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- <html lang="en">
-
- <head>
- <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../stylesheets/style.css">
- <title>Script Task</title>
- </head>
-
- <body>
-
- <h2 id="script">Script</h2>
- <h3>Description</h3>
- <p>Execute a script in a <a href="https://jakarta.apache.org/bsf" target="_top">Apache BSF</a>
- or <a href="https://jcp.org/aboutJava/communityprocess/maintenance/jsr223/223ChangeLog.html"
- target="_top">JSR 223</a> supported language.
- </p>
- <p><strong>Note</strong>: This task depends on external libraries not included in the Apache Ant
- distribution. See <a href="../install.html#librarydependencies">Library Dependencies</a> for more
- information.</p>
- <p>The task may use the BSF scripting manager or the JSR 223 manager that is included in the JDK.
- This is controlled by the <var>manager</var> attribute. The JSR 223 scripting manager is
- indicated by <q>javax</q>.</p>
- <p>All items (tasks, targets, etc) of the running project are accessible from the script, using
- either their <var>name</var> or <var>id</var> attributes (as long as their names are considered
- valid Java identifiers, that is). This is controlled by the <var>setbeans</var> attribute of the
- task. The name <code class="code">project</code> is a pre-defined reference to the Project, which
- can be used instead of the project name. The name <code class="code">self</code> is a pre-defined
- reference to the actual <code><script></code>-Task instance.<br/>From these objects you have
- access to the Ant Java API, see the <a href="../api/index.html">JavaDoc</a> (especially
- for <a href="../api/org/apache/tools/ant/Project.html">Project</a>
- and <a href="../api/org/apache/tools/ant/taskdefs/optional/Script.html">Script</a>) for more
- information.</p>
- <p>If you are using JavaScript under BSF, a good resource
- is <a href="https://www.mozilla.org/rhino/doc.html"
- target="_top">https://www.mozilla.org/rhino/doc.html</a> as we are using their JavaScript
- interpreter.</p>
- <p>Scripts can do almost anything a task written in Java could do.</p>
- <p>Rhino provides a special construct—the <code>JavaAdapter</code>. With that you can create
- an object which implements several interfaces, extends classes and for which you can overwrite
- methods. Because this is an undocumented feature (yet), here is the link to an
- explanation: <a href="https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/netscape.public.mozilla.jseng/YlRQE0OvM8c/F8Mvq-XkpxcJ"
- target="_top">Google Groups: "Rhino, enum.js, JavaAdapter?"</a> by Norris Boyd in the
- newsgroup <em>netscape.public.mozilla.jseng</em>.</p>
-
- <p>If you are creating Targets programmatically, make sure you set the Location to a useful value.
- In particular all targets should have different location values.</p>
-
- <h3>Parameters</h3>
- <table class="attr">
- <tr>
- <th scope="col">Attribute</th>
- <th scope="col">Description</th>
- <th scope="col">Required</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>language</td>
- <td>The programming language the script is written in. Must be a supported Apache BSF or JSR
- 223 language</td>
- <td>Yes</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>manager</td>
- <td>
- <em>Since Ant 1.7</em>. The script engine manager to use. This can have one of three
- values: <q>auto</q>, <q>bsf</q> or <q>javax</q>.
- <ul>
- <li><q>bsf</q> use the BSF scripting manager to run the language.</li>
- <li><q>javax</q> use the <code>javax.scripting</code> manager to run the language.</li>
- <li><q>auto</q> use the BSF engine if it exists, otherwise use
- the <code>javax.scripting</code> manager.</li>
- </ul>
- </td>
- <td>No; default is <q>auto</q></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>src</td>
- <td>The location of the script as a file, if not inline</td>
- <td>No</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>encoding</td>
- <td>The encoding of the script as a file. <em>Since Ant 1.10.2</em>.</td>
- <td>No; defaults to default JVM character encoding</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>setbeans</td>
- <td>This attribute controls whether to set variables for all properties, references and targets
- in the running script. If this attribute is <q>false</q>, only the <code>project</code> and
- <code>self</code> variables are set. If this attribute is <q>true</q> all the variables are
- set. <em>Since Ant 1.7</em></td>
- <td>No; defaults to <q>true</q></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>classpath</td>
- <td>The classpath to pass into the script. <em>Since Ant 1.7</em></td>
- <td>No</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>classpathref</td>
- <td>The classpath to use, given as a <a href="../using.html#references">reference</a> to a path
- defined elsewhere.
- <em>Since Ant 1.7</em></td>
- <td>No</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- <h3>Parameters specified as nested elements</h3>
- <h4>classpath</h4>
- <p><em>Since Ant 1.7</em></p>
- <p><code>Script</code>'s <var>classpath</var> attribute is a <a href="../using.html#path">path-like
- structure</a> and can also be set via a nested <code><classpath></code> element.
