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diff --git a/framework/src/ant/apache-ant-1.9.6/manual/install.html b/framework/src/ant/apache-ant-1.9.6/manual/install.html deleted file mode 100644 index 818b168d..00000000 --- a/framework/src/ant/apache-ant-1.9.6/manual/install.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1096 +0,0 @@ -<!-- - Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more - contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with - this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. - The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 - (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with - the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at - - http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 - - Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software - distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, - WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. - See the License for the specific language governing permissions and - limitations under the License. ---> -<html> - -<head> -<meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us"> -<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheets/style.css"> -<title>Installing Apache Ant</title> -</head> - -<body> -<h1>Installing Apache Ant</h1> -<h2><a name="getting">Getting Apache Ant</a></h2> - -<h3>The Short Story</h3> -<p>To get up and running with the binary edition of Ant quickly, follow these steps: -<ol> -<li>Make sure you have a Java environment installed, See <a href="#sysrequirements">System -Requirements</a> for details.</li> -<li>Download Ant. See <a href="#getBinary">Binary Edition</a> for details.</li> -<li>Uncompress the downloaded file into a directory.</li> -<li>Set environmental variables <code>JAVA_HOME</code> to your Java environment, <code>ANT_HOME</code> to -the directory you uncompressed Ant to, and add <code>${ANT_HOME}/bin</code> (Unix) or -<code>%ANT_HOME%/bin</code> (Windows) to your <code>PATH</code>. See <a href="#setup">Setup</a> for details.</li> -<li>Optionally, from the <code>ANT_HOME</code> directory run <code>ant -f fetch.xml -Ddest=system</code> to get -the library dependencies of most of the Ant tasks that require them. If you don't do this, many of the dependent -Ant tasks will not be available. See <a href="#optionalTasks">Optional Tasks</a> for details and other options -for the -Ddest parameter.</li> -<li>Optionally, add any desired Antlibs. See <a href="http://ant.apache.org/antlibs/proper.html" target="_top">Ant Libraries</a> for a list. -</ol> -</p> -<p> -Note that the links in the list above will give more details about each of the steps, -should you need them. Or you can just continue reading the rest of this document. -</p> -The short story for working with the Ant source code (not needed if you are working with the binary edition) is: -<ol> -<li>Get the source code. See <a href="#sourceEdition">Source Edition</a> for details.</li> -<li> Build Ant. See <a href="#buildingant">Building Ant</a> for details.</li> -</ol> -<p> -</p> -<p> -For the full story, continue reading. -</p> - -<h3><a name="getBinary">Binary Edition</a></h3> - -<p>The latest stable version of Ant is available from the Ant web page <a -href="http://ant.apache.org/" target="_top">http://ant.apache.org/</a> -</p> - -<p>The binary edition of Ant is shipped with 3 different compression formats: -<ol> -<li><b>.zip</b> - Recommended compression format for Windows, can also be used on other platforms. Supported -by many programs and some operating systems natively.</li> -<li><b>.tar.gz</b> - Uses the tar program to gather files together, and gzip to compress and uncompress.</li> -<li><b>.tar.bz2</b> - Uses the tar program to gather files together, and bzip2 to compress and uncompress..</li> -</ol> -Choose the format that is best supported for your platform. -</p> - -<h3>As a binary in an RPM Package</h3> - -<p>Consult the <a href="#jpackage">jpackage</a> section below.</p> - -<h3>Bundled in IDEs</h3> -<p> - All the main Java IDEs ship with Ant, products such as Eclipse, NetBeans - and IntelliJ IDEA. If you install Ant this way you usually get the most recent - release of Ant at the time the IDE was released. Some of the IDEs (Eclipse - and NetBeans in particular) ship with extra tasks that only work if - IDE-specific tools are on Ant's path. To use these on command-line versions - of Ant, the relevant JARs need to be added to the command-line Ant as - extra libraries/tasks. Note that if it is an IDE task or extension that is - not behaving, the Ant team is unable to field bug reports. Try the IDE mailing - lists first, who will cross-file bugs if appropriate. -</p> -<p> - IDE's can invariably be pointed at different Ant installations. This lets - developers upgrade to a new release of Ant, and eliminate inconsistencies - between command-line and IDE Ant. -</p> - -<h3>Bundled in Java applications</h3> - -<p> - Many Java applications, most particularly application servers, ship with - a version of Ant. These are primarily for internal use by the application, - using the Java APIs to delegate tasks such as JSP page compilation to the Ant - runtime. Such distributions are usually unsupported by everyone. Particularly - troublesome are those products that not only ship with their own Ant release, - they add their own version of ANT.BAT or ant.sh to the PATH. If Ant starts - behaving weirdly after installing something, try the - <a href="#diagnostics">diagnostics</a> advice. -</p> - -<h3><a name="sourceEdition">Source Edition</a></h3> - -<p>If you prefer the source edition, you can download the source for the latest -Ant release from -<a href="http://ant.apache.org/srcdownload.cgi" target="_top">http://ant.apache.org/srcdownload.cgi</a>. - -If