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- <html>
- <head>
- <title>Tutorial: Tasks using Properties & Filesets</title>
- <meta name="author" content="Jan Matèrne">
- <style type="text/css">
- <!--
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- </head>
- <body>
- <h1>Tutorial: Tasks using Properties & Filesets</h1>
-
- <p>After reading the tutorial about <a href="tutorial-writing-tasks.html">writing
- tasks</a> this tutorial explains how to get and set properties and how to use
- nested filesets and paths.</p>
-
- <h2>Content</h2>
- <p><ul>
- <li><a href="#s">s</a></li>
- </ul></p>
-
-
- <a name="goal"/>
- <h2>The goal</h2>
- <p>The goal is to write a task, which searchs in a path for a file and saves the
- location of that file in a property.</p>
-
-
- <a name="buildenvironment"/>
- <h2>Build environment</h2>
- <p>We can use the buildfile from the other tutorial and modify it a little bit.
- That´s the advantage of using properties - we can reuse nearly the whole script. :-)</p>
- <pre class="code">
- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
- <project name="<b>FindTask</b>" basedir="." default="test">
- ...
- <target name="use.init" description="Taskdef´ the <b>Find</b>-Task" depends="jar">
- <taskdef name="<b>find</b>" classname="<b>Find</b>" classpath="${ant.project.name}.jar"/>
- </target>
-
- <b><!-- the other use.* targets are deleted --></b>
- ...
- </project>
- </pre>
-
-
- <a name="propertyaccess"/>
- <h2>Property access</h2>
- <p>Our first step is to set a property to a value and print the value of property. So our scenario
- would be
- <pre class="code">
- <find property="test" value="test-value"/>
- <find print="test"/>
- </pre>
- ok, can be rewritten with the core tasks
- <pre class="code">
- <property name="test" value="test-value"/>
- <echo message="${test}"/>
- </pre>
- but I have to start on known ground :-)</p>
- <p>So what to do? Handling three attributes (property, value, print) and an execute. Because this
- is only an introduction example I don´t do much checking:
-
- <pre class="code">
- import org.apache.tools.ant.BuildException;
-
- public class Find extends Task {
-
- private String property;
- private String value;
- private String print;
-
- public void setProperty(String property) {
- this.property = property;
- }
-
- // setter for value and print
-
- public void execute() {
- if (print != null) {
- String propValue = <b>getProject().getProperty(print)</b>;
- log(propValue);
- } else {
- if (property == null) throw new BuildException("property not set");
- if (value == null) throw new BuildException("value not set");
- <b>getProject().setNewProperty(property, value)</b>;
- }
- }
- }
- </pre>
-
- As said in the other tutorial, the property access is done via Project instance.
- This instance we get via the public <tt>getProject()</tt> method which we inherit from
- <tt>Task</tt> (more precise from ProjectComponent). Reading a property is done via
- <tt>getProperty(<i>propertyname</i>)</tt> (very simple, isn´t it?). This property returns
- the value (String) or <i>null</i> if not set.<br>
- Setting a property is ... not really difficult, but there is more than one setter. You can
- use the <tt>setProperty()</tt> method which will do the job like expected. But there is
- a golden rule in Ant: <i>properties are immutable</i>. And this method sets the property
- to the specified value - whether it has a value before that or not. So we use another
- way. <tt>setNewProperty()</tt> sets the property only if there is no property with that
- name. Otherwise a message is logged.</p>
-
- <p><i>(by the way: a short word to ants "namespaces" (don´t
- be confused with xml namespaces which will be also introduces in the future (1.6 or 1.7):
- an <antcall> creates a new space for property names. All properties from the caller
- are passed to the callee, but the callee can set its own properties without notice by the
- caller.)</i></p>
-
- <p>There are some other setter, too (but I haven´t used them, so I can´t say something
- to them, sorry :-)</p>
-
