If you've installed Ant as described in the
Installing Ant section,
running Ant from the command-line is simple: just type
ant.
When no arguments are specified, Ant looks for a build.xml
file in the current directory and, if found, uses that file as the
build file and runs the target specified in the default
attribute of the <project> tag.
To make Ant use
a build file other than build.xml, use the command-line
option -buildfile file
-find [file]build.xml. To have it search for a build file other
than build.xml, specify a file argument.
Note: If you include any other flags or arguments
on the command line after
the -find-findbuild.xml.
You can also set properties on the
command line. This can be done with
the -Dproperty=value-DMYVAR=%MYVAR%-DMYVAR=$MYVAR${MYVAR}.
You can also access environment variables using the
property task's
environment attribute.
Options that affect the amount of logging output by Ant are:
-quiet-verbose-debug
It is also possible to specify one or more targets that should be executed.
When omitted, the target that is specified in the
default attribute of the
project tag is
used.
The -projecthelpdescription attribute are listed as "Main targets",
those without a description are listed as
"Other targets", then the "Default" target is listed
("Other targets" are only displayed if there are no main
targets, or if Ant is invoked in -verbose or -debug mode).
ant [options] [target [target2 [target3] ...]]
Options:
-help, -h print this message
-projecthelp, -p print project help information
-version print the version information and exit
-diagnostics print information that might be helpful to
diagnose or report problems.
-quiet, -q be extra quiet
-verbose, -v be extra verbose
-debug, -d print debugging information
-emacs, -e produce logging information without adornments
-lib <path> specifies a path to search for jars and classes
-logfile <file> use given file for log
-l <file> ''
-logger <classname> the class which is to perform logging
-listener <classname> add an instance of class as a project listener
-noinput do not allow interactive input
-buildfile <file> use given buildfile
-file <file> ''
-f <file> ''
-D<property>=<value> use value for given property
-keep-going, -k execute all targets that do not depend
on failed target(s)
-propertyfile <name> load all properties from file with -D
properties taking precedence
-inputhandler <class> the class which will handle input requests
-find <file> (s)earch for buildfile towards the root of
-s <file> the filesystem and use it
-nice number A niceness value for the main thread:
1 (lowest) to 10 (highest); 5 is the default
-nouserlib Run ant without using the jar files from ${user.home}/.ant/lib
-noclasspath Run ant without using CLASSPATH
-autoproxy Java 1.5+ : use the OS proxies
-main <class> override Ant's normal entry point
For more information about -logger and
-listener see
Loggers & Listeners.
For more information about -inputhandler see
InputHandler.
Easiest way of changing the exit-behaviour is subclassing the original main class:
public class CustomExitCode extends org.apache.tools.ant.Main {
protected void exit(int exitCode) {
// implement your own behaviour, e.g. NOT exiting the JVM
}
}
and starting Ant with access (-lib path-to-class) to this class.
Prior to Ant 1.6, all jars in the ANT_HOME/lib would be added to the CLASSPATH used to run Ant. This was done in the scripts that started Ant. From Ant 1.6, two directories are scanned by default and more can be added as required. The default directories scanned are ANT_HOME/lib and a user specific directory, ${user.home}/.ant/lib. This arrangement allows the Ant installation to be shared by many users while still allowing each user to deploy additional jars. Such additional jars could be support jars for Ant's optional tasks or jars containing third-party tasks to be used in the build. It also allows the main Ant installation to be locked down which will please system adminstrators.
Additional directories to be searched may be added by using the -lib option. The -lib option specifies a search path. Any jars or classes in the directories of the path will be added to Ant's classloader. The order in which jars are added to the classpath is as follows:
Note that the CLASSPATH environment variable is passed to Ant using a -lib option. Ant itself is started with a very minimalistic classpath. Ant should work perfectly well with an empty CLASSPATH environment variable, something the the -noclasspath option actually enforces. We get many more support calls related to classpath problems (especially quoting problems) than we like.