you prefer the leading-edge code, you can access -the code as it is being developed via git. The Ant website has details on -<a href="http://ant.apache.org/git.html" target="_top">accessing git</a>. -All bug fixes will go in against the HEAD of the source tree, and the first -response to many bugreps will be "have you tried the latest version". -Don't be afraid to download and build a prererelease edition, as everything -other than new features are usually stable. - </p> -<p> - - -See the section <a href="#buildingant">Building Ant</a> on how to -build Ant from the source code. -You can also access the -<a href="https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=ant.git;a=summary" target="_top"> -Ant SVN repository</a> on-line. </p> - -<h3 name="archives">Archive Download Area Layout</h3> -<p> -Older versions of Ant are available in the archives at <a -href="http://archive.apache.org/dist/ant/" target="_top">http://archive.apache.org/dist/ant/</a>. The -files are organized as follows. -</p> -<table> -<tr> - <th>Filename or Path</th> - <th>Description</th> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>KEYS</td> - <td>PGP-Keysfile. It contains the PGP-keys of Ant developers so you can 'trust' the distribution. </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>RELEASE-NOTES-{version}.html</td> - <td> - Release notes of the given version in HTML format. When upgrading your Ant installation you - should have a look at the <i>Changes that could break older environments</i> section. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>ant-current-bin.zip</td> - <td> - ZIP-Archive containing the compiled version of Ant in the last released version. It is recommended that - you do not download the latest version this way, as the standard way of downloading described above will - redirect you to a mirror closer to you, thus making the download faster for you and reducing the load - on Apache servers. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>ant-current-src.zip</td> - <td> - ZIP-Archive containing the sources of Ant. If you have this you could compile Ant itself. - If you do not have the <i>required</i> dependencies, the classes depending on them are just not - built. Again, it is preferred to use the standard way of getting the source package described above - to make your download quicker and to reduce the load on Apache servers. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>ant-current-*.asc</td> - <td> - Security file for checking the correctness of the zip file. This one is the - <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy" target="_blank">PGP</a> key. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>ant-current-*.md5</td> - <td> - Security file for checking the correctness of the zip file. This one is the - <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Md5" target="_blank">MD5</a> key. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>ant-current-*.sha1</td> - <td> - Security file for checking the correctness of the zip file. This one is the - <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHA-1" target="_blank">SHA1</a> key. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>antlibs/</td> - <td> - This directory holds the Antlibs that are made of available by the Apache Ant project. - Antlibs are bundles of Ant tasks that are not delivered as part of the Ant core but are - available as optional downloads. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>binaries/</td> - <td> - The binaries directory holds specific Ant releases bundled in both ZIP and tar.gz compression - formats. The named releases are in contrast to the ant-current-bin.zip file in the parent - directory, which is always guaranteed to be the most current release of Ant. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>common/</td> - <td> - The common directory holds various files, such as the Apache License file that Ant is licensed - under, that people may wish to examine without having to download the whole Ant distribution. - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td>source/</td> - <td> - The source directory holds the source code for specific Ant releases bundled in both ZIP and - tar.gz compression formats. The named releases are in contrast to the ant-current-src.zip file - in the parent directory, which is always guaranteed to hold the source code for the most current - release of Ant. - </td> -</tr> -</table> - -<hr> -<h2><a name="sysrequirements">System Requirements</a></h2> -Ant has been used successfully on many platforms, including Linux, -commercial flavours of Unix such as Solaris and HP-UX, -Windows NT-platforms, OS/2 Warp, Novell Netware 6, OpenVMS and MacOS X. -The platforms used most for development are, in no particular order, -Linux, MacOS X, Windows XP and Unix; these are therefore that platforms -that tend to work best. As of Ant1.7, Windows 9x is no longer supported. - -<p> -For the current version of Ant, you will also need a JDK installed on -your system, version 1.4 or later required, 1.7 or later strongly recommended. -The more up-to-date the version of Java , the more Ant tasks you get. -</p> -<p> - <strong>Note: </strong>If a JDK is not present, only the JRE runtime, then many tasks will not work. -</p> -<p> - <strong>Note: </strong> - Ant 1.8.* works with jdk1.4 and higher, Ant 1.7.* works with jdk1.3 and higher, Ant 1.6.* works with jdk 1.2 and higher, - Ant 1.2 to Ant 1.5.