- <p>After putting our two line example from above into a target names <tt>use.simple</tt>
- we can call that from our testcase:
-
- <pre class="code">
- import org.apache.tools.ant.BuildFileTest;
-
- public class FindTest extends BuildFileTest {
-
- public FindTest(String name) {
- super(name);
- }
-
- public void setUp() {
- configureProject("build.xml");
- }
-
- public void testSimple() {
- <b>expectLog("use.simple", "test-value");</b>
- }
- }
- </pre>
-
- and all works fine.</p>
-
-
-
- <a name="filesets"/>
- <h2>Using filesets</h2>
- <p>Ant provides a common way of bundling files: the fileset. Because you are reading
- this tutorial I think you know them and I don´t have to spend more explanations about
- their usage in buildfiles. Our goal is to search a file in path. And on this step the
- path is simply a fileset (or more precise: a collection of filesets). So our usage
- would be
- <pre class="code">
- <find file="ant.jar" location="location.ant-jar">
- <fileset dir="${ant.home}" includes="**/*.jar"/>
- </find>
- </pre>
- </p>
-
- <p>What do we need? A task with two attributes (file, location) and nested
- filesets. Because we had attribute handling already in the example above and the handling
- of nested elements is described in the other tutorial the code should be very easy:
- <pre class="code">
- public class Find extends Task {
-
- private String file;
- private String location;
- private Vector filesets = new Vector();
-
- public void setFile(String file) {
- this.file = file;
- }
-
- public void setLocation(String location) {
- this.location = location;
- }
-
- public void addFileset(FileSet fileset) {
- filesets.add(fileset);
- }
-
- public void execute() {
- }
- }
- </pre>
- Ok - that task wouldn´t do very much, but we can use it in the described manner without
- failure. On next step we have to implement the execute method. And before that we will
- implement the appropriate testcases (TDD - test driven development).</p>
-
- <p>In the other tutorial we have reused the already written targets of our buildfile.
- Now we will configure most of the testcases via java code (sometimes it´s much easier
- to write a target than doing it via java coding). What can be tested?<ul>
- <li>not valid configured task (missing file, missing location, missing fileset)</li>
- <li>don´t find a present file</li>
- <li>behaviour if file can´t be found</li>
- </ul>
- Maybe you find some more testcases. But this is enough for now.<br>
- For each of these points we create a <tt>testXX</tt> method.</p>
-
- <pre class="code">
- public class FindTest extends BuildFileTest {
-
- ... // constructor, setUp as above
-
- public void testMissingFile() {
- <b>Find find = new Find();</b>
- try {
- <b>find.execute();</b>
- fail("No 'no-file'-exception thrown.");
- } catch (Exception e) {
- // exception expected
- String expected = "file not set";
- assertEquals("Wrong exception message.", expected, e.getMessage());
- }
- }
-
- public void testMissingLocation() {
- Find find = new Find();
- <b>find.setFile("ant.jar");</b>
- try {
- find.execute();
- fail("No 'no-location'-exception thrown.");
- } catch (Exception e) {
- ... // similar to testMissingFile()
- }
- }
-
- public void testMissingFileset() {
- Find find = new Find();
- find.setFile("ant.jar");
- find.setLocation("location.ant-jar");
- try {
- find.execute();
- fail("No 'no-fileset'-exception thrown.");
- } catch (Exception e) {
- ... // similar to testMissingFile()
- }
- }
-
- public void testFileNotPresent() {
- executeTarget("testFileNotPresent");
- String result = getProject().getProperty("location.ant-jar");
- assertNull("Property set to wrong value.", result);
- }
-
- public void testFilePresent() {
- executeTarget("testFilePresent");
- String result = getProject().getProperty("location.ant-jar");
- assertNotNull("Property not set.", result);
- assertTrue("Wrong file found.", result.endsWith("ant.jar"));
- }
- }
- </pre>
-
- <p>If we run this test class all test cases (except <i>testFileNotPresent</i>) fail. No we
- can implement our task, so that these test cases will pass.</p>
-
- <pre class="code">
