entry.</li>
  1319. <li>remove the class that loads the external library from
  1320. the <code>CLASSPATH</code>.</li>
  1321. </ol>
  1322. <p>The easiest way to do this is to remove
  1323. <code>optional.jar</code> from <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>. If
  1324. you do so, you will have to <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> all
  1325. optional tasks and use nested <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code>
  1326. elements in the <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> tasks that point
  1327. to the new location of <code>optional.jar</code>. Also,
  1328. don&apos;t forget to add the new location of
  1329. <code>optional.jar</code> to the
  1330. <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> of your
  1331. <code>&lt;style&gt;</code> or <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code>
  1332. task.</p>
  1333. <p>If you want to avoid to <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> all
  1334. optional tasks you need, the only other option is to remove
  1335. the classes that should not be loaded via the bootstrap class
  1336. loader from <code>optional.jar</code> and put them into a
  1337. separate archive. Add this separate archive to the
  1338. <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> of your
  1339. <code>&lt;style&gt;</code> or <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> task
  1340. - and make sure the separate archive is not in
  1341. <code>CLASSPATH</code>.</p>
  1342. <p>In the case of <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> you&apos;d have
  1343. to remove all classes that are in the
  1344. <code>org/apache/tools/ant/taskdefs/optional/junit</code>
  1345. directory, in the <code>&lt;style&gt;</code> case it is one of
  1346. the <code>*Liaison</code> classes in
  1347. <code>org/apache/tools/ant/taskdefs/optional</code>.</p>
  1348. <p>If you use the option to break up <code>optional.jar</code>
  1349. for <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> or remove
  1350. <code>ant-junit.jar</code>, you still have to use a
  1351. <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> with a nested
  1352. <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> to define the junit task.</p>
  1353. </answer>
  1354. </faq>
  1355. <faq id="delegating-classloader-1.6">
  1356. <question>&lt;style&gt; or &lt;junit&gt; ignores my
  1357. &lt;classpath&gt; - Ant 1.6.x version</question>
  1358. <answer>
  1359. <p>Please read <a href="#delegating-classloader">the general
  1360. entry</a> before you go ahead.</p>
  1361. <p>The wrapper script of Ant 1.6.x no longer adds the contents
  1362. of <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code> to <code>CLASSPATH</code>,
  1363. instead Ant will create a classloader on top of the bootstrap
  1364. classloader - let's call it the coreloader for the rest of
  1365. this answer - which holds the contents of
  1366. <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>. Ant's core and its tasks will be
  1367. loaded through this classloader and not the bootstrap
  1368. classloader.</p>
  1369. <p>This causes some small but notable differences between Ant
  1370. 1.5.x and 1.6.x. Most importantly, a third-party task that is
  1371. part of <code>CLASSPATH</code> will no longer work in Ant
  1372. 1.6.x since the task now can't find Ant's classes. In a sense
  1373. this is the same problem this entry is about, only
  1374. <code>ant.jar</code> has become the external library in
  1375. question now.</p>
  1376. <p>This coreloader also holds the contents of
  1377. <code>~/.ant/lib</code> and any file or directory that has
  1378. been specified using Ant's <code>-lib</code> command line
  1379. argument.</p>
  1380. <p>Let's see what happens when you load the &lt;junit&gt;
  1381. task. Ant&apos;s class loader will consult the bootstrap
  1382. class loader first, which tries to load classes from
  1383. <code>CLASSPATH</code>. The bootstrap class loader
  1384. doesn&apos;t know anything about Ant&apos;s class loader or
  1385. even the path you have specified. If it fails to find the
  1386. class using the bootstrap classloader it will try the
  1387. coreloader next. Again, the coreloader doesn't know anything
  1388. about your path.</p>
  1389. <p>If the coreloader can load the class Ant has asked it to
  1390. load (which it can if <code>ant-junit.jar</code> is in
  1391. <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>), this class will try to load the
  1392. external library from coreloader as well - it doesn&apos;t
  1393. know anything else - and will not find it unless the library
  1394. is in <code>CLASSPATH</code> or the coreloader as well.</p>
  1395. <p>To solve this, you have the following major options:</p>
  1396. <ol>
  1397. <li>put all external libraries you need in
  1398. <code>CLASSPATH</code> as well this is not what you want,