* work with jdk 1.1 and higher. -</p> - -<h3>Open Source Java Runtimes</h3> -<p> - The Ant team strongly supports users running Ant on <a target="_blank" href="http://openjdk.java.net/">OpenJDK</a> and other - open source Java runtimes, and so strives to have a product that works - well on those platforms. -</p> -<hr> -<h2><a name="installing">Installing Ant</a></h2> -<p>The binary distribution of Ant consists of the following directory layout: -<pre> - ant - +--- README, LICENSE, fetch.xml, other text files. //basic information - +--- bin // contains launcher scripts - | - +--- lib // contains Ant jars plus necessary dependencies - | - +--- docs // contains documentation - | | - | +--- images // various logos for html documentation - | | - | +--- manual // Ant documentation (a must read ;-) - | - +--- etc // contains xsl goodies to: - // - create an enhanced report from xml output of various tasks. - // - migrate your build files and get rid of 'deprecated' warning - // - ... and more ;-) -</pre> - -Only the <code>bin</code> and <code>lib</code> directories are -required to run Ant. - -To install Ant, choose a directory and copy the distribution -files there. This directory will be known as ANT_HOME. -</p> - -<table width="80%"> -<tr> - <td colspan="2"> - <b>Windows 95, Windows 98 & Windows ME Note:</b> - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td width="5%"> </td> - <td><i> -Note that current releases of Ant no longer support these systems. If you are using an older -version of Ant, however, the script used to launch Ant will have -problems if ANT_HOME is a long filename (i.e. a filename which is not -of the format known as "8.3"). This is due to -limitations in the OS's handling of the <code>"for"</code> -batch-file statement. It is recommended, therefore, that Ant be -installed in a <b>short</b>, 8.3 path, such as C:\Ant. </i> - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td width="5%"> </td> - <td> - <p>On these systems you will also need to configure more environment - space to cater for the environment variables used in the Ant launch script. - To do this, you will need to add or update the following line in - the <code>config.sys</code> file - </p> - <p><code>shell=c:\command.com c:\ /p /e:32768</code></p> - </td> -</tr> -</table> - -<h3><a name="setup">Setup</a></h3> -<p> -Before you can run Ant there is some additional set up you -will need to do unless you are installing the <a href="#jpackage">RPM -version from jpackage.org</a>:</p> -<ul> -<li>Add the <code>bin</code> directory to your path.</li> -<li>Set the <code>ANT_HOME</code> environment variable to the -directory where you installed Ant. On some operating systems, Ant's -startup scripts can guess <code>ANT_HOME</code> (Unix dialects and -Windows NT/2000), but it is better to not rely on this behavior.</li> -<li>Optionally, set the <code>JAVA_HOME</code> environment variable -(see the <a href="#advanced">Advanced</a> section below). -This should be set to the directory where your JDK is installed.</li> -</ul> -<p>Operating System-specific instructions for doing this from the command -line are in the <a href="#windows">Windows</a>, <a href="#bash">Linux/Unix (bash)</a>, -and <a href="#tcshcsh">Linux/Unix (csh)</a> sections. Note that using this method, -the settings will only be valid for the command line session you run them in.</p> -<p><strong>Note:</strong> Do not install Ant's ant.jar file into the lib/ext -directory of the JDK/JRE. Ant is an application, whilst the extension -directory is intended for JDK extensions. In particular there are security -restrictions on the classes which may be loaded by an extension.</p> - -<table width="80%"> -<tr> - <td colspan="2"> - <b>Windows Note:</b> - </td> -</tr> -<tr> - <td width="5%"> </td> - <td> - The ant.bat script makes use of three environment variables - - ANT_HOME, CLASSPATH and JAVA_HOME. <b>Ensure</b> that ANT_HOME and JAVA_HOME variables are set, - and that they do <b><u>not</u></b> have quotes (either - ' or ") and they do <b><u>not</u></b> end with \ or with /. CLASSPATH should be unset or - empty. - </td> -</tr> -</table> - -<h3><a name="checkInstallation">Check Installation</a></h3> -<p>You can check the basic installation with opening a new shell and typing <tt>ant</tt>. You -should get a message like this -<pre> -Buildfile: build.xml does not exist! -Build failed -</pre> -So Ant works. This message is there because you need to write an individual buildfile for your -project. With a <tt>ant -version</tt> you should get an output like -<pre> -Apache Ant(TM) version 1.9.2 compiled on July 8 2013 -</pre> -</p> -<p>If this does not work ensure your environment variables are set right. They must resolve to: -<ul> - <li>required: %ANT_HOME%\bin\ant.bat</li> - <li>optional: %JAVA_HOME%\bin\java.exe</li> - <li>required: %PATH%=...<i>maybe-other-entries</i>...;%ANT_HOME%\bin;...<i>maybe-other-entries</i>...</li> -</ul> -<b>ANT_HOME</b> is used by the launcher script for finding the libraries. -<b>JAVA_HOME</b> is used by the launcher for finding the JDK/JRE to use. (JDK is recommended as some tasks -require the java tools.) If not set, the launcher tries to find one via the %PATH% environment variable. -<b>PATH</b> is set for user convenience. With that set you can just start <i>ant</i> instead of always typing -<i>the/complete/path/to/your/ant/installation/bin/ant</i>. -</p> - -<h3><a name="optionalTasks">Optional Tasks</a></h3> -<p>Ant supports a number of optional tasks. An optional task is a task which -typically requires an external library to function. The optional tasks are -packaged together with the core Ant tasks.