|
- <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN" "strict.dtd">
- <HTML>
- <HEAD>
- <TITLE>Ant Specification, version 0.5</TITLE>
- </HEAD>
- <BODY>
- <H1>Ant Specification</H1>
- <P>Version 0.5 (2000/04/20)</P>
- <P>This document specifies the behavior of Ant. At this time, this is a
- working document with no implementation. It is hoped that this specification
- will lead to a simplier and more consistent implementation of Ant.</P>
- <P>This document is not intended to be used as an end user manual or user
- guide to Ant. To adequatly explain the concepts herein in a way appropriate to
- such a use would potentially complicate this document.</P>
- <H2>Design Goals</H2>
- <P>The following are the overall design goals of Ant:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>Simplicity</LI>
- <LI>Understandability</LI>
- <LI>Extensibility</LI>
- </UL>
- <H3>Simplicity</H3>
- <P>Ant must be simple to use. Of course, as the definition of simple varies
- according to the audience of the program. For Ant, since it is a build tool
- aimed at programmers, the goal is to be simple to use for a competent
- programmer.</P>
- <H3>Understandability</H3>
- <P>Ant must be clearly understandible for a first time as well as a veteran
- user. This means that a new user should be able to use Ant comfortably the
- first time and understand how to modify a build file by looking at it. And it
- should not require much experience with Ant to understand how it works and how
- to configure it for particular situtations.</P>
- <H3>Extensibility</H3>
- <P>Ant must be easy to extend. The API used to extend Ant must be easy to
- use and the way in which these extensions are located and used by the core
- runtime should be clear.</P>
- <H2>Conceptual Overview</H2>
- <P>This is a conceptual overview of the components used by Ant. Full APIs
- will be defined later.</P>
- <H3>Project</H3>
- <P>The base unit of work in Ant is the <STRONG>Project</STRONG>. A Project
- is defined by an editable text file and is represented by an object of type
- <CODE>org.apache.ant.Project</CODE> at runtime.</P>
- <P>A Project is a collection of <STRONG>Properties</STRONG> and
- <STRONG>Targets</STRONG>.</P>
- <H3>Properties</H3>
- <P>Properties are mutable name-value pairs that are scoped to the Project
- and held in a table. Only one pair is allowed per name. It is anticipated that
- this data structure would be of type <CODE>java.util.Properties</CODE> or a type that has approximatly
- the same contract.</P>
- <P>Properties can be defined in a hierarchical manner. The order of
- precidence in this hiearchy is:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>Properties defined on the command line or via a GUI tool</LI>
- <LI>Properties defined in the text file which defines the project.</LI>
- <LI>Properties defined in a file in the users <CODE>user.home</CODE> directory</LI>
- <LI>Properties defined in the installation directory that can be shared
- by multiple users.</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>Note: The current version of Ant allows the System property list to be
- consulted for a return value if the property list doesn't satisfy the requested
- property name. As all Java code has access to the system property list via the
- <CODE>java.lang.System</CODE> class, this functionality is considered to be confusing and to be
- removed.</P>
- <P>Note: The current version of Ant allows property substitution to be
- performed in the project file. This functionality is being removed.</P>
- <H3>Targets</H3>
- <P>Targets are ordered collections of <STRONG>Tasks</STRONG>, units of work
- to be performed if a Target is executed. </P>
- <P>Targets can define dependancies on other Targets within the Project. If
- a Target is deemed to be executed, either directly on the command line, or via
- a dependancy from some other Target, then all of its dependencies must first be
- executed. Circular depenancies are resolved by examination of the dependancy
- stack when a Target is evaluated. If a dependancy is already on the stack of
- targets to be executed, then the dependancy is considered to have been
- satisfied.</P>
- <P>After all dependancies of a Target have been satisfied, all of the Tasks
- contained by the target are configured and executed in sequential order. </P>
- <H3>Tasks</H3>
- <P>A Task is a unit of work. When a Task is to be executed, an instance of
- the class that defines the behavior of the particular task specified is
- instantiated and then configured. This class implements the <CODE>org.apache.ant.Task</CODE> interface.