  1399. otherwise you wouldn&apos;t have found this FAQ entry.</li>
  1400. <li>put all external libraries you need in
  1401. <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code> or <code>.ant/lib</code>. This
  1402. probably still isn't what you want, but you might reconsider
  1403. the <code>.ant/lib</code> option.</li>
  1404. <li>Always start Ant with the <code>-lib</code> command line
  1405. switch and point to your external libraries (or the
  1406. directories holding them).</li>
  1407. <li>remove the class that loads the external library from
  1408. the coreloader.</li>
  1409. </ol>
  1410. <p>In Ant 1.6 <code>optional.jar</code> has been split into
  1411. multiple jars, each one containing classes with the same
  1412. dependencies on external libraries. You can move the
  1413. "offending" jar out of <code>ANT_HOME/lib</code>. For the
  1414. <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code> task it would be
  1415. <code>ant-junit.jar</code> and for <code>&lt;style&gt;</code>
  1416. it would be <code>ant-trax.jar</code>
  1417. or <code>ant-xslp.jar</code> -
  1418. depending on the processor you use.</p>
  1419. <p>If you do so, you will have to <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code>
  1420. all optional tasks that need the external library and use
  1421. nested <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> elements in the
  1422. <code>&lt;taskdef&gt;</code> tasks that point to the new
  1423. location of <code>ant-*.jar</code>. Also, don&apos;t forget
  1424. to add the new location of <code>ant-*.jar</code> to the
  1425. <code>&lt;classpath&gt;</code> of your
  1426. <code>&lt;style&gt;</code> or <code>&lt;junit&gt;</code>
  1427. task.</p>
  1428. <p>For example</p>
  1429. <source><![CDATA[
  1430. <taskdef name="junit"
  1431. class="org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.optional.junit.JUnitTask">
  1432. <classpath>
  1433. <pathelement location="HOME-OF/junit.jar"/>
  1434. <pathelement location="NEW-HOME-OF/ant-junit.jar"/>
  1435. </classpath>
  1436. </taskdef>
  1437. ]]></source>
  1438. </answer>
  1439. </faq>
  1440. <faq id="winxp-jdk14-ant14">
  1441. <question>When running Ant 1.4 on Windows XP and JDK 1.4, I get
  1442. various errors when trying to <code>&lt;exec&gt;</code>, fork
  1443. <code>&lt;java&gt;</code> or access environment
  1444. variables.</question>
  1445. <answer>
  1446. <p>Ant &lt; 1.5 doesn&apos;t recognize Windows XP as a flavor
  1447. of Windows that runs <code>CMD.EXE</code> instead of
  1448. <code>COMMAND.COM</code>. JDK 1.3 will tell Ant that Windows
  1449. XP is Windows 2000 so the problem doesn&apos;t show up
  1450. there.</p>
  1451. <p>Apart from upgrading to Ant 1.5 or better, setting the
  1452. environment variable <code>ANT_OPTS</code> to
  1453. <code>-Dos.name=Windows_NT</code> prior to invoking Ant has
  1454. been confirmed as a workaround.</p>
  1455. </answer>
  1456. </faq>
  1457. <faq id="1.5-cygwin-sh">
  1458. <question>The <code>ant</code> wrapper script of Ant 1.5 fails
  1459. for Cygwin if <code>ANT_HOME</code> is set to a Windows style
  1460. path.</question>
  1461. <answer>
  1462. <p>This problem has been reported only hours after Ant 1.5 has
  1463. been released, see <a
  1464. href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10664">Bug
  1465. 10664</a> and all its duplicates.</p>
  1466. <p>A fixed version of the wrapper script can be found <a
  1467. href="http://ant.apache.org/old-releases/v1.5/errata/">here</a>.
  1468. Simply replace your script with this version.</p>
  1469. </answer>
  1470. </faq>
  1471. <faq id="1.5.2-zip-broken">
  1472. <question><code>&lt;zip&gt;</code> is broken in Ant 1.5.2.</question>
  1473. <answer>
  1474. <p>Yes, it is.</p>
  1475. <p>The problem reported by most people - see <a
  1476. href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17648">Bug
  1477. 17648</a> and all its duplicates - is that Ant creates
  1478. archives that a partially unreadable by WinZIP. Luckily
  1479. <code>jar</code> deals with the archives and so the generated
  1480. jars/wars/ears will most likely work for you anyway.</p>
  1481. <p>There are additional problems, see bugs <a
  1482. href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17780">Bug
  1483. 17780</a>, <a
  1484. href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17871">Bug
  1485. 17871</a> and <a
  1486. href="http://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18403">Bug
  1487. 18403</a>. All of them are supposed to be fixed with Ant
  1488. 1.5.3 (and only 18403 should exist in 1.5.3beta1).</p>
  1489. </answer>
  1490. </faq>
  1491. <faq id="unknownelement.taskcontainer">
  1492. <question>
  1493. Why do my custom task containers see Unknown Elements in Ant 1.6
  1494. - they worked in Ant 1.5?
  1495. </question>
  1496. <answer>
  1497. <p>
  1498. The objects added in TaskContainer.addTask(Task task)
  1499. have changed from Tasks to UnknownElements.