</p> - -<p>The external libraries required by each of the optional tasks is detailed -in the <a href="#librarydependencies">Library Dependencies</a> section. These external -libraries must be added to Ant's classpath, in any of the following ways: -</p> -<ul> - <li><p> - In <code><i>ANT_HOME</i>/lib</code>. This makes the JAR files available to all - Ant users and builds. - </p></li> - - <li><p> - In <code>${user.home}/.ant/lib</code> (as of Ant 1.6). This - allows different users to add new libraries to Ant. All JAR files - added to this directory are available to command-line Ant. - </p></li> - - <li><p> - On the command line with a <code>-lib</code> parameter. This lets - you add new JAR files on a case-by-case basis. - </p></li> - - <li><p> - In the <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable. Avoid this; it makes - the JAR files visible to <i>all</i> Java applications, and causes - no end of support calls. See <a href="#classpath">below</a> for details. - </p> - </li> - - <li><p> - In some <code><classpath></code> accepted by the task itself. - For example, as of Ant 1.7.0 you can run the <code><junit></code> - task without <code>junit.jar</code> in Ant's own classpath, so long as - it is included (along with your program and tests) in the classpath - passed when running the task. - </p><p> - Where possible, this option is generally - to be preferred, as the Ant script itself can determine the best path - to load the library from: via relative path from the basedir (if you - keep the library under version control with your project), according - to Ant properties, environment variables, Ivy downloads, whatever you like. - </p></li> - -</ul> - -<p> - If you are using the binary version of Ant, or if you are working from source - code, you can easily gather most of the dependencies and install them for use - with your Ant tasks. In your <code>ANT_HOME</code> directory you should see a - file called <code>fetch.xml</code>. This is an Ant script that you can run to - install almost all the dependencies the optional Ant tasks need. -</p> - -<p> - To do so, change to the <code>ANT_HOME</code> directory and execute the command: -</p> - -<blockquote> - <pre>ant -f fetch.xml -Ddest=<i>[option]</i></pre> -</blockquote> - -<p> - where option is one of the following, as described above: - <ul> - <li><code>system</code> - store in Ant's lib directory <i>(Recommended)</i></li> - <li><code>user</code> - store in the user's home directory</li> - <li><code>optional</code> - store in Ant's source code lib/optional directory, used if building Ant source code</li> - </ul> -</p> - -<p> - You may also need to set proxy settings. See the <a href="#proxy">Proxy Settings</a> section for details. -</p> - -<p> -Note that not all dependencies are gathered using <code>fetch.xml</code>. Tasks that depend on -commercial software, in particular, will require you to have the commercial software installed -in order to be used. -</p> - -<p>The Apache Ant Project also provides additional tasks and types that are available as separately -downloaded Ant Libraries. You can see the the list of available Antlibs at -the <a href="http://ant.apache.org/antlibs/proper.html" target="_top">Ant Libraries</a> page. -</p> - -<p>You can also find tasks and types provided by third-party projects at the -<a href="http://ant.apache.org/external.html" target="_top">External Tools and Tasks</a> page. -</p> - -<p> - IDEs have different ways of adding external JAR files and third-party tasks - to Ant. Usually it is done by some configuration dialog. Sometimes JAR files - added to a project are automatically added to ant's classpath. -</p> - -<h3><a name="classpath">The <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable</a></h3> -<p> - -The <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable is a source of many Ant support queries. As -the round trip time for diagnosis on the Ant user mailing list can be slow, and -because filing bug reports complaining about 'ant.bat' not working will be -rejected by the developers as WORKSFORME "this is a configuration problem, not a -bug", you can save yourself a lot of time and frustration by following some -simple steps. - -</p> -<ol> - -<li>Do not ever set <code>CLASSPATH</code>. Ant does not need it, it only causes confusion -and breaks things. - -</li> - -<li>If you ignore the previous rule, do not ever, ever, put quotes in the -<code>CLASSPATH</code>, even if there is a space in a directory. This will break Ant, and it -is not needed. </li> - -<li>If you ignore the first rule, do not ever, ever, have a trailing backslash -in a <code>CLASSPATH</code>, as it breaks Ant's ability to quote the string. Again, this is -not needed for the correct operation of the <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable, even -if a DOS directory is to be added to the path. </li> - -<li>You can stop Ant using the <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment variable by setting the -<code>-noclasspath</code> option on the command line. This is an easy way -to test for classpath-related problems.</li> - -</ol> - -<p> - -The usual symptom of <code>CLASSPATH</code> problems is that ant will not run with some error -about not being able to find <code>org.apache.tools.ant.launch.Launcher</code>, or, if you have got the -quotes/backslashes wrong, some very weird Java startup error. To see if this is -the case, run <code>ant -noclasspath</code> or unset the <code>CLASSPATH</code> environment -variable. - -</p> - -<p> -You can also make your Ant script reject this environment -variable just by placing the following at the top of the script (or in an init target): -</p> -<pre> -<property environment="env."/> -<property name="env.CLASSPATH" value=""/> -<fail message="Unset $CLASSPATH / %CLASSPATH% before running Ant!"