- protected void validate() {
- if (file==null) throw new BuildException("file not set");
- if (location==null) throw new BuildException("location not set");
- if (filesets.size()<1) throw new BuildException("fileset not set");
- }
-
- public void execute() {
- validate(); // 1
- String foundLocation = null;
- for(Iterator itFSets = filesets.iterator(); itFSets.hasNext(); ) { // 2
- FileSet fs = (FileSet)itFSets.next();
- DirectoryScanner ds = fs.getDirectoryScanner(getProject()); // 3
- String[] includedFiles = ds.getIncludedFiles();
- for(int i=0; i<includedFiles.length; i++) {
- String filename = includedFiles[i].replace('\\','/'); // 4
- filename = filename.substring(filename.lastIndexOf("/")+1);
- if (foundLocation==null && file.equals(filename)) {
- File base = ds.getBasedir(); // 5
- File found = new File(base, includedFiles[i]);
- foundLocation = found.getAbsolutePath();
- }
- }
- }
- if (foundLocation!=null) // 6
- getProject().setNewProperty(location, foundLocation);
- }
- </pre>
-
- <p>On <b>//1</b> we check the prerequisites for our task. Doing that in a <tt>validate</tt>-method
- is a common way, because we separate the prerequisites from the real work. On <b>//2</b> we iterate
- over all nested filesets. We we don´t want to handle multiple filesets, the <tt>addFileset()</tt>
- method has to reject the further calls. We can get the result of fileset via its DirectoryScanner
- like done <b>//3</b>. After that we create a plattform independend String representation of
- the file path (<b>//4</b>, can be done in other ways of course). We have to do the <tt>replace()</tt>,
- because we work with a simple string comparison. Ant itself is platform independant and can
- therefore run on filesystems with slash (/, e.g. Linux) or backslash (\, e.g. Windows) as
- path separator. Therefore we have to unify that. If we found our file we create an absolute
- path representation on <b>//5</b>, so that we can use that information without knowing the basedir.
- (This is very important on use with multiple filesets, because they can have different basedirs
- and the return value of the directory scanner is relative to its basedir.) Finally we store the
- location of the file as property, if we had found one (<b>//6</b>).</p>
-
- <p>Ok, much more easier in this simple case would be to add the <i>file</i> as additional
- <i>include</i> element to all filesets. But I wanted to show how to handle complex situations
- whithout being complex :-)</p>
-
- <p>The test case uses the ant property <i>ant.home</i> as reference. This property is set by the
- <tt>Launcher</tt> class which starts ant. We can use that property in our buildfiles as a build-in
- property (see [XXX]). But if we create a new ant environment we have to set that value for our own.
- And we use the <junit< task in fork-mode. Therefore we have do modify our buildfile:
- <pre class="code">
- <target name="junit" description="Runs the unit tests" depends="jar">
- <delete dir="${junit.out.dir.xml}" />
- <mkdir dir="${junit.out.dir.xml}" />
- <junit printsummary="yes" haltonfailure="no">
- <classpath refid="classpath.test"/>
- <b><sysproperty key="ant.home" value="${ant.home}"/></b>
- <formatter type="xml"/>
- <batchtest fork="yes" todir="${junit.out.dir.xml}">
- <fileset dir="${src.dir}" includes="**/*Test.java"/>
- </batchtest>
- </junit>
- </target>
- </pre>
-
-
- <a name="path"/>
- <h2>Using nested paths</h2>
- <p>A task providing support for filesets is a very comfortable one. But there is another
- possibility of bundling files: the <path>. Fileset are easy if the files are all under
- a common base directory. But if this is not the case you have a problem. Another disadvantage
- is its speed: if you have only a few files in a huge directory structure, why not use a
- <fileset> instead? <path>s combines these datatypes in that way that a path contains
- other paths, filesets, dirsets and filelists. This is way <a href="">Ant-Contribs [XXX]</a>
- <foreach> task is modified to support paths instead of filesets. So we want that, too.</p>
-