- It is then executed so that it may be able to perform its function. It is
- important to note that this configuration occurs just before execution of the
- task, and after execution of any previous tasks, so that configuration
- information that was modified by any other Task can be properly set.</P>
- <P>When a Task is executed, it is provided access to the object
- representing the Project it is running in allowing it to examine the Property
- list of the project and access to various methods needed to operate.</P>
- <H2>Task Jar Layout</H2>
- <P>Tasks are defined within Java Archive files. The name of the JAR
- determines the name under which the task is known by in the system. For
- example, if a Task JAR is named mvdir.jar, the task is known to the system as
- <CODE>"mvdir"</CODE>.</P>
- <P><EM>Question: Should we say that tasks belong in a JAR file with the
- .tsk extension?</EM></P>
- <P>The class within the Jar file that implements the <CODE>org.apache.ant.Task</CODE> interface is
- specified by a manifest attribute named <CODE>Ant-Task-Class</CODE> in the Jar manifest. An example
- manifest would look like:</P>
- <PRE> Manifest-Version: 1.0
- Ant-Task-Class: org.apache.ant.task.javac.JavacTask</PRE>
- <P>When the task is used by Ant, a class loader is created that reads
- classes from the JAR file. This ensures that there is no chance of namespace
- collision in the classes of various task JAR files.</P>
- <H2>Installation</H2>
- <P>When Ant is installed on a user system, it installs a directory
- structure with the following form:</P>
- <PRE><installdir>/ant (unix shell script)
- /ant.bat
- /ant.jar
- /ant.properties
- /tasks/[task jar files]
- /docs/[documentation]
- /README</PRE>
- <P>Note: Current Jakarta practice is to name the Unix shell script with a
- .sh extension. This goes against Unix conventions and is unecessary. Testing
- has shown that the leaving the extension off on Unix will not interfere with
- the working of the Windows batch file.</P>
- <P>Note: The ant.jar file has been moved from the lib/ directory and placed
- alongside the shell startup scripts (which have also been moved out of the bin/
- directory). This is because on windows platforms, the .jar file is an
- executable file of sorts.</P>
- <H3>Ant Properties</H3>
- <P>The <CODE>ant.properties</CODE> file contains a list of all the properties that should be
- set by default when ant is run. In addition there are a few special properties
- that are used directly by ant. An example of these properties in use is:</P>
- <PRE> system.taskdir=tasks/
- user.taskdir=anttasks/</PRE>
- <P>The <CODE>system.taskdir</CODE> property sets where the system looks for Java ARchive files
- containing tasks. If this property defines a relative path, then the path is
- taken as relative from the installation directory.</P>
- <P>The <CODE>user.taskdir</CODE> property defines where users can locate Java Archive files
- containing tasks. If this property defines a realtive path, then the path is
- taken as relative from the users home directory (as defined by the <CODE>user.home</CODE>
- system property). Task JAR files in this directory take precendence of those in
- the system directory.</P>
- <P>Note: <EM>It has been suggested to add a properties file hook to the
- command line to roll in props. Pending investigation.</EM></P>
- <H3>User Preferences</H3>
- <P>In addition to the Ant installation directory, an <CODE>ant.properties</CODE> file can be
- located in the user's home directory (as found by the system property <CODE>user.home</CODE>)
- which can define user preferences such as the location of a user tasks
- directory. Properties defined in this file take precidence over those set in
- the installation's <CODE>ant.properties</CODE> file. Such a file could look like:</P>
- <PRE> user.taskdir=anttasks/
- javac.debug=off</PRE>
- <P>Properties starting with <CODE>"system."</CODE> in the user's <CODE>ant.properties</CODE> file are not
- allowed and must cause a warning to be thrown.</P>
- <H2>Project Configuration</H2>
- <P>Ant's Project text file is structured using XML and reflects the
- structure of the various components described in the Conceptual Overview.</P>
- <P>A sample Project file:</P>
- <PRE><project name="projectname" defaulttarget="main" taskdir="tasks/">
- <property name="javac.debug" value="on"/>
- <target name="main">
- <taskimpl ...>
- ...