> - <condition> - <not> - <equals arg1="${env.CLASSPATH}" arg2=""/> - </not> - </condition> -</fail> -</pre> - -<h3><a name="proxy">Proxy Configuration</a></h3> - -<p> Many Ant built-in and third-party tasks use network connections to retrieve -files from HTTP servers. If you are behind a firewall with a proxy server, then -Ant needs to be configured with the proxy. Here are the different ways to do -this. </p> - -<ul> - -<li><b>With Java1.5 or above</b><br> - -<p> -When you run Ant on Java1.5 or above, you could try to use the automatic proxy setup -mechanism with <code>-autoproxy</code>. -</p> - -</li> - -<li><b>With explicit JVM properties.</b><br> -<p> -These are documented in <a -href="http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/net/properties.html" target="_top">Java's Networking Properties</a>, -and control the proxy behaviour of the entire JVM. To set them in Ant, declare -them in the <code>ANT_OPTS</code> environment variable. This is the best option -for a non-mobile system. For a laptop, you have to change these settings as you -roam. To set ANT_OPTS: -</p> -<blockquote> -<p> - For csh/tcsh: -</p> -<pre> - setenv ANT_OPTS "-Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080" -</pre> -<p> - For bash: -</p> -<pre> - export ANT_OPTS="-Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080" -</pre> -<p> - For Windows, set the environment variable in the appropriate dialog box - and open a new console. or, by hand -</p> -<pre> - set ANT_OPTS = -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080 -</pre> -</p> -</blockquote> -</li> - -<li><b>In the build file itself</b><br> - -<p> -If you are writing a build file that is always to be used behind the firewall, -the <setproxy> task lets you configure the proxy (which it does by setting -the JVM properties). If you do this, we strongly recommend using ant properties -to define the proxy host, port, etc, so that individuals can override the -defaults.</li> -</p> - -</ul> - -<p> The Ant team acknowledges that this is unsatisfactory. Until the JVM -automatic proxy setup works properly everywhere, explicit JVM options via -ANT_ARGS are probably the best solution. Setting properties on Ant's -command line do not work, because those are <i>Ant properties</i> being set, not -JVM options. This means the following does not set up the command line: - -</p> - -<pre>ant -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy -Dhttp.proxyPort=81</pre> - -<p> All it does is set up two Ant properties.</p> - -<p>One other troublespot with -proxies is with authenticating proxies. Ant cannot go beyond what the JVM does -here, and as it is very hard to remotely diagnose, test and fix proxy-related -problems, users who work behind a secure proxy will have to spend much time -configuring the JVM properties until they are happy. </p> - - -<h3><a name="windows">Windows and OS/2</a></h3> -<p>Assume Ant is installed in <code>c:\ant\</code>. The following sets up the -environment:</p> -<pre>set ANT_HOME=c:\ant -set JAVA_HOME=c:\jdk1.7.0_51 -set PATH=%PATH%;%ANT_HOME%\bin</pre> - -<h3><a name="bash">Linux/Unix (bash)</a></h3> -<p>Assume Ant is installed in <code>/usr/local/ant</code>. The following sets up -the environment:</p> -<pre>export ANT_HOME=/usr/local/ant -export JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/jdk1.7.0_51 -export PATH=${PATH}:${ANT_HOME}/bin</pre> - -<h3><a name="tcshcsh">Linux/Unix (csh)</a></h3> -<pre>setenv ANT_HOME /usr/local/ant -setenv JAVA_HOME /usr/local/jdk/jdk1.7.0_51 -set path=( $path $ANT_HOME/bin )</pre> - -<p> -Having a symbolic link set up to point to the JVM/JDK version makes updates more seamless. </p> -<a name="jpackage"></a> -<h3>RPM version from jpackage.org</h3> -<p> -The <a href="http://www.jpackage.org" target="_top">JPackage project</a> distributes an RPM version of Ant. -With this version, it is not necessary to set <code> JAVA_HOME </code>or -<code> ANT_HOME </code>environment variables and the RPM installer will correctly -place the Ant executable on your path. -</p> - <p> - <b>NOTE:</b> <em>Since Ant 1.7.0</em>, if the <code>ANT_HOME</code> - environment variable is set, the jpackage distribution will be - ignored. - </p> - <p> -Optional jars for the JPackage version are handled in two ways. The easiest, and -best way is to get these external libraries from JPackage if JPackage has them -available. (Note: for each such library, you will have to get both the external -package itself (e.g. <code>oro-2.0.8-2jpp.noarch.rpm</code>) and the small library that links -ant and the external package (e.g. <code>ant-apache-oro-1.6.2-3jpp.noarch.rpm</code>). -</p><p> -However, JPackage does not package proprietary software, and since some of the -optional packages depend on proprietary jars, they must be handled as follows. -This may violate the spirit of JPackage, but it is necessary if you need these proprietary packages. -For example, suppose you want to install support for netrexx, which jpackage does not -support: -<ol> -<li>Decide where you want to deploy the extra jars. One option is in <code>$ANT_HOME/lib</code>, -which, for JPackage is usually <code>/usr/share/ant/lib</code>. Another, less messy option -is to create an <code>.ant/lib</code> subdirectory of your home directory and place your -non-jpackage ant jars there, thereby avoiding mixing jpackage -libraries with non-jpackage stuff in the same folder. -More information on where Ant finds its libraries is available -<a href="http://ant.apache.org/manual/running.html#libs">here</a></li> -<li>Download a non-jpackage binary distribution from the regular - <a href="http://ant.apache.org/bindownload.cgi" target="_top">Apache Ant site</a></li> -<li>Unzip or untar the distribution into a temporary directory</li> -<li>Copy the linking jar, in this case <code>ant-jai.jar</code>, into the library directory you -chose in step 1 above.</li> -<li>Copy the proprietary jar itself into the same directory.