  1500. </p>
  1501. <p>
  1502. There was a number of valid reasons for this change. But the backward
  1503. compatibility problems were not noticed until after Ant 1.6.0 was
  1504. released.
  1505. </p>
  1506. <p>
  1507. Your container class will need to be modified to check if the Task
  1508. is an UnknownElement and call perform on it to
  1509. convert it to a Task and to execute it.
  1510. (see apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.Sequential)
  1511. </p>
  1512. <p>
  1513. If you want to do more processing on the task,
  1514. you need to use the techniques in apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.Antlib#execute()
  1515. This does make use of one 1.6 method call (UE#getRealObject()),
  1516. you need to use UE#getTask() instead - this will
  1517. return null for non tasks (types like fileset id=x).
  1518. </p>
  1519. <p>
  1520. So.. iterate over the tasks, if they are UEs, convert them to
  1521. tasks, using UE#maybeConfigure and UE#getTask()
  1522. </p>
  1523. <source><![CDATA[
  1524. for (Iterator i = tasks.iterator(); i.hasNext();) {
  1525. Task t = (Task) i.next();
  1526. if (t instanceof UnknownElement) {
  1527. ((UnknownElement) t).maybeConfigure();
  1528. t = ((UnknownElement) t).getTask();
  1529. if (t == null) {
  1530. continue;
  1531. }
  1532. }
  1533. // .... original Custom code
  1534. }
  1535. ]]></source>
  1536. <p>
  1537. This approach should work for ant1.5 and ant1.6.
  1538. </p>
  1539. </answer>
  1540. </faq>
  1541. <faq id="java.exception.stacktrace">
  1542. <question>
  1543. The program I run via &lt;java&gt; throws an exception but I
  1544. can't seem to get the full stack trace.
  1545. </question>
  1546. <answer>
  1547. <p>This is a know bug that has been fixed after the release of
  1548. Ant 1.6.1.</p>
  1549. <p>As a workaround, run your &lt;java&gt; task with
  1550. <code>fork="true"</code> and Ant will display the full
  1551. trace.</p>
  1552. </answer>
  1553. </faq>
  1554. <faq id="junit-no-runtime-xml">
  1555. <question>
  1556. Using format=&quot;xml&quot;, &lt;junit&gt; fails with a
  1557. <code>NoClassDefFoundError</code> if forked.
  1558. </question>
  1559. <answer>
  1560. <p>The XML formatter needs the <a
  1561. href="http://www.w3.org/DOM/">DOM classes</a> to work. If you
  1562. are using JDK 1.4 or later they are included with your Java
  1563. Runtime and this problem won't occur. If you are running JDK
  1564. 1.3 or earlier, the DOM classes have to be on your
  1565. &lt;junit&gt; task's &lt;classpath&gt;.</p>
  1566. <p>Prior to Ant 1.6.0 Ant would include the DOM classes from
  1567. the XML parser that is used by Ant itself if you set the
  1568. includeAntRuntime attribute to true (the default). With Ant
  1569. 1.6.0 this has been changed as this behavior made it
  1570. impossible to use a different XML parser in your tests.</p>
  1571. <p>This means that you have to take care of the DOM classes
  1572. explicitly starting with Ant 1.6.0. If you don't need to set
  1573. up a different XML parser for your tests, the easiest solution
  1574. is to add</p>
  1575. <source><![CDATA[
  1576. <pathelement path="${ant.home}/lib/xml-apis.jar:${ant.home}/lib/xercesImpl.jar"/>
  1577. ]]></source>
  1578. <p>to your task's &lt;classpath&gt;.</p>
  1579. </answer>
  1580. </faq>
  1581. <faq id="xalan-jdk1.5">
  1582. <question>
  1583. <code>&lt;junitreport&gt;</code> doesn't work with JDK 1.5 but
  1584. worked fine with JDK 1.4.
  1585. </question>
  1586. <answer>
  1587. <p>While JDK 1.4.x contains a version of Xalan-J 2, JDK 1.5
  1588. (and later?) have <a
  1589. href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/compatibility.html#4959783">moved
  1590. to XSLTC</a>. Since this task uses Xalan's redirect
  1591. extensions for its internal stylesheet, Ant prior to 1.6.2 didn't support
  1592. XSLTC. This means that you have to install <a
  1593. href="http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/">Xalan-J 2</a> in order
  1594. to use this task with JDK 1.5 in older versions of Ant.</p>
  1595. <p>Starting with Ant 1.6.2 <code>&lt;junitreport&gt;</code>
  1596. supports JDK 1.5.</p>
  1597. </answer>
  1598. </faq>
  1599. </faqsection>
  1600. </document>