Setup:
Project A - Pure Java project with no dependencies.
Project B - Pure Java project depends on project A.
Process:
I have a build project script in each of the project root directory and a master script to run them both, in the correct order, first Project A and then Project B. The script output is relative to each project's path.
The script works just fine for Project A, but when it comes to Project B it misses the classes output of Project A.
Using ANT, is there a way to add "dynamically" to the compile classpath the output of a previously compile project?
Or, is there any action I can take except explicitly provide Project B with the classes output path of Project A?
OK, so this took a bunch of hacking.
First use add ant-contrib to your ant you can download it from here.
Then I declared a var instead of a property in my main ant script.
In the compile macro I've passed it to the javac as the classpath.
After the compile is done, I've appended the new classes output folder to the classpath var and called the next compile.
Good luck.
The compile script:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<project name="PDF Test Client" default="main" basedir=".">
<taskdef resource="net/sf/antcontrib/antlib.xml" />
<macrodef name="Compile">
<attribute name="ProjectName" default=" -- set aname to a 'ProjectName' property --" />
<attribute name="ProjectRootDir" default="." />
<attribute name="SourceDir" default="#{ProjectRootDir}/src" />
<attribute name="OutputDir" default="#{ProjectRootDir}/output" />
<attribute name="BuildDir" default="#{OutputDir}/bin" />
<attribute name="ClassesDir" default="#{BuildDir}/classes" />
<sequential>
<echo message="Compiling... #{ProjectName}" />
<mkdir dir="#{ClassesDir}" />
<javac srcdir="#{SourceDir}" destdir="#{ClassesDir}" classpath="${ClassPathFolders}" includeantruntime="true" />
<var name="ClassPathFolders" value="${ClassPathFolders}; #{ClassesDir}" />
<echo message="-" />
</sequential>
</macrodef>
<target name="main">
</target>
</project>
Related
I've made a simple 'AntExecutor' app in eclipse that can run ant tasks programmatically and it works. But for university purposes I need to keep it independant from IDE. So, funnily, I'm strugling to create ant tasks which would compile,build my 'AntExecutor' app (which executes ant-tasks) :)
Stripped-down version I'm currently trying to define ant-tasks for only contains one source file in 'storageAccess' package:
./src/storageAccess/AntExecutor.java
I've got some libraries that AntExecutor.java makes use of at:
./lib
And the build file is at:
./build.xml
AntExecutor.java also needs ant libraries to execute ant tasks so they're added to CP at compile at. in build file:
<classpath path="${build};D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/;"/>
Full build.xml file:
<project name="AntExecutor" default="dist" basedir=".">
<description>
simple example build file
</description>
<!-- set global properties for this build -->
<property name="src" location="src"/>
<property name="build" location="build/classes/"/>
<property name="dist" location="build/jar/"/>
<target name="init">
<!-- Create the time stamp -->
<tstamp/>
<!-- Create the build directory structure used by compile -->
<mkdir dir="${build}"/>
</target>
<target name="compile" depends="init"
description="compile the source " >
<!-- Compile the java code from ${src} into ${build} -->
<javac destdir="${build}">
<src path="${src}"/>
<classpath path="${build};D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/;"/>
</javac>
</target>
<target name="dist" depends="compile"
description="generate the distribution" >
<!-- Create the distribution directory -->
<mkdir dir="${dist}"/>
<!-- Put everything in ${build} into RunExecutor.jar file -->
<jar destfile = "${dist}/RunExecutor.jar" basedir="${build}">
<manifest>
<attribute name = "Main-Class" value = "storageAccess.AntExecutor"/>
<attribute name = "Class-Path" value = "D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/;"/>
</manifest>
</jar>
<copy todir="${dist}\lib">
<fileset dir="lib"/>
</copy>
</target>
<target name="clean"
description="clean up" >
<!-- Delete the ${build} and ${dist} directory trees -->
<delete dir="${build}"/>
<delete dir="${dist}"/>
</target>
</project>
now if i run 'ant dist' command I get no errors, build succeeds and RunExecutor.jar file is created at ./build/jar
To check contents of RunExecutor.jar, I ran: jar tf build/jar/RunExecutor.jar
result:
META-INF/
META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
storageAccess/
storageAccess/AntExecutor.class
so it seems like storageAcces.AntExecutor class was indeed successfully compiled to .jar file.