</li> -</ol> -Finally, if for some reason you are running on a system with both the JPackage and Apache versions of Ant -available, if you should want to run the Apache version (which will have to be specified with an absolute file name, -not found on the path), you should use Ant's <code>--noconfig</code> command-line switch to avoid JPackage's classpath mechanism. - - -<h3><a name="advanced">Advanced</a></h3> - -<p>There are lots of variants that can be used to run Ant. What you need is at -least the following:</p> -<ul> -<li>The classpath for Ant must contain <code>ant.jar</code> and any jars/classes -needed for your chosen JAXP-compliant XML parser.</li> -<li>When you need JDK functionality -(such as for the <a href="Tasks/javac.html">javac</a> task or the -<a href="Tasks/rmic.html">rmic</a> task), then <code>tools.jar</code> -must be added. The scripts supplied with Ant, -in the <code>bin</code> directory, will add -the required JDK classes automatically, if the <code>JAVA_HOME</code> -environment variable is set.</li> - -<li>When you are executing platform-specific applications, such as the -<a href="Tasks/exec.html">exec</a> task or the -<a href="Tasks/cvs.html">cvs</a> task, the property <code>ant.home</code> -must be set to the directory containing where you installed Ant. Again -this is set by the Ant scripts to the value of the ANT_HOME environment -variable.</li> -</ul> -The supplied ant shell scripts all support an <tt>ANT_OPTS</tt> -environment variable which can be used to supply extra options -to ant. Some of the scripts also read in an extra script stored -in the users home directory, which can be used to set such options. Look -at the source for your platform's invocation script for details. - -<hr> -<h2><a name="buildingant">Building Ant</a></h2> -<p>To build Ant from source, you can either install the Ant source distribution -or clone the ant repository from git. See <a href="#sourceEdition">Source Edition</a> for details.</p> -<p>Once you have installed the source, change into the installation -directory.</p> - -<p>Set the <code>JAVA_HOME</code> environment variable -to the directory where the JDK is installed. -See <a href="#installing">Installing Ant</a> -for examples on how to do this for your operating system. </p> - -<p><b>Note</b>: The bootstrap process of Ant requires a greedy -compiler like OpenJDK or Oracle's javac. It does not work with gcj or -kjc.</p> - -<p>Make sure you have downloaded any auxiliary jars required to -build tasks you are interested in. These should be -added to the <code>lib/optional</code> -directory of the source tree. -See <a href="#librarydependencies">Library Dependencies</a> -for a list of JAR requirements for various features. -Note that this will make the auxiliary JAR -available for the building of Ant only. For running Ant you will -still need to -make the JARs available as described under -<a href="#installing">Installing Ant</a>.</p> - -<p>You can also get most of the auxiliary jar files (ie. the jar files -that various optional Ant tasks depend on) by running Ant on the -<code>fetch.xml</code> build file. See <a href="#optionalTasks">Optional -Tasks</a> for instructions on how to do this. -</p> - -<p>As of version 1.7.0 Ant has a hard dependency on JUnit. The <code>fetch.xml</code> build - script will download JUnit automatically, but if you don't use this you must - install it manually into <code>lib/optional</code> (download it from - <a href="http://junit.org/" target="_top">JUnit.org</a>) if you are - using a source distribution of Ant.</p> - -<p>Your are now ready to build Ant:</p> -<blockquote> - <p><code>build -Ddist.dir=<<i>directory_to_contain_Ant_distribution</i>> dist</code> (<i>Windows</i>)</p> - <p><code>sh build.sh -Ddist.dir=<<i>directory_to_contain_Ant_distribution</i>> dist</code> (<i>Unix</i>)</p> -</blockquote> - -<p>This will create a binary distribution of Ant in the directory you specified.</p> - -<p>The above action does the following:</p> -<ul> - -<li>If necessary it will bootstrap the Ant code. Bootstrapping involves the manual -compilation of enough Ant code to be able to run Ant. The bootstrapped Ant is -used for the remainder of the build steps. </li> - -<li>Invokes the bootstrapped Ant with the parameters passed to the build script. In -this case, these parameters define an Ant property value and specify the "dist" target -in Ant's own <code>build.xml</code> file.</li> - -<li>Create the ant.jar and ant-launcher.jar JAR files</li> - -<li>Create optional JARs for which the build had the relevant libraries. If -a particular library is missing from ANT_HOME/lib/optional, then the matching -ant- JAR file will not be created. For example, ant-junit.jar is only built -if there is a junit.jar in the optional directory.</li> -</ul> - -<p>On most occasions you will not need to explicitly bootstrap Ant since the build -scripts do that for you. If however, the build file you are using makes use of features -not yet compiled into the bootstrapped Ant, you will need to manually bootstrap. -Run <code>bootstrap.bat</code> (Windows) or <code>bootstrap.sh</code> (UNIX) -to build a new bootstrap version of Ant.</p> - -If you wish to install the build into the current <code>ANT_HOME</code> -directory, you can use: -<blockquote> - <p><code>build install</code> (<i>Windows</i>)</p> - <p><code>sh build.sh install</code> (<i>Unix</i>)</p> -</blockquote> - -You can avoid the lengthy Javadoc step, if desired, with: -<blockquote> - <p><code>build install-lite</code> (<i>Windows</i>)</p> - <p><code>sh build.sh install-lite</code> (<i>Unix</i>)</p> -</blockquote> -This will only install the <code>bin</code> and <code>lib</code> directories. -<p>Both the <code>install</code> and -<code>install-lite</code> targets will overwrite -the current Ant version in <code>ANT_HOME</code>.