- </taskimpl>
- </target>
- </project></PRE>
- <H3>The Project Element</H3>
- <P>The <CODE>project</CODE> element has the following required attributes:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI><CODE><STRONG>defaulttarget</STRONG></CODE> defining the default target to be executed if no other target
- is specified when Ant is run</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>It also has the following optional allowed attributes:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI><CODE><CODE><STRONG>name</STRONG></CODE></CODE> defining a name for this project</LI>
- <LI><CODE><STRONG>taskdir</STRONG></CODE> defining a directory in which project specific tasks can be
- located. Tasks in this directory take precedence over those in the either the
- user taskdir or the installation taskdir.</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>The following elements are allowed as children of the project
- element:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI><CODE><STRONG>property</STRONG></CODE> defining a property scoped to the project</LI>
- <LI><CODE><STRONG>target</STRONG></CODE> defining a target</LI>
- </UL>
- <H3>The Property Element</H3>
- <P>asdf</P>
- <H3>The Target Element</H3>
- <P>asfd</P>
- <H2>Configuration of Tasks</H2>
- <P>The Task section of the configuration file is structured as such:</P>
- <PRE> <[taskname] [attname=value] [attname=value]...]>
- [<[elementname] [attname=value] ...> ... </[elementname]>]
- </[taskname]></PRE>
- <P>The taskname is used to find the class of the Task. Once the class has
- been located and an instance of it created, all of the attributes of the Task
- are reflected into the task instance using bean patterns. For example, if a
- Task contains an attribute named "directory", the method named
- setDirectory would be called with the attribute value cast to the appropriate
- type desired by the method. <EM>(What to do if the type isn't a file or a
- simple type, look for the class and see if it has a setString method?)</EM></P>
-
- <P>Text blocks contained by the element are added to task using an addText
- method. <EM>Place an example...</EM></P>
- <P>For each element contained in the Task definition, an addElementname
- method is found on the task. The parameter type of the method defines an object
- that will be loaded and instantiated. The attributes of the element are
- reflected into the object using bean methods. Any text is set using the addText
- method. Any elements are recursed in the same fashion.</P>
- <P>Search order of tasks.... project/user/system</P>
- <H2>Command Line</H2>
- <P>The command line utility provided with Ant must support the following
- allowable syntax:</P>
- <P><CODE>ant projectfile [prop=value [prop=value...]] [target]</CODE></P>
- <P>Internally, the command line shell scripts should call the <CODE>org.apache.ant.Main</CODE> class
- with the following arguments:</P>
- <PRE>java -Dant.home=installdir org.apache.ant.Main $*</PRE>
- <P>or its equivalent on the host platform. Note that the ant installation
- directory is a System property. The above syntax results in ant.home being
- placed in the System property list.</P>
- <P>Note: <EM>On unix, finding the directory of the script that was launched
- is relatively easy. However on Windows, I'm not sure the best way of handling
- this.</EM></P>
- <H2>File Naming Conventions</H2>
- <P>File naming in a cross platform tool is tricky. For maximum portability
- and understandiblity it is recommended that project files use the following
- conventions:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>The '/' character is used as a directory seperator</LI>
- <LI>The ':' character is used as a path seperator</LI>
- <LI>Only relative paths are used</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>However, to allow for maximum flexibility and to allow project authors
- to use conventions that make sense on their native platform, Ant allows for a
- representation of file names which has the following rules:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>Directories are seperated by the forward slash ('/') or backwards
- slash ('\') character.</LI>
- <LI>File names starting with either of the above directory seperators are
- considered to be absolute paths.</LI>
- <LI>On systems that support multiple file roots (e.g. Windows), a file
- name that starts with a single alphabetical character followed by a colon (':')
- followed by a directory seperator defines an absolute path where the letter
- corresponds with a directory root.</LI>
- <LI>File names starting with any other character are considered to be
- relative paths. In project files, all relative paths are resolved relative to
- the directory in which the project file is located.</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>Absolute paths are not recommended for build files as they reduce the
- ability to share a project between u sers or machines.</P>
- <P>In situtations where a set of filenames need to be specified, such as
- defining a classpath, both the colon (':') andsemicolon (';') are allowable
- characters to seperate each filename. The only case that has to be
- disambiguated is if a user specifies paths that contain windows style absolute
- paths. In this case, the colon is not treated as a path seperator if the
- following rules are met:</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>The character two places before the colon is either of the allowable
- path seperators (':' or ';') or if the colon is the second character of the
- string.</LI>
- <LI>The character immediately before the colon is a alphabetic character
- in the range a-z or A-Z.</LI>
- <LI>The character immediately after the colon is either of the allowable
- directory seperators ('/' or '\').</LI>
- </UL>
- <H2>Scripting Model</H2>
- <P>Sam, I'm leaving this to you. </P>
- <H2>Runtime Requirements</H2>
- <P>The following requirements are system requirements that Ant should have
- in order to run correctly. We should not bundle in any of these into the
- distribution of ant.</P>
- <UL>
- <LI>JDK 1.1 or greater</LI>
- <LI>A JAXP compliant parser on the classpath</LI>
- </UL>
- <P>Note: <EM>When running on JDK 1.2 or greater, the tools.jar isn't on the
- classpath by default. There's a few different ways we can take care of this.
- One is to put it on the classpath in the execute script (I don't like this
- one). Another is to find the location of tools.jar at runtime and put it on the
- classpath of class loaders that load in task.jars so that, at least in the
- scope of the Tasks, the relevant classes are there. </EM></P>
- <P></P>
- <P></P> </BODY>
- </HTML>
|