However, if i try running it like this: java -jar build/jar/RunExecutor.jar
I get this error:
Error: Could not find or load main class storageAccess.AntExecutor
Main-question:
How come it can't find the class that is clearly in it.(as 'jar tf' shows) how do I fix this?
Also, what is the corret way to add ant/lib/*.jar files to CP for compiling and running 'RunExecutor.jar' ?
is it okay just to specify the path to them as I do now? :
<attribute name = "Class-Path" value = "D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/;"/>
or, maybe I should use wildcard like:
<attribute name = "Class-Path" value = "D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/*.jar;"/>
or, should I frustratingly add all the files one by one?
<attribute name = "Class-Path" value = "D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/ant.jar;"/> , etc...
The problem with
<attribute name = "Class-Path" value = "D:/DevTools/apache-ant-1.9.8/lib/;"/>
is you are hard-coding path which is not a good practice. This jar will not execute on other machines as there are chances that they won't have lib under same location.
You can directly create executable jar from eclipse project itself. For steps refer this.
You can also put required lib in same jar file and they will by default get added to class-path.
Say I have a library and a binary target, let's call them MyLib and MyBin,
MyBin depends on MyLib.
I'm trying to create an Ant buildfile for MyBin that first builds MyLib and then includes it in the classpath when building MyBin.
I've tried using Ant tasks as in Building other, dependent projects with Ant .
However, it's not working, and from ant -v I think the MyBin build-deps target is not even building MyLib. Seems like it's confusing MyBin and MyLib properties? I'm not sure how to prevent this though.
I'm dumping only MyBin/build.xml below, but the MyLib is almost identical, except it does not have the build-deps target.
<project name="MyBin" default="main" basedir=".">
<property name="projectName" value="MyBin" />
<property name="src.dir" location="src" />
<property name="build.dir" location="bin" />
<property name="dist.dir" location="dist" />
<property name="dist.lib.dir" location="dist/lib" />
<property name="lib.dir" value="lib" />
<target name="build-deps" depends="init">
<!-- MyLib main target does clean -> build -> jar to dist folder -->
<!-- Its build.xml uses many of the same property values as above -->
<ant antfile="../MyLib/build.xml" target="main"/>
</target>
<path id="classpath">
<fileset dir="${basedir}/">
<include name="../MyLib/dist/**/*.jar" />
</fileset>
</path>
<!-- Need classpath to run this -->
<target name="compile" depends="build-deps" description="compile the source ">
<javac includeantruntime="false" srcdir="${src.dir}"
destdir="${build.dir}" classpathref="classpath" />
</target>
<!-- Group all dependencies into a big dependency-all.jar -->
<target name="copy-dependencies">
<mkdir dir="${dist.lib.dir}" />
<jar jarfile="${dist.lib.dir}/dependencies-all.jar">
<zipgroupfileset dir="${lib.dir}">
<include name="**/*.jar" />
</zipgroupfileset>
</jar>
</target>
<!-- jar it, extract above dependency-all.jar and zip it with project files -->
<target name="jar" depends="compile, copy-dependencies"
description="package, output to JAR">
<mkdir dir="${dist.dir}" />
<mkdir dir="${dist.lib.dir}" />
<jar jarfile="${dist.dir}/${projectName}.jar" basedir="${build.dir}">
<manifest>
<attribute name="Main-Class" value="${main-class}" />
</manifest>
<zipfileset src="${dist.lib.dir}/dependencies-all.jar"
excludes="META-INF/*.SF" />
</jar>
</target>
<target name="clean" description="clean up">
<delete dir="${build.dir}" />
<delete dir="${dist.dir}" />
</target>
<!-- Default, run this -->
<target name="main" depends="clean, compile, jar" />
</project>
What I see with ant -v in MyBin is something along the lines of:
build-deps:
Project base dir set to: /MyBin
[ant] calling target(s) [main] in build file /MyLib/build.xml
parsing buildfile /MyLib/build.xml with URI = file:/MyLib/build.xml
Project base dir set to: /MyBin
Override ignored for property "projectName"
Override ignored for property "build.dir"
Override ignored for property "dist.dir"
Override ignored for property "dist.lib.dir"
Override ignored for property "lib.dir"
[pathconvert] Set property classpath.name =
[ant] Entering /MyLib/build.xml...
Build sequence for target(s) `main' is [clean, init, copy-dependencies, jar, main]
Complete build sequence is [clean, init, copy-dependencies, jar, main, ]
clean:
[delete] Deleting directory /MyBin/bin
[delete] Deleting directory /MyBin/bin
init:
[mkdir] Created dir: /MyBin/bin
copy-dependencies:
[ant] Exiting /MyLib/build.xml.