- <p>Changing from fileset to path support is very easy:</p>
- <pre class="code">
- <i><b>Change java code from:</b></i>
- private Vector filesets = new Vector();
- public void addFileset(FileSet fileset) {
- filesets.add(fileset);
- }
- <i><b>to:</b></i>
- private Vector paths = new Vector(); *1
- public void add<b>Path</b>(<b>Path</b> path) { *2
- paths.add(path);
- }
- <i><b>and build file from:</b></i>
- <find file="ant.jar" location="location.ant-jar">
- <fileset dir="${ant.home}" includes="**/*.jar"/>
- </find>
- <i><b>to:</b></i>
- <find file="ant.jar" location="location.ant-jar">
- <b><path></b> *3
- <fileset dir="${ant.home}" includes="**/*.jar"/>
- </path>
- </find>
- </pre>
- <p>On <b>*1</b> we rename only the vector. It´s just for better reading the source. On <b>*2</b>
- we have to provide the right method: an add<i>Name</i>(<i>Type</i> t). Therefore replace the
- fileset with path here. Finally we have to modify our buildfile on <b>*3</b> because our task
- don´t support nested filesets any longer. So we wrap the fileset inside a path.</p>
-
- <p>And now we modify the testcase. Oh, not very much to do :-) Renaming the <tt>testMissingFileset()</tt>
- (not really a <i>must-be</i> but better it´s named like the think it does) and update the
- <i>expected</i>-String in that method (now a <tt>path not set</tt> message is expected). The more complex
- test cases base on the buildscript. So the targets <tt>testFileNotPresent</tt> and <tt>testFilePresent</tt> have to be
- modified in the manner described above.</p>
-
- <p>The test are finished. Now we have to adapt the task implementation. The easiest modification is
- in the <tt>validate()</tt> method where we change le last line to <tt>if (paths.size()<1) throw new
- BuildException("path not set");</tt>. In the <tt>execute()</tt> method we have a liitle more work.
- ... mmmh ... in reality it´s lesser work, because the Path class does a the whole DirectoryScanner-handling
- and creating absolute paths stuff for us. So the execute method is just:</p>
-
- <pre class="code">
- public void execute() {
- validate();
- String foundLocation = null;
- for(Iterator itPaths = paths.iterator(); itPaths.hasNext(); ) {
- Path path = (<b>Path</b>)itPaths.next(); // 1
- String[] includedFiles = <b>path.list()</b>; // 2
- for(int i=0; i<includedFiles.length; i++) {
- String filename = includedFiles[i].replace('\\','/');
- filename = filename.substring(filename.lastIndexOf("/")+1);
- if (foundLocation==null && file.equals(filename)) {
- <b>foundLocation = includedFiles[i];</b> // 3
- }
- }
- }
- if (foundLocation!=null)
- getProject().setNewProperty(location, foundLocation);
- }
- </pre>
-
- <p>Of course we have to do the typecase to Path on <b>//1</b>. On <b>//2</b> and <b>//3</b>
- we see that the Path class does the work for us: no DirectoryScanner (was at 2) and no
- creating of the absolute path (was at 3).</p>
-
-
-
- <a name="returning-list"/>
- <h2>Returning a list</h2>
- <p>So far so good. But could a file be on more than one place in the path? - Of course.<br>
- And would it be good to get all of them? - It depends on ...<p>
-
- <p>In this section we will extend that task to support returning a list of all files.
- Lists as property values are not supported by Ant natively. So we have to see how other
- tasks use lists. The most famous task using lists is Ant-Contribs <foreach>. All list
- elements are concatenated and separated with a customizable separator (default ',').</p>
-
- <p>So we do the following:</p>
-
- <pre class="code">
- <find ... <b>delimiter=""</b>/> ... </find>
- </pre>
-
- <p>If the delimiter is set we will return all found files as list with that delimiter.</p>
-
- <p>Therefore we have to<ul>
- <li>provide a new attribute</li>
- <li>collect more than the first file</li>
- <li>delete duplicates</li>
- <li>create the list if necessary</li>
- <li>return that list</li>
- </ul></p>
-
- <p>So we add as testcase:</p>
- <pre class="code">
- <b><i>in the buildfile:</i></b>
- <target name="test.init">
- <mkdir dir="test1/dir11/dir111"/> *1
- <mkdir dir="test1/dir11/dir112"/>
- ...