The location of ${user.home}/.ant/lib is somewhat dependent on the JVM. On Unix systems ${user.home} maps to the user's home directory whilst on recent versions of Windows it will be somewhere such as C:\Documents and Settings\username\.ant\lib. You should consult your JVM documentation for more details.
ant
runs Ant using the build.xml file in the current directory, on
the default target.
ant -buildfile test.xml
runs Ant using the test.xml file in the current directory, on
the default target.
ant -buildfile test.xml dist
runs Ant using the test.xml file in the current directory, on
the target called dist.
ant -buildfile test.xml -Dbuild=build/classes dist
runs Ant using the test.xml file in the current directory, on
the target called dist, setting the build property
to the value build/classes.
ant -lib /home/ant/extras
runs Ant picking up additional task and support jars from the /home/ant/extras location
The Ant wrapper script for Unix will source (read and evaluate) the
file ~/.antrc before it does anything. On Windows, the Ant
wrapper batch-file invokes %HOME%\antrc_pre.bat at the start and
%HOME%\antrc_post.bat at the end. You can use these
files, for example, to set/unset environment variables that should only be
visible during the execution of Ant. See the next section for examples.
The wrapper scripts use the following environment variables (if set):
JAVACMD - full path of the Java executable. Use this
to invoke a different JVM than JAVA_HOME/bin/java(.exe).ANT_OPTS - command-line arguments that should be
passed to the JVM. For example, you can define system properties or set
the maximum Java heap size here.ANT_ARGS - Ant command-line arguments. For example,
set ANT_ARGS to point to a different logger, include a
listener, and to include the -find flag.-find
in ANT_ARGS, you should include the name of the build file
to find, even if the file is called build.xml.
Some of Ant's core classes can be configured via system properties.
Here is the result of a search through the codebase. Because system properties are available via Project instance, I searched for them with a
grep -r -n "getPropert" * > ..\grep.txt
command. After that I filtered out the often-used but not-so-important values (most of them
read-only values): path.separator, ant.home, basedir, user.dir, os.name,
line.separator, java.home, java.version, java.version, user.home, java.class.path| property name | valid values /default value | description |
|---|---|---|
ant.build.javac.source |
Source-level version number | Default source value for <javac>/<javadoc> |
ant.build.javac.target |
Class-compatibility version number | Default target value for <javac> |
ant.executor.class |
classname; default is org. apache. tools. ant. helper. DefaultExecutor | Since Ant 1.6.3 Ant will delegate Target invocation to the org.apache.tools.ant.Executor implementation specified here. |
ant.file |
read only: full filename of the build file | This is set to the name of the build file. In <import>-ed files, this is set to the containing build file. |
ant.file.* |
read only: full filename of the build file of Ant projects | This is set to the name of a file by project; this lets you determine the location of <import>-ed files, |
ant.input.properties |
filename (required) | Name of the file holding the values for the PropertyFileInputHandler. |
ant.logger.defaults |
filename (optional, default '/org/ apache/ tools/ ant/ listener/ defaults.properties') | Name of the file holding the color mappings for the AnsiColorLogger. |
ant.netrexxc.* |
several formats | Use specified values as defaults for netrexxc. |
ant.PropertyHelper |
ant-reference-name (optional) | Specify the PropertyHelper to use. The object must be of the type org.apache.tools.ant.PropertyHelper. If not defined an object of org.apache.tools.ant.PropertyHelper will be used as PropertyHelper. |
ant.regexp.regexpimpl |
classname | classname for a RegExp implementation; if not set Ant tries to find another (JDK14+, Apache Oro...); RegExp-Mapper "Choice of regular expression implementation" |
ant.reuse.loader |
boolean | allow to reuse classloaders used in org.apache.tools.ant.util.ClasspathUtil |
ant.XmlLogger.stylesheet.uri |
filename (default 'log.xsl') | Name for the stylesheet to include in the logfile by XmlLogger. |
build.compiler |
name | Specify the default compiler to use. see javac, EJB Tasks (compiler attribute), javah |
build.compiler.emacs |
boolean (default false) | Enable emacs-compatible error messages. see javac "Jikes Notes" |
build.compiler.fulldepend |
boolean (default false) | Enable full dependency checking see javac "Jikes Notes" |
build.compiler.jvc.extensions |
boolean (default true) | enable Microsoft extensions of their java compiler see javac "Jvc Notes" |
build.compiler.pedantic |
boolean (default false) | Enable pedantic warnings. see javac "Jikes Notes" |
build.compiler.warnings |
Deprecated flag | see javac "Jikes Notes" |
build.rmic |
name | control the rmic compiler |
build.sysclasspath |