On your specific question:
seems like it's confusing MyBin and MyLib properties? I'm not sure how
to prevent this though.
You are using this to invoke the MyLib build:
<ant antfile="../MyLib/build.xml" target="main" />
A build invoked via the <ant> task this way by default inherits all properties from the caller, including basedir, hence the build is run in the wrong place.
Instead you could use, for example:
<ant dir="../MyLib" />
That will run build.xml in the specified directory, set the basedir property, and call the default target, which should be main if you are using a very similar buildfile for the library as you say. If you don't want to inherit properties from MyBin when executing the MyLib task, specify inheritAll=false in the task.
From the <ant> task docs for the dir attribute:
the directory to use as a basedir for the new Ant project (unless
useNativeBasedir is set to true). Defaults to the current project's
basedir, unless inheritall has been set to false, in which case it
doesn't have a default value. This will override the basedir setting
of the called project. Also serves as the directory to resolve the
antfile and output attribute's values (if any).
I'm trying to compile project using:
ant compile
I've receive following error in terminal:
taskdef class org.testng.TESTNGNGAntTask cannot be found
using the classloader AntClassLoader[]
Here is my teskdef from build.xml file
<taskdef name="testng" classpath="${test.classpath}"
classname="org.testng.TESTNGNGAntTask" />
Could you include the ant file (by default is named build.xml) ?
Ensure you had installed Apache Ant in your computer: open a command line and execute ant -v. If appears a version message It's works.
If you find the ant file, include a compile target (or if you have one, modify it) like this:
<property name="src" location="src" />
<property name="build" location="build" />
<target name="compile">
<mkdir dir="${build}" />
<javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}" />
</target>
The propierties are just constants.
Good luck!
The name of the class is TestNGAntTask (with one NG and with only the T of Test capitalized), not TESTNGNGAntTask (with two NG's and an entirely capitalized TEST).
Try the following instead:
<taskdef name="testng" classpath="${test.classpath}"
classname="org.testng.TestNGAntTask" />
I am using eclipse, and I am having difficulty in creating jar files.
So I have codes like getClass().getResource("/imagesfolder/dog.jpg").
How would I create Jar files such that the folder containing my images will also be included. Because error occurs if my Jar file is not in my bin folder with the class files and the imagesfolder.
I tried File>Export>Java>Executable Jar>Save in desktop but when I double click it, it does not start. I tried cmd and it worked but with errors that it can't find imagesfolder.
How will I do a jar file in a separate directory that executes with a double click
I have a class TreeIcon; it uses two images, and I store them in a folder 'images' which is within the package of TreeIcon. For whatever reason, I made the package of TreeIcon spacecheck.images (it could just as easily have been com.mycompany.images). Therefore I used following code to access my images:
expandedIcon = new ImageIcon(TreeIcon.class.getResource("images/Expanded.GIF"));
where the 'images' here is the name of the folder containing just the images, not the one that is part of the package. I.E., in my tree structure for the program source, the images are in a folder named spacecheck.images.images.
Note that there's no slash at the start of my string; this means it references a path relative to that of the class. Putting the slash in front of the spec causes getResource to regard the path as absolute within your jar, so I could also have used the string "/spacecheck/images/images/Expanded.GIF".
ANT is The Way
In eclipse you can use Ant to build your .jar file.
From ant.apache.org
Apache Ant is a Java library and command-line tool whose mission is to
drive processes described in build files as targets and extension
points dependent upon each other. The main known usage of Ant is the
build of Java applications. Ant supplies a number of built-in tasks
allowing to compile, assemble, test and run Java applications. Ant can
also be used effectively to build non Java applications, for instance
C or C++ applications. More generally, Ant can be used to pilot any
type of process which can be described in terms of targets and tasks.
Ant is written in Java. Users of Ant can develop their own "antlibs"
containing Ant tasks and types, and are offered a large number of
ready-made commercial or open-source "antlibs".
Ant is extremely flexible and does not impose coding conventions or
directory layouts to the Java projects which adopt it as a build tool.
Software development projects looking for a solution combining build
tool and dependency management can use Ant in combination with Apache
Ivy.
The Apache Ant project is part of the Apache Software Foundation.
Search with google and you will find many documentation, I will show the basic way to do it.
