I'm confused. Is it really related to IvyDE or just to launching ant from eclipse? Also, If you don't put the the ivy ant task into the ant classpath, but only the core. How does ant launched from eclipse find those tasks? I guess I miss something.
Anyway, I think it is a good idea to simplify our main distribution. However, once we will have a clear published interface, I think we could further split the distribution in the maven repository. Gilles 2007/12/19, Xavier Hanin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > Hi, > > ATM Ivy is provided in the form of two jars: ivy.jar and ivy-core.jar. The > ivy-core.jar is basically the same as ivy.jar except that it doesn't > contain > Ant related classes (mostly Ivy Ant tasks). This was introduced a long > time > ago for IvyDE, as a workaround to a classloader issue when contributing > ivy.jar to ant classpath in eclipse. > > The downside of this is that most people do not understand the difference > between the two, and I often see people putting both ivy.jar and > ivy-core.jar in ant/lib. Not that much a problem, until someone change > only > one jar out of the two, which can lead to strange bugs difficult to > diagnose > if ivy-core.jar is before ivy.jar in the classpath. > > Moreover, in recent tests I've found that the eclipse ant classpath > problem > was still present in some cases, and preferred to use an easy and > straightforward solution: configure ant classpath manually in eclipse to > add > ivy.jar (or point to another ant home where ivy.jar is already present). > > Thus I'm wondering if it wouldn't be easier to abandon ivy-core.jar, and > tell IvyDE users they have to configure their ant classpath manually IF > they > want to use Ivy tasks in their ant build from eclipse (as they have to do > for any other custom ant tasks anyway). > > WDYT? > > Xavier > -- > Xavier Hanin - Independent Java Consultant > http://xhab.blogspot.com/ > http://ant.apache.org/ivy/ > http://www.xoocode.org/ >