- <touch file="test1/dir11/dir111/test"/>
- <touch file="test1/dir11/dir111/not"/>
- ...
- <touch file="test1/dir13/dir131/not2"/>
- <touch file="test1/dir13/dir132/test"/>
- <touch file="test1/dir13/dir132/not"/>
- <touch file="test1/dir13/dir132/not2"/>
- <mkdir dir="test2"/>
- <copy todir="test2"> *2
- <fileset dir="test1"/>
- </copy>
- </target>
-
- <target name="testMultipleFiles" depends="use.init,<b>test.init</b>"> *3
- <find file="test" location="location.test" <b>delimiter=";"</b>>
- <path>
- <fileset dir="test1"/>
- <fileset dir="test2"/>
- </path>
- </find>
- <delete> *4
- <fileset dir="test1"/>
- <fileset dir="test2"/>
- </delete>
- </target>
-
- <b><i>in the test class:</i></b>
- public void testMultipleFiles() {
- executeTarget("testMultipleFiles");
- String result = getProject().getProperty("location.test");
- assertNotNull("Property not set.", result);
- assertTrue("Only one file found.", result.indexOf(";") > -1);
- }
- </pre>
-
- <p>Now we need a directory structure where we CAN find files with the same
- name in different directories. Because we can´t sure to have one we create
- one on <b>*1, *2</b>. And of course we clean up that on <b>*4</b>. The creation
- can be done inside our test target or in a separate one, which will be better
- for reuse later (<b>*3</b>).
-
- <p>The task implementation is modified as followed:</p>
-
- <pre class="code">
- private Vector foundFiles = new Vector();
- ...
- private String delimiter = null;
- ...
- public void setDelimiter(String delim) {
- delimiter = delim;
- }
- ...
- public void execute() {
- validate();
- // find all files
- for(Iterator itPaths = paths.iterator(); itPaths.hasNext(); ) {
- Path path = (Path)itPaths.next();
- String[] includedFiles = path.list();
- for(int i=0; i<includedFiles.length; i++) {
- String filename = includedFiles[i].replace('\\','/');
- filename = filename.substring(filename.lastIndexOf("/")+1);
- if (file.equals(filename) && <b>!foundFiles.contains(includedFiles[i]</b>)) { // 1
- foundFiles.add(includedFiles[i]);
- }
- }
- }
-
- // create the return value (list/single)
- String rv = null;
- if (foundFiles.size() > 0) { // 2
- if (delimiter==null) {
- // only the first
- rv = (String)foundFiles.elementAt(0);
- } else {
- // create list
- StringBuffer list = new StringBuffer();
- for(Iterator it=foundFiles.iterator(); it.hasNext(); ) { // 3
- list.append(it.next());
- if (<b>it.hasNext()</b>) list.append(delimiter); // 4
- }
- rv = list.toString();
- }
- }
-
- // create the property
- if (rv!=null)
- getProject().setNewProperty(location, rv);
- }
- </pre>
-
- <p>The algorithm does: finding all files, creating the return value depending on the users
- wish, returning the value as property. On <b>//1</b> we eliminates the duplicates. <b>//2</b>
- ensures that we create the return value only if we have found one file. On <b>//3</b> we
- iterate over all found files and <b>//4</b> ensures that the last entry has no trailing
- delimiter.</p>
-
- <p>Ok, first searching for all files and then returning only the first one ... You can
- tune the performance of your own :-)</p>
-
-
- <a name="documentation"/>
- <h2>Documentation</h2>
- <p>A task is useless if the only who is able to code the buildfile is the task developer
- (and he only the next few weeks :-). So documentation is also very important. In which
- form you do that depends on your favourite. But inside Ant there is a common format and
- it has advantages if you use that: all task users know that form, this form is requested if
- you decide to contribute your task. So we will doc our task in that form.</p>
-
- <p>If you have a look at the manual page of the <a href="">java [XXX]</a> task you will see<ul>
- <li>it is plain html</li>
- <li>starts with the name</li>