</p> - -<p>Ant's build script will try to set executable flags for its shell - scripts on Unix-like systems. There are various reasons why the - chmod-task might fail (like when you are running the build script as - a different user than the one who installed Ant initially). In this - case you can set the Ant property <code>chmod.fail</code> to false - when starting the build like in -<blockquote> - <p><code>sh build.sh install -Dchmod.fail=false</code></p> -</blockquote> -and any error to change permission will not result in a build failure.</p> - -<hr> -<h2><a name="librarydependencies">Library Dependencies</a></h2> -<p>The following libraries are needed in Ant's classpath -if you are using the -indicated feature. Note that only one of the regexp libraries is -needed for use with the mappers -(and Java includes a regexp implementation which -Ant will find automatically). -You will also need to install the particular -Ant optional jar containing the task definitions to make these -tasks available. Please refer to the <a href="#optionalTasks"> -Installing Ant / Optional Tasks</a> section above.</p> - -<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"> - <tr> - <td><b>Jar Name</b></td> - <td><b>Needed For</b></td> - <td><b>Available At</b></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jakarta-regexp-1.3.jar</td> - <td>regexp type with mappers (if you do not wish to use java.util.regex)</td> - <td><a href="http://attic.apache.org/projects/jakarta-regexp.html" target="_top">http://attic.apache.org/projects/jakarta-regexp.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jakarta-oro-2.0.8.jar</td> - <td>regexp type with mappers (if you do not wish to use java.util.regex)<br> - To use the FTP task, -you need jakarta-oro 2.0.8 or later, and <a href="#commons-net">commons-net</a></td> - <td><a href="http://attic.apache.org/projects/jakarta-oro.html" target="_top">http://attic.apache.org/projects/jakarta-oro.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>junit.jar</td> - <td><code><junit></code> task. May be in classpath passed to task rather than Ant's classpath.</td> - <td><a href="http://www.junit.org/" target="_top">http://www.junit.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>xalan.jar</td> - <td>junitreport task</td> - <td><a href="http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/" target="_top">http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>antlr.jar</td> - <td>antlr task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.antlr.org/" target="_top">http://www.antlr.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>bsf.jar</td> - <td>script task - <p> - <strong>Note</strong>: Ant 1.6 and later require Apache BSF, not - the IBM version. I.e. you need BSF 2.3.0-rc1 or later. - </p> - <p> - <strong>Note</strong>: BSF 2.4.0 is needed to use a post 1.5R3 version - of rhino's javascript. - </p> - <p> - <strong>Note</strong>: BSF 2.4.0 uses jakarta-commons-logging - so it needs the commons-logging.jar. - </p> - </td> - <td><a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/bsf/" target="_top">http://jakarta.apache.org/bsf/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Groovy jars</td> - <td>Groovy with script and scriptdef tasks<br> - You need to get the groovy jar and two asm jars from a groovy - installation. The jars are groovy-[version].jar, asm-[version].jar and - asm-util-[version].jar and antlr-[version].jar. - As of groovy version 1.0-JSR-06, the jars are - groovy-1.0-JSR-06.jar, antlr-2.7.5.jar, asm-2.2.jar and asm-util-2.2.jar. - Alternatively one may use the embedded groovy jar file. - This is located in the embedded directory of the groovy distribution. - This bundles all the needed jar files into one jar file. - It is called groovy-all-[version].jar. - </td> - <td> - <a href="http://groovy.codehaus.org/" target="_top">http://groovy.codehaus.org/</a> - <br> - The asm jars are also available from the creators of asm - - <a href="http://asm.objectweb.org/" target="_top">http://asm.objectweb.org/</a> - </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>netrexx.jar</td> - <td>netrexx task, Rexx with the script task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.ibm.com/software/awdtools/netrexx/download.html" target="_top"> - http://www.ibm.com/software/awdtools/netrexx/download.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>js.jar</td> - <td>Javascript with script task<br> - If you use Apache BSF 2.3.0-rc1, you must use rhino 1.5R3 (later - versions of BSF (e.g. version 2.4.0) work with 1.5R4 and higher).</td> - <td><a href="http://www.mozilla.org/rhino/" target="_top">http://www.mozilla.org/rhino/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jython.jar</td> - <td>Python with script task<br> - Warning : jython.jar also contains classes from jakarta-oro. - Remove these classes if you are also using jakarta-oro.</td> - <td><a href="http://jython.sourceforge.net/" target="_top">http://jython.sourceforge.net/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jpython.jar</td> - <td>Python with script task <b>deprecated, jython is the preferred engine</b></td> - <td><a href="http://www.jpython.org/" target="_top">http://www.jpython.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jacl.jar and tcljava.jar</td> - <td>TCL with script task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.scriptics.com/software/java/" target="_top">http://www.scriptics.com/software/java/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>BeanShell JAR(s)</td> - <td>BeanShell with script task. - <br> - <strong>Note</strong>: Ant requires BeanShell version 1.3 or - later</td> - <td><a href="http://www.beanshell.org/" target="_top">http://www.beanshell.