I think it is log4j which wants to look for config files on the thread
context loader.
Regards,
Antoine
On 1/29/2011 1:27 PM, Mitch Gitman wrote:
Here's the solution that finally worked for me, and that includes locating
the log4j class. This is all in my Ant task:
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext applicationContext = new
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext();
applicationContext.setClassLoader(this.getClass().getClassLoader());
applicationContext
.setConfigLocation("com/foo/ApplicationContext.xml");
applicationContext.refresh();
I'm going to clean this up to make the application layer initialize its own
ApplicationContext internally. The caller/consumer of the application will
just be responsible for passing a ClassLoader to the application layer. To
my mind, having to supply a ClassLoader is the least evil--the smallest
concession to the need for this application to be run by an Ant task as
opposed to some other execution environment.
Still, I'm curious why an executing task uses the ClassLoader obtained by
LoaderUtils.getContextClassLoader() rather than the task's own
AntClassLoader.
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 12:26 AM, Mitch Gitman<mgit...@gmail.com> wrote:
Here's another old post that corroborates the one I linked to:
http://www.mail-archive.com/user@ant.apache.org/msg22871.html
This poster isolated the problem with the base class of
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext,
org.springframework.core.io.DefaultResourceLoader. And I notice that
DefaultResourceLoader does have a setClassLoader method:
http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/api/org/springframework/core/io/DefaultResourceLoader.html#setClassLoader%28java.lang.ClassLoader%29
This has the makings of a possibly more elegant solution. So I get:
AntClassLoader taskloader = (AntClassLoader)
this.getClass().getClassLoader();
And then I pass this this AntClassLoader to
DefaultResourceLoader.setClassLoader. I'll give this a shot. Might solve my
log4j problem in the process.
I'm still curious why this classloader isn't used in the first place and
what the default one, as obtained by LoaderUtils.getContextClassLoader(),
represents. This goes back to my observation that this sort of problem
doesn't arise elsewhere.
Note. I'm using Ant 1.7.1.
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 11:33 PM, Mitch Gitman<mgit...@gmail.com> wrote:
I have a Spring-based application that I'm exposing through an Ant task,
among other interfaces.
The moment where I run into trouble is when the application tries to use
Spring's ClassLoader-based code to load a Spring application context:
ApplicationContext applicationContext = new
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext(
"/com/foo/ApplicationContext.xml");
I see an error that the resource com/foo/ApplicationContext.xml cannot be
found on the classpath. The XML file, together with the application code,
happen to be in the same JAR as the task itself.
Now, I came across this very, very old post on the ant-dev list that gave
me the makings of a solution:
http://www.mail-archive.com/dev@ant.apache.org/msg07704.html
So at the start of my task, I would do this:
AntClassLoader taskloader = (AntClassLoader)
this.getClass().getClassLoader();
taskloader.setThreadContextLoader();
And at the close of my task, I would do this:
taskloader.resetThreadContextLoader();
This works actually.*
I'm leery though of having to resort to this fix. Does anyone know of a
"better" way to get Spring to use the right ClassLoader or just in general
to fool task-invoked application code that might play fast and loose with
classloaders? I haven't delved into the Spring source myself. What's odd is
that this problem doesn't arise in other classloading containers in which a
Spring-based application might be running. For example, a web container
would be loading a web application with a child classloader, and yet that
works fine.
Thanks.
* Rather, this almost works. Almost in that Spring tries to configure its
logging through log4j, but it can't find the class
org.apache.log4j.Category. I've verified that the log4j JAR is in my
classpath. The quick fix is to stick the log4j JAR in the Ant lib directory.
Obviously, that is not a sustainable solution. I'm still trying to get to
the bottom of this and might have to write a follow-up message.
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