The Build.xml file
First of all create a new file xml, for example "Build.xml" this will be the file that Ant will read.
The you start writing inside it this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
This is the basic line you have always to include.
<project name="NameOfYourProject" default="try_jar" basedir=".">
This (with its closing tag </project> at the end of the file, is the main tag, declaring the name of the project and the first task (default) that will be executed, each task is something Ant will do, and is called "Target", you can create a single target that do everything or various target that do few things each, in this case you can create different "flow-chart" that ant will follow. For example I usually create 3 route for Ant: try_jar that is used just to try if all is working in the jar without doing many things, new_version_jar that is the same of try_jar but will update version number, will sign the jar and some other stuff, and javadoc that creates the javadoc for the project. Il will show you the basic try_jar.
<description>
This buildfile is used to build the jar of the game.
</description>
No need to explanation.
<!-- ================= File and Directory Names ==================== -->
<property name="src" location="${basedir}/src" />
<property name="conf" location="${basedir}/conf" />
<property name="build" location="${basedir}/build" />
<property name="dist" location="${basedir}/dist" />
<property name="app.name" value="MyAppName" />
<property name="dist.jarHome" value="${user.home}/MyApplicationMainFolder" />
<property name="app.version" value="0.2" />
<tstamp />
<property name="jar.name" value="${app.name}_${app.version}.${DSTAMP}.jar" />
<property name="jar.completePath" value="${dist.jarHome}/${jar.name}" />
Here we declare the base properties of the jar, we tell it where the source code is, where the build folder should be and so on. We also choose to put all the app in a folder in the base user home (in mac this is /user/UserName/) and create the name for the file that will include the name (obviously) the version and the time when this jar is created. This avoid duplicated or overriding of files that we may want to keep.
<property name="shared.lib" value="${basedir}/lib" />
Here we must specify the directory in which jar files needed by this plugin to run are stored
<!-- =============== Custom Ant Task Definitions =================== -->
<property name="compile.debug" value="true" />
<property name="compile.deprecation" value="false" />
<property name="compile.optimize" value="true" />
This are configuration params for ant
<!-- ================== External Dependencies ======================= -->
<property name="LWJGL" value="lwjgl.jar" />
<property name="Timer" value="timer.jar" />
<property name="Database" value="hsqldb.jar" />
<property name="Splice" value="jarsplice-0.25.jar" />
Here you must specify your external dependencies (something like easymock or powermock if you want to create a test target.
<!-- ================== Compilation Classpath ======================= -->
<path id="compile.classpath">
<fileset dir="${src}">
<include name="**/*.java" />
<exclude name="**/server/*.java"/>
</fileset>
<fileset dir="${shared.lib}">
<include name="**/*.jar" />
</fileset>
</path>
This is what And (with javac command) will build, you have to specify all the folders you want to build and to add (with <fileset>) any jar that is in the buildpath
<!-- =================== All Target ================================ -->
<!-- ================== Try_jar Target ============================ -->
<target name="try_jar" depends="compile, dist, clean_class_files, run" description="Clean build and dist directories, then compile, create jar and finally run" />
This is our target, as specified in "default" the first line, and will run this. Depends tells Ant what it should do before this target. A you can read it will compile, create the jar (dist), remove the class files, and run it.
<!-- ================== Clean Target ============================== -->
<target name="clean" description="Delete old build and dist directories">
<delete dir="${build}" />
<delete dir="${dist}" />
</target>
This is very clear, before to compile a new version we want to remove any old class file to avoid problems. You may think that this is never called, but pay attention to the dependencies of each target.
<!-- ================== Prepare Target ============================= -->
<target name="prepare" depends="clean">
<mkdir dir="${build}" />
<mkdir dir="${build}/classes" />
<mkdir dir="${build}/lib" />
<copy todir="${build}/lib">
<fileset dir="${shared.lib}" includes="${Timer}, ${LWJGL}, ${Database}" />
</copy>
</target>
This prepare the path, creating new needed folders (like build and build/classes) and adding the external dependencies jars.
<!-- ================== Compile Target =========================== -->
<target name="compile" depends="prepare" description="Compile Java sources">
<mkdir dir="${build}/classes" />
<javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${build}/classes" encoding="8859_1" debug="${compile.debug}" deprecation="${compile.deprecation}" optimize="${compile.optimize}" source="1.6" target="1.6">
<classpath refid="compile.classpath" />
</javac>
</target>
This is the main compiling target, as you can see it depends on prepare (that depends on clean) so until now we are using all <target> tags.
Ant compile .java files using <javac> tag, that needs to know where the source files are, where to put .class files, the encoding, and the three params we specified earlier.
<!-- =================== Dist Target ================================ -->
<target name="dist" description="Creates Jar archive">
<!-- Create the time stamp -->
<tstamp>
<format property="compile.timestamp" pattern="yyyyMMddHHmm" />
</tstamp>
<!-- update version in manifest -->
<replaceregexp file="${basedir}/manifestClient" match="Implementation-Version: .*" replace="Implementation-Version: ${app.version}.${compile.timestamp}" />
<!-- Create Jar file -->
<jar destfile="${jar.completePath}" manifest="${basedir}/manifest">
<fileset dir="${build}/classes" excludes="**/*.bak" />
<fileset dir="${src}/" excludes="mh/" />
<fileset dir="${shared.lib}/native/macosx" />
<zipfileset src="${shared.lib}/${Timer}" />
<zipfileset src="${shared.lib}/${LWJGL}" />
<zipfileset src="${shared.lib}/${Database}" />
</jar>
</target>
this creates the real jar. <tstamp> and <replaceregexp> are used to update the version in the manifest, you can remove them.
Jar tag will create the .jar file, we specified what files to add in the jar that will be avaible to my classes inside. We have also to specify a manifest that will discuss later.
<!-- =================== Delete .class Target===================== -->
<target name="clean_class_files" description="Delete .class files stored inside build directory and dist folder">
<delete dir="${build}" />
<delete dir="${dist}" />
</target>
This target deletes the two folder used to store .class files (and obviously all the files inside).
<!-- ================== Run Target =============================== -->
<target name="run" description="Run MagicHogwarts">
<java jar="${jar.completePath}" fork="true">
</java>
</target>
The end of our build.xml file, that is the run target that runs the jar.
This is almost what you need to compile and and the correct resources to a jar, if something is not like you are expecting, simply try few times and all will go right.
This is the manifest:
Manifest-Version: 1.0
Created-By: 1.6.0 (Sun Microsystems Inc.)
Main-Class: package.to.class.with.main
Built-by: Gianmarco
Implementation-Vendor: Gianmarco
Implementation-Title: Title
I hope this will be useful to you.
I am editing few things to make the post better, but no contents will be different.
I have a Java program that uses an external library, whose location is specified through the classpath. I would now like to make the Java program into a standalone jar file (so I can use my IDE for other things whilst the program is running).
How do I turn my existing .java file into an executable jar file?
I am able to make a jar file that includes the class file, manifest file, and the jar file of the library (that was specified in the classpath), but that still appears to be wrong because I get class not found errors.
Ant script for you. What you missed was the classpath generation as a string for the jar task.
<target name="all">
<property name="dir" value="yourProjectDir" />
<property name="name" value="$yourProjectName" />
<!-- clean -->
<delete dir="temp/" />
<mkdir dir="temp/bin/" />
<!-- prepare libs -->
<copy todir="temp/libs/"><fileset dir="${dir}/lbs/" /></copy>
<!-- prepare classpath -->
<pathconvert property="classpath" pathsep=" ">
<path><fileset dir="temp/libs/" /></path>
<chainedmapper><flattenmapper /><globmapper from="*" to="libs/*" /></chainedmapper>
</pathconvert>
<!-- compile -->
<javac destdir="temp/bin/" srcdir="${dir}/src/" target="1.6" source="1.6" includeAntRuntime="false">
<classpath>
<pathelement location="temp/bin/" />
<fileset dir="temp/libs/" />
</classpath>
</javac>
<!-- jar -->
<jar destfile="temp/${name}.jar" basedir="temp/bin/">
<manifest>
<attribute name="Main-Class" value="Main" />
<attribute name="Class-Path" value="${classpath}" />
</manifest>
</jar>
<!-- zip jar + libs -->
<zip destfile="${name}-${version}.zip">
<fileset dir="temp" includes="${name}.jar, libs/" />
</zip>
</target>
The following is the steps, how run stand alone App from command prompt.
1. Create a sample java file then save in particular location(like d:\sample\Hello.java.
2. open command prompt compile that java class, then create jar like Hello.jar file
3. then set classpath in Environment file(like D:\sample\Hello.jar ;
4. Now run your java class , it will work(d:sample>java Hello