- </p>
- <p>If a classpath is set, it will be used as the current thread context classloader, and as the
- classloader given to the BSF manager. This means that it can be used to specify the classpath
- containing the language implementation for BSF or for JSR 223 managers. This can be useful if one
- wants to keep <samp>${user.home}/.ant/lib</samp> free of lots of scripting language specific jar
- files.</p>
- <p><strong>Note</strong>: (<em>since Ant 1.7.1</em>) This classpath <em>can</em> be used to specify
- the location of the BSF jar file and/or languages that have engines in the BSF jar file. This
- includes the <q>javascript</q>, <q>jython</q>, <q>netrexx</q> and <q>jacl</q> languages.</p>
- <h3>Examples</h3>
- <p>The following snippet shows use of five different languages:</p>
- <pre>
- <property name="message" value="Hello world"/>
-
- <script language="groovy">
- println("message is " + message)
- </script>
-
- <script language="beanshell">
- System.out.println("message is " + message);
- </script>
-
- <script language="judoscript">
- println 'message is ', message
- </script>
-
- <script language="ruby">
- print 'message is ', $message, "\n"
- </script>
-
- <script language="jython">
- print "message is %s" % message
- </script></pre>
- <p>Note that for the <q>jython</q> example, the script contents <strong>must</strong> start on the
- first column.</p>
- <p>Note also that for the <q>ruby</q> example, the names of the set variables are prefixed by
- a <q>$</q>.</p>
- <p>The following script shows a little more complicated JRuby example:</p>
- <pre>
- <script language="ruby">
- xmlfiles = Dir.new(".").entries.delete_if { |i| ! (i =~ /\.xml$/) }
- xmlfiles.sort.each { |i| $self.log(i) }
- </script></pre>
- <p>The same example in Groovy is:</p>
- <pre>
- <script language="groovy">
- xmlfiles = new java.io.File(".").listFiles().findAll{ it =~ "\.xml$"}
- xmlfiles.sort().each { self.log(it.toString()) }
- </script></pre>
- <p>The following example shows the use of classpath to specify the location of the beanshell jar
- file.</p>
- <pre>
- <script language="beanshell" setbeans="true">
- <classpath>
- <fileset dir="${user.home}/lang/beanshell" includes="*.jar"/>
- </classpath>
- System.out.println("Hello world");
- </script></pre>
- <p>The following script uses JavaScript to create a number of <code>echo</code> tasks and execute
- them.</p>
- <pre>
- <project name="squares" default="main" basedir=".">
- <target name="main">
- <script language="javascript"> <![CDATA[
- for (i = 1; i <= 10; i++) {
- echo = squares.createTask("echo");
- echo.setMessage(i*i);
- echo.perform();
- }
- ]]> </script>
- </target>
- </project></pre>
- <p>generates</p>
- <pre>
- main:
- 1
- 4
- 9
- 16
- 25
- 36
- 49
- 64
- 81
- 100
-
- BUILD SUCCESSFUL</pre>
-
- <p>Now a more complex example using the Java API and the Ant API. The goal is to list the file sizes
- of all files a <code><fileset/></code> caught.</p>
- <pre>
- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
- <project name="<span style="color:blue">MyProject</span>" basedir="." default="main">
-
- <property name="fs.dir" value="src"/>
- <property name="fs.includes" value="**/*.txt"/>
- <property name="fs.excludes" value="**/*.tmp"/>
-
- <target name="main">
- <script language="javascript"> <![CDATA[
- // import statements
- <span style="color:blue">// importPackage(java.io)</span>;
- <span style="color:blue">importClass(java.io.File)</span>;
- // Nashorn syntax
- // <span style="color:blue">load("nashorn:mozilla_compat.js");</span>
- // or
- // <span style="color:blue">var File = Java.type('java.io.File');</span>
-
-
- // Access to Ant-Properties by their names
- dir = <span style="color:blue">project</span>.getProperty("fs.dir");
- includes = <span style="color:blue">MyProject</span>.getProperty("fs.includes");
- excludes = <span style="color:blue">self.getProject()</span>.<span style="color:blue">getProperty("fs.excludes")</span>;
-
- // Create a <fileset dir="" includes=""/>
- fs = project.<span style="color:blue">createDataType("fileset")</span>;
- fs.setDir(new File(dir));
- <span style="color:blue">fs.setIncludes(includes)</span>;
- fs.setExcludes(excludes);
-
- // Get the files (array) of that fileset
- ds = fs.getDirectoryScanner(project);
- srcFiles = ds.getIncludedFiles();
-
- // iterate over that array
- for (i = 0; i < srcFiles.length; i++) {
-
- // get the values via Java API
- var basedir = fs.getDir(project);
- var filename = srcFiles[i];
- var file = <span style="color:blue">new File(basedir, filename)</span>;
- var size = file.length();
-
- // create and use a Task via Ant API
- echo = MyProject.<span style="color:blue">createTask("echo")</span>;
- echo.setMessage(filename + ": " + size + " byte");