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jruby.jar</td> - <td>Ruby with script task</td> - <td><a href="http://jruby.org/" target="_top">http://jruby.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>judo.jar</td> - <td>Judoscript with script task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.judoscript.org/" target="_top">http://www.judoscript.org/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>commons-logging.jar</td> - <td>CommonsLoggingListener</td> - <td><a href="http://commons.apache.org/logging/" - target="_top">http://commons.apache.org/logging/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>log4j.jar</td> - <td>Log4jListener</td> - <td><a href="http://logging.apache.org/log4j/" - target="_top">http://logging.apache.org/log4j/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><a name="commons-net">commons-net.jar</a></td> - <td>ftp, rexec and telnet tasks<br> - jakarta-oro 2.0.8 or later is required together with commons-net 1.4.0.<br> - For all users, a minimum version of commons-net of 1.4.0 is recommended. Earlier - versions did not support the full range of configuration options, and 1.4.0 is needed - to compile Ant. - </td> - <td><a href="http://commons.apache.org/net/" - target="_top">http://commons.apache.org/net/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>bcel.jar</td> - <td>classfileset data type, - JavaClassHelper used by the ClassConstants filter reader and - optionally used by ejbjar for dependency determination - </td> - <td><a href="http://commons.apache.org/bcel/" target="_top">http://commons.apache.org/bcel/</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>mail.jar</td> - <td>Mail task with Mime encoding, and the MimeMail task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/index-138643.html" - target="_top">http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/index-138643.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>activation.jar</td> - <td>Mail task with Mime encoding, and the MimeMail task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/jaf-135115.html" - target="_top">http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/jaf-135115.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jdepend.jar</td> - <td>jdepend task</td> - <td><a href="http://www.clarkware.com/software/JDepend.html" - target="_top">http://www.clarkware.com/software/JDepend.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>resolver.jar <b>1.1beta or later</b></td> - <td>xmlcatalog datatype <em>only if support for external catalog files is desired</em></td> - <td><a href="http://xml.apache.org/commons/" - target="_top">http://xml.apache.org/commons/</a>.</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>jsch.jar <b>0.1.50 or later</b></td> - <td>sshexec and scp tasks</td> - <td><a href="http://www.jcraft.com/jsch/index.html" - target="_top">http://www.jcraft.com/jsch/index.html</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>JAI - Java Advanced Imaging</td> - <td>image task</td> - <td><a href="https://jai.dev.java.net/" - target="_top">https://jai.dev.java.net/</a></td> - </tr> -</table> -<br> -<h2><a name="Troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a></h2> - - -<h3><a name="diagnostics">Diagnostics</a></h3> - -<p> Ant has a built in diagnostics feature. If you run <code>ant --diagnostics</code> ant will look at its internal state and print it out. This -code will check and print the following things. </p> - -<ul> - -<li>Where Ant is running from. Sometimes you can be surprised.</li> - -<li>The version of ant.jar and of the ant-*.jar containing the optional tasks - - and whether they match</li> - -<li>Which JAR files are in ANT_HOME/lib - -<li>Which optional tasks are available. If a task is not listed as being -available, either it is not present, or libraries that it depends on are -absent.</li> - - -<li>XML Parser information</li> - -<li>JVM system properties -</li> - -<li>The status of the temp directory. If this is not writable, or its clock is -horribly wrong (possible if it is on a network drive), a lot of tasks will fail -with obscure error messages.</li> - -<li>The current time zone as Java sees it. If this is not what it should be for -your location, then dependency logic may get confused. - -</ul> - -<p> - Running <code>ant -diagnostics</code> is a good way to check that ant is - installed. It is also a first step towards self-diagnosis of any problem. - Any configuration problem reported to the user mailing list will probably - result ins someone asking you to run the command and show the results, so - save time by using it yourself. -</p> - -<p> - For under-IDE diagnostics, use the <diagnostics> task to run the same - tests as an ant task. This can be added to a diagnostics target in a build - file to see what tasks are available under the IDE, what the XML parser and - classpath is, etc. -</p> - -<h3><a name="ant-user">user mailing list</a></h3> - -<p> If you cannot get Ant installed or working, the Ant user mailing list is the -best place to start with any problem. Please do your homework first, make sure -that it is not a <a href="#classpath"><code>CLASSPATH</code></a> problem, and run a <a -href="#diagnostics">diagnostics check</a> to see what Ant thinks of its own -state. Why the user list, and not the developer list? -Because there are more users than developers, so more people who can help you. </p> - -<p> - -Please only file a bug report against Ant for a configuration/startup problem if -there really is a fixable bug in Ant related to configuration, such as it not -working on a particular platform, with a certain JVM version, etc, or if you are -advised to do it by the user mailing list. -</p> - - - - -</body> -</html> |