I want to write a custom Fileset type that reads input from a file.
I don't want to support any nested elements, I just want to be able to
do something like this:
and have a custom class create a fileset based on the content of
libraries.txt.
So, I have two questions:
1. Is it possible for
An offshore user running JDK 1.4.1_02 and Ant 1.6.1 is getting this
strange message:
The type doesn't support the nested "echo" element
Here's the snippet of code:
'makeall' produces output like this:
$ makeall bmesmall
Using jvm.lib at "c:\local\jdk1.4.x\lib\jvm.lib"
Root di
Thanks for your help. I figured it was much too complicated for what
I wanted to do. The shell script is for a deployment of my software
to various linux pcs. The software is 24x7 server software for a grid
computing project. The sysadmins for those pcs are intimately
familiar with unix system
I would probably do this a different way. What is the
shell script for? What about the particular java task
in your build file are you trying to preserve? If you
really need to do this you'd probably have an easier
time extending the Java task and grabbing its command
line to write your shell sc
I'm probably doing things incorrectly.
The code snippet is...
Target target = (Target)getProject().getTargets().get(fromTarget);
Task[] tasks = target.getTasks();
Then I just search through the array for the one labeled "java" and
that turns out to be an UnknownElement.
Basically, all I want to
What code are you executing to return an
UnknownElement?
-Matt
--- Greg Gimler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sorry, sent that one too soon.
>
> Continuing... from there I'm trying to get access to
> the java runtime
> inside of the task specified to my custom task,
> unixscriptgen.
> Instead I g
Sorry, sent that one too soon.
Continuing... from there I'm trying to get access to the java runtime
inside of the task specified to my custom task, unixscriptgen.
Instead I get access to an UnknownElement which I can then try and
call the getTask() method on. It returns null unless I first call
Hello,
I'm trying to generate a unix shell script from an ant task. The ant
task is just a simple java execution and I want to generate the unix
shell script for deployment purposes. Is there a way to do this
easily? I've tried to write a custom task and I'm having a difficult
time getting all
If all you have is the JRE (and not the JDK) then you won't have tools.jar
--
Jeffrey E. Care ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
WebSphere Build SWAT Team Lead
WebSphere Build Tooling Lead (Project Mantis)
https://w3.opensource.ibm.com/projects/mantis
Graeme Shaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 04/08/2005 11:01:
> From: Graeme Shaw [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I'm trying to get Ant set up so I can use it to install Apache
XML-RPC.
> $JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/java/jre
JAVA_HOME is supposed to point to the JDK, not the JRE.
> $ANT_HOME=/usr/local/ant
>
> When I run 'ant' in the XML-RPC directory I get the ou
tools.jar is part of a JDK - not included in a JRE.
So your JAVA_HOME should point to a JDK.
Jan
> -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
> Von: Graeme Shaw [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet am: Freitag, 8. April 2005 17:02
> An: user@ant.apache.org
> Betreff: Ant configuration problem (tools.jar).
Hello
Thanks for responding.
Since I have i,j variable is defined outside of all methods in my
method, their values are available anywhere in any method.
Can you provide pseudo code or any example snippet for 2 and 3 ?
I am new to ant world ?
Eagerly awaiting your response to implement your
I'm trying to get Ant set up so I can use it to install Apache XML-RPC.
I have:
$JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/java/jre
$ANT_HOME=/usr/local/ant
When I run 'ant' in the XML-RPC directory I get the output I've
attached at the bottom. I can't seem to find a tools.jar either in
/usr/lib/java/jre/lib or in /us
> From: Mark Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
^^
Oh, and you want here instead too. --DD
>
>
-
To unsu
> From: Mark Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
^
It's likely the pb is the leading slash, unless all your Jars
are in the root dir or the drive root, which is unlikely.
automatically removes non-valid filenames, so yours
is correctly referenced,
Hello Mark,
try this :
+
-
Cheers,
Antoine
> Hello,
>
> Apache Ant version 1.6.2
>
> I have a problem with my Ant script. I create a classpath reference at
> the start of the script, like this:
Hello Mark,
Could try it in this way:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> location="/myadditionaljar.jar"/>
>
> ... etc...
Fore more information on reusing paths using refid see
[1].
HTH Ivan
[1]htt
Hello,
Apache Ant version 1.6.2
I have a problem with my Ant script. I create a classpath reference at
the start of the script, like this:
... but when I reference this from one of the targets in the build
script (a JUnit test), it doesn't seem to be picking
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