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- <title>Running Apache Ant</title>
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- <h1>Running Ant</h1>
- <h2><a name="commandline">Command Line</a></h2>
- <p> If you've installed Ant as described in the
- <a href="install.html"> Installing Ant</a> section,
- running Ant from the command-line is simple: just type
- <code>ant</code>.</p>
- <p>When no arguments are specified, Ant looks for a <code>build.xml</code>
- file in the current directory and, if found, uses that file as the
- buildfile and runs the "default" target.
- If you use the <code>-find</code> option,
- Ant will search for a buildfile first in the current directory, then in
- the parent directory, and so on, until either a buildfile is found or the root
- of the filesystem has been reached. To make Ant use
- a buildfile other than <code>build.xml</code>, use the command-line
- option <code>-buildfile <i>file</i></code>,
- where <i>file</i> is the name of the buildfile you want to use.</p>
-
- <p>You can also set <a href="using.html#properties">properties</a> that
- override properties specified in the
- buildfile (see the <a href="CoreTasks/property.html">property</a> task).
- This can be done with
- the <nobr><code>-D<i>property</i>=<i>value</i></code></nobr> option,
- where <i>property</i> is the name of the property,
- and <i>value</i> is the value for that property.
- This can also be used to pass in the value of environment variables.
- Just pass <nobr><code>-DMYVAR=%MYVAR%</code></nobr> (Windows) or
- <nobr><code>-DMYVAR=$MYVAR</code></nobr> (Unix)
- to Ant - you can then access
- these variables inside your buildfile as <code>${MYVAR}</code>.
- You can also access environment variables using the <a href="CoreTasks/property.html">
- property</a> task.
- </p>
-
- <p>Options that affect the amount of logging output by Ant are: <nobr><code>-quiet</code></nobr>,
- which instructs Ant to print less
- information on the console when running;
- <nobr><code>-verbose</code></nobr>, which causes Ant to print
- additional information to the console; and <nobr><code>-debug</code></nobr>,
- which causes Ant to print considerably more additional information.
- </p>
-
- <p>It is also possible to specify one or more targets that should be executed.
- When omitted, the target that is specified in the
- <code>default</code> attribute of the
- <a href="using.html#projects"><code>project</code></a> tag is
- used.</p>
-
- <p>The <nobr><code>-projecthelp</code></nobr> option prints out a list
- of the buildfile's targets, along with the
- text in the <code>description</code> attribute of the target,
- if one was specified, followed by a list of those targets without one.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="options">Command-line Options Summary</a></h3>
- <pre>ant [options] [target [target2 [target3] ...]]
- Options:
- -help print this message
- -projecthelp print project help information
- -version print the version information and exit
- -quiet be extra quiet
- -verbose be extra verbose
- -debug print debugging information
- -emacs produce logging information without adornments
- -logfile <file> use given file for log
- -logger <classname> the class which is to perform logging
- -listener <classname> add an instance of class as a project listener
- -buildfile <file> use given buildfile
- -D<property>=<value> use value for given property
- -propertyfile <name> load all properties from file with -D
- properties taking precedence
- -find <file> search for buildfile towards the root of the
- filesystem and use it
- </pre>
- <p>For more information about <code>-logger</code> and
- <code>-listener</code> see the section <a
- href="listeners.html">Loggers & Listeners</a>
- <h3>Examples</h3>
- <blockquote>
- <pre>ant</pre>
- </blockquote>
- <p>runs Ant using the <code>build.xml</code> file in the current directory, on
- the default target.</p>
- <blockquote>
- <pre>ant -buildfile test.xml</pre>
- </blockquote>
- <p>runs Ant using the <code>test.xml</code> file in the current directory, on
- the default target.</p>
- <blockquote>
- <pre>ant -buildfile test.xml dist</pre>
- </blockquote>
- <p>runs Ant using the <code>test.xml</code> file in the current directory, on a
- target called <code>dist</code>.</p>
- <blockquote>
- <pre>ant -buildfile test.xml -Dbuild=build/classes dist</pre>
- </blockquote>
- <p>runs Ant using the <code>test.xml</code> file in the current directory, on a
- target called <code>dist</code>, setting the <code>build</code> property to the
- value <code>build/classes</code>.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="files">Files</a></h3>
-
- <p>The Ant wrapper script for Unix will source (read and evaluate) the
- file <code>~/.antrc</code> before it does anything - the Windows batch
- file invokes <code>%HOME%\antrc_pre.bat</code> at the start and
- <code>%HOME%\antrc_post.bat</code> at the end. You can use these
- files to set/unset environment variables that should only be visible
- during the execution of Ant. See the next section for example.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="envvars">Environment Variables</a></h3>
-
- <p>The wrapper scripts use the following environment variables (if
- set):</p>
-
- <ul>
- <li><code>JAVACMD</code> - full path of the Java executable. Use this
- to invoke a different JVM than <code>JAVA_HOME/bin/java(.exe)</code>.</li>
-
- <li><code>ANT_OPTS</code> - command-line arguments that should be
- passed to the JVM. For example, you can define properties or set
- the maximum Java heap size here.</li>
-
- <li><code>ANT_ARGS</code> - Ant command-line arguments. For example,
- set <code>ANT_ARGS</code> to point to a different logger and to
- include the <code>-find</code> flag.</li>
- </ul>
-
- <h2><a name="viajava">Running Ant via Java</a></h2>
- <p>If you have installed Ant in the do-it-yourself way, Ant can be started
- with:</p>
- <blockquote>
- <pre>java -Dant.home=c:\ant org.apache.tools.ant.Main [options] [target]</pre>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>These instructions actually do exactly the same as the <code>ant</code>
- command. The options and target are the same as when running Ant with the <code>ant</code>
- command. This example assumes you have set your classpath to include:</p>
- <ul>
- <li><code>ant.jar</code></li>
- <li>jars/classes for your XML parser</li>
- <li>the JDK's required jar/zip files</li>
- </ul>
- <br>
- <hr>
- <p align="center">Copyright © 2001-2002 Apache Software Foundation. All rights
- Reserved.</p>
-
- </body>
- </html>
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