"only", something else | only: current threads get the actual class loader (AntClassLoader.setThreadContextLoader()). else: use core loader as default (ComponentHelper.initTasks()). Disable changing the classloader (oata.taskdefs.Classloader.execute() experimental task). |
file.encoding |
name of a supported character set (e.g. UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, US-ASCII) | use as default character set of email messages; use as default for source-, dest- and bundleencoding
in translate see JavaDoc of java.nio.charset.Charset for more information about character sets (not used in Ant, but has nice docs). |
jikes.class.path |
path | The specified path is added to the classpath if jikes is used as compiler. |
MailLogger.properties.file, MailLogger.* |
filename (optional, defaults derived from Project instance) | Name of the file holding properties for sending emails by the MailLogger. Override properties set inside the buildfile or via command line. |
org.apache.tools.ant.ProjectHelper |
classname (optional, default 'org.apache.tools.ant.ProjectHelper') | specifies the classname to use as ProjectHelper. The class must extend org.apache.tools.ant.ProjectHelper. |
p4.port, p4.client, p4.user |
several formats | Specify defaults for port-, client- and user-setting of the perforce tasks. |
websphere.home
| ||
XmlLogger.file
|
If new properties get added (it happens), expect them to appear under the "ant." and "org.apache.tools.ant" prefixes, unless the developers have a very good reason to use another prefix. Accordingly, please avoid using properties that begin with these prefixes. This protects you from future Ant releases breaking your build file.
the ant start up scripts (in their Windows and Unix version) return the return code of the java program. So a successful build returns 0, failed builds return other values.
The Unix launch script that come with Ant works correctly with Cygwin. You
should not have any problems launching Ant from the Cygwin shell. It is
important to note, however, that once Ant is running it is part of the JDK
which operates as a native Windows application. The JDK is not a Cygwin
executable, and it therefore has no knowledge of Cygwin paths, etc. In
particular when using the <exec> task, executable names such
as "/bin/sh" will not work, even though these work from the Cygwin
shell from which Ant was launched. You can use an executable name such as
"sh" and rely on that command being available in the Windows path.
The OS/2 launch script was developed to perform complex tasks. It has two parts:
ant.cmd which calls Ant and antenv.cmd which sets the environment for Ant.
Most often you will just call ant.cmd using the same command line options as described
above. The behaviour can be modified by a number of ways explained below.
Script ant.cmd first verifies whether the Ant environment is set correctly. The
requirements are:
JAVA_HOME is set.ANT_HOME is set.CLASSPATH is set and contains at least one element from
JAVA_HOME and at least one element from ANT_HOME.If any of these conditions is violated, script antenv.cmd is called. This script
first invokes configuration scripts if there exist: the system-wide configuration
antconf.cmd from the %ETC% directory and then the user configuration
antrc.cmd from the %HOME% directory. At this moment both
JAVA_HOME and ANT_HOME must be defined because antenv.cmd
now adds classes.zip or tools.jar (depending on version of JVM) and
everything from %ANT_HOME%\lib except ant-*.jar to
CLASSPATH. Finally ant.cmd calls per-directory configuration
antrc.cmd. All settings made by ant.cmd are local and are undone when the
script ends. The settings made by antenv.cmd are persistent during the lifetime of the
shell (of course unless called automatically from ant.cmd). It is thus possible to call
antenv.cmd manually and modify some settings before calling ant.cmd.
Scripts envset.cmd and runrc.cmd perform auxiliary tasks. All scripts
have some documentation inside.
If you have installed Ant in the do-it-yourself way, Ant can be started from one of two entry points:
java -Dant.home=c:\ant org.apache.tools.ant.Main [options] [target]
java -Dant.home=c:\ant org.apache.tools.ant.launch.Launcher [options] [target]
The first method runs Ant's traditional entry point. The second method uses the Ant Launcher introduced in Ant 1.6. The former method does not support the -lib option and all required classes are loaded from the CLASSPATH. You must ensure that all required jars are available. At a minimum the CLASSPATH should include:
ant.jar and ant-launcher.jarThe latter method supports the -lib, -nouserlib, -noclasspath options and will load jars from the specified ANT_HOME. You should start the latter with the most minimal classpath possible, generally just the ant-launcher.jar.
Ant can be started in Ant via the<java> command.
Here is an example:
<java
classname="org.apache.tools.ant.launch.Launcher"
fork="true"
failonerror="true"
dir="${sub.builddir}"
timