So, it appears here's what's happening. Perl invokes a command shell to execute the bat file (ant.bat). The return code from that command shell process is NOT turning out to be %errorlevel%. So, while the ant application has failed, Perl never gets wind of it. Doing an 'exit' at the end of the bat apparently causes the command shell to return %errorlevel% as the return code. Without it, the command shell will return %errorlevel% if no other bat directive follows the failed ant app invocation (and even a simple REM statement can mask out the failure).
For proof of this latter point, try invoking the following:
[test.bat] dir -xyz REM
[test.pl] `test.bat`; print("error is $?\n");
Running test.pl will print "error is 0" !! Take out the REM statement, and you'll get the expected behavior. Very strange. Put back the REM and add an 'exit' and there too you'll get the expected behavior, although now test.bat will terminate the command window if you run it straight out (not good).
Anyway, I realize some of this has strayed significantly from the focus of this mailing list. However, hopefully it does document why running ant.bat from a perl script is problematic (in so far as getting the success status of the ant invocation).
As to my previous email, I figured out why invoking ant via runant.pl was having a problem finding tools.jar. Unlike ant.bat, tools.jar does NOT support JAVA_HOME. Instead, it relies on java.exe being in the PATH. (My PATH picks up an old java.exe)
The need for java.exe in the PATH is documented at the top of runant.pl, so that's fair. Still, I would expect runant.pl and ant.bat to behave as similar as possible. I.e. I'd expect both to support JAVA_HOME.
John
At 08:55 AM 3/11/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From the Windows XP on-line help:
EXIT [/B] [exitCode]
/B specifies to exit the current batch script instead of CMD.EXE. If executed from outside a batch script, it will quit CMD.EXE
exitCode specifies a numeric number. if /B is specified, sets ERRORLEVEL that number. If quitting CMD.EXE, sets the process exit code with that number.
Sten Rosendahl
> -----Original Message----- > From: Dick, Brian E. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 4:35 PM > To: Ant Users List > Subject: RE: launching Ant from a perl script > > The "exit" command terminates the command shell and not the bat file. > You exit a bat file by "goto :eof".
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]