- echo.<span style="color:blue">perform()</span>;
- }
- ]]></script>
- </target>
- </project></pre>
- <p>We want to use the Java API. Because we don't want always typing the package signature we do an
- import. Rhino knows two different methods for import statements: one for packages and one for a
- single class. By default only the <code>java</code> packages are available,
- so <code class="code">java.lang.System</code> can be directly imported
- with <code>importClass</code>/<code>importPackage</code>. For other packages you have to prefix the
- full classified name with <strong>Packages</strong>. For example
- Ant's <code class="code">FileUtils</code> class can be imported
- with <code class="code">importClass(<strong>Packages</strong>.org.apache.tools.ant.util.FileUtils)</code></p>
- <p>In Java 8 up until Java 14, you may use the built-in Nashorn JavaScript engine rather than Rhino (which is
- available in Java 7 runtime). Then, use <code>Java.type</code> as import statement for any Java
- class
- or <a href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/scripting/prog_guide/javascript.html#A1147207">the
- compatibility script</a>: <code>load("nashorn:mozilla_compat.js");</code>.</p>
-
- <p>Starting with Java 15 Nashorn has been removed again and you need
- to provide an external JavaScript engine. Your best option probably
- is <a href="https://github.com/graalvm/graaljs">GraalVM
- JavaScript</a> which requires you to add a lot of extra jars. For
- GraalVM JavaScript 20.1 you'll
- need <code>org.graalvm.js:js</code>, <code>org.graalvm.js:js-engine</code>
- which in turn
- require <code>org.graalvm.regex:regex</code>, <code>org.graalvm.truffle:truffle-api</code>, <code>org.graalvm.sdk:graal-sdk</code>,
- and <code>com.ibm.icu:icu4j</code>. GraalVM JavaScript is not a
- drop-in replacement for Nashorn, see
- Graal's <a href="https://github.com/graalvm/graaljs/blob/master/docs/user/NashornMigrationGuide.md">Nashorn
- Migration Guide</a> for more details.</p>
-
- <p>When using GraalVM JavaScript Ant will enable the
- feature <code>polyglot.js.allowAllAccess</code> in order to allow
- scripts to use Ant objects. By default it will also enable Nashorn
- compatibility mode, but you can disable this by setting the magic
- Ant property <code>ant.disable.graal.nashorn.compat</code>
- to <code>true</code>.</p>
-
- <p>The <code><script></code> task populates the Project instance under the
- name <code class="code">project</code>, so we can use that reference. Another way is to use its
- given name or getting its reference from the task itself. The Project provides methods for accessing
- and setting properties, creating DataTypes and Tasks and much more.<br/>After creating a FileSet
- object we initialize that by calling its set-methods. Then we can use that object like a normal Ant
- task (<code><copy></code> for example).<br/>For getting the size of a file we instantiate
- a <code class="code">java.io.File</code>. So we are using normal Java API here.<br/>Finally we use
- the <code><echo></code> task for producing the output. The task is not executed by
- its <code class="code">execute()</code> method, because the <code class="code">perform()</code>
- method (implemented in Task itself) does the appropriate logging before and after
- invoking <code class="code">execute()</code>.</p>
- <p>Here is an example of using beanshell to create an Ant task. This task will add filesets and
- paths to a referenced path. If the path does not exist, it will be created.</p>
- <pre>
- <!--
- Define addtopath task
- -->
- <script language="beanshell">
- import org.apache.tools.ant.Task;
- import org.apache.tools.ant.types.Path;
- import org.apache.tools.ant.types.FileSet;
- public class AddToPath extends Task {
- private Path path;
- public void setRefId(String id) {
- path = getProject().getReference(id);
- if (path == null) {
- path = new Path(getProject());
- getProject().addReference(id, path);
- }
- }
- public void add(Path c) {
- path.add(c);
- }
- public void add(FileSet c) {
- path.add(c);
- }
- public void execute() {
- // Do nothing
- }
- }
- project.addTaskDefinition("addtopath", AddToPath.class);
- </script></pre>
- <p>An example of using this task to create a path from a list of directories (using
- Ant-Contrib's <a href="http://ant-contrib.sourceforge.net/tasks/tasks/for.html"
- target="_top"><for></a> task) follows:</p>
- <pre>
- <path id="main.path">
- <fileset dir="build/classes"/>
- </path>
- <ac:for param="ref" list="commons,fw,lps"
- xmlns:ac="antlib:net.sf.antcontrib">
- <sequential>
- <addtopath refid="main.path">
- <fileset dir="${dist.dir}/@{ref}/main"
- includes="**/*.jar"/>
- </addtopath>
- </sequential>
- </ac:for></pre>
-
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