- <li>has sections: description, parameters, nested elements, (maybe return codes) and (most
- important :-) examples</li>
- <li>parameters are listed in a table with columns for attribute name, its description and whether
- it´s required (if you add a feature after an Ant release, provide a <tt>since Ant xx</tt>
- statement when it´s introduced)</li>
- <li>describe the nested elements (since-statement if necessary)</li>
- <li>provide one or more useful examples; first code then description</li>
- </ul>
- As a template we have:
-
- <pre class="code">
- <html>
-
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us">
- <title> <b>Taskname</b> Task</title>
- </head>
-
- <body>
-
- <h2><a name="<i>taskname</i>"><b>Taskname</b></a></h2>
- <h3>Description</h3>
- <p> <b>Describe the task.</b></p>
-
- <h3>Parameters</h3>
- <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top"><b>Attribute</b></td>
- <td valign="top"><b>Description</b></td>
- <td align="center" valign="top"><b>Required</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <b>do this html row for each attribute (including inherited attributes)</b>
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">classname</td>
- <td valign="top">the Java class to execute.</td>
- <td align="center" valign="top">Either jar or classname</td>
- </tr>
-
- </table>
-
- <h3>Parameters specified as nested elements</h3>
-
- <b>Describe each nested element (including inherited)</b>
- <h4><b>your nested element</b></h4>
- <p> <b>description</b> </p>
- <p><em>since Ant 1.6</em>.</p>
-
- <h3>Examples</h3>
- <pre>
- <b>A code sample; don´t forget to escape the < of the tags with &lt;</b>
- </pre>
- <b>what should that example do?</b>
-
- </body>
- </html>
- </pre>
-
- <p>For our task we have <a href="">that [XXX]</a>:</p>
- <pre class="code">
- <html>
-
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us">
- <title> Find Task</title>
- </head>
-
- <body>
-
- <h2><a name="find">Find</a></h2>
- <h3>Description</h3>
- <p>Searchs in a given path for a file and returns the absolute to it as property.
- If delimiter is set this task returns all found locations.</p>
-
- <h3>Parameters</h3>
- <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top"><b>Attribute</b></td>
- <td valign="top"><b>Description</b></td>
- <td align="center" valign="top"><b>Required</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">file</td>
- <td valign="top">The name of the file to search.</td>
- <td align="center" valign="top">yes</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">location</td>
- <td valign="top">The name of the property where to store the location</td>
- <td align="center" valign="top">yes</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">delimiter</td>
- <td valign="top">A delimiter to use when returning the list</td>
- <td align="center" valign="top">only if the list is required</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
- <h3>Parameters specified as nested elements</h3>
-
- <h4>path</h4>
- <p>The path where to search the file.</p>
-
- <h3>Examples</h3>
- <pre>
- <find file="ant.jar" location="loc">
- <path>
- <fileset dir="${ant.home}"/>
- <path>
- </find>
- </pre>
- Searches in Ants home directory for a file <i>ant.jar</i> and stores its location in
- property <i>loc</i> (should be ANT_HOME/bin/ant.jar).
-
- <pre>
- <find file="ant.jar" location="loc" delimiter=";">
- <path>
- <fileset dir="C:/"/>
- <path>
- </find>
- <echo>ant.jar found in: ${loc}</echo>
- </pre>
- Searches in Windows C: drive for all <i>ant.jar</i> and stores their locations in
- property <i>loc</i> delimited with <i>';'</i>. (should need a long time :-)
- After that it prints out the result (e.g. C:/ant-1.5.4/bin/ant.jar;C:/ant-1.6/bin/ant.jar).
-
- </body>
- </html>
- </pre>
-
-
- <a name="contribute"/>
- <h2>Contribute the new task</h2>
- If we decide to contribute our task, we should do some things:<ul>
- <li>is our task welcome? :-) Simply ask on the user list</li>
- <li>is the right package used? </li>
- <li>is the code conform to the styleguide?</li>
- <li>do all tests pass? </li>
- <li>does the code compile on JDK 1.2 (and passes all tests there)?</li>
- <li>code under Apache license</li>
- <li>create a patch file</li>
- <li>publishing that patch file</li>
- </ul>
- The <a href="">Ant Task Guidelines [XXX]</a> support additional information on that.</p>
-
- <p>Now we will check the "Checklist before submitting a new task" described in that guideline.
- <ul>
- <li>Java file begins with Apache copyright and license statement. <b><i>must do that</i></b></li>
- <li>Task does not depend on GPL or LGPL code. <b><i>ok</i></b></li>
- <li>Source code complies with style guidelines <b><i>have to check (checkstyle)</i></b></li>
- <li>Code compiles and runs on Java1.2 <b><i>have to try</i></b></li>
- <li>Member variables are private, and provide public accessor methods
- if access is actually needed. <b><i>have to check (checkstyle)</i></b></li>
- <li><i>Maybe</i> Task has failonerror attribute to control failure behaviour <b><i>hasn´t</i></b></li>
- <li>New test cases written and succeed <b><i>passed on JDK 1.4, have to try on JDK 1.2</i></b></li>
- <li>Documentation page written <b><i>ok</i></b></li>
- <li>Example task declarations in the documentation tested. <b><i>ok (used in tests)</i></b></li>
- <li>Patch files generated using cvs diff -u <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- <li>patch files include a patch to defaults.properties to register the
- tasks <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- <li>patch files include a patch to coretasklist.html or
- optionaltasklist.html to link to the new task page <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- <li>Message to dev contains [SUBMIT] and task name in subject <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- <li>Message body contains a rationale for the task <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- <li>Message attachments contain the required files -source, documentation,
- test and patches zipped up to escape the HTML filter. <b><i>to do</i></b></li>
- </ul>
-
-
- <h3>Package / Directories</h3>
- This task does not depend any external library. Therefore we can use this as
- a core task. This task contains only one class. So we can use the standardd package
- for core tasks: <tt>org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs</tt>. Implementations are in the
- directory <tt>src/main</tt>, tests in <tt>src/testcases</tt> and buildfiles for
- tests in <tt>src/etc/testcases</tt>.
-
-
- <h3>Apache copyright and license statement</h3>
- <p>Simply copy the license text from one the other source from the Ant source tree. But
- ensure that the current year is used in the<tt> * Copyright (c) 2000-2003 The Apache Software
- Foundation. All rights reserved.</tt> lines.
-
-
- <h3>Checkstyle</h3>
- There are many things we have to ensure. Indentation with 4 spaces, blanks here and there, ...
- (all described in the <a href="">Ant Task Guidelines [XXX]</a> which includes the
- <a href="">Sun code style [XXX]</a>. Because there are so many things we would be happy
- to have a tool for do the checks. There is one: checkstyle. Checkstyle is available
- at <a href="">Sourceforge [XXX]</a> and Ant provides with the <tt>check.xml</tt> a buildfile
- which will do the job for us.
-
- <h3>Test on JDK 1.2</h3>
-
- <h3>Creating the diff</h3>
-
- <h3>Publish the task</h3>
-
-
-
-
- <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
- - stichpunkte siehe ... manual
- - ist das richtige package gewählt worden?
- - checkstyle
- - tests
- - dokumentation
- - jdk 1.2
- - patch erstellen
- - bugzilla / mailingliste
-
-
-
-
- <a name="resources"/>
- <h2>Resources</h2>
- -- text durchsehen
- [1] <a href="http://ant.apache.org/manual/using.html#built-in-props">http://ant.apache.org/manual/using.html#built-in-props</a><br/>
-
- <hr>
- <p align="center">Copyright © 2003 Apache Software Foundation. All rights
- Reserved.</p>
-
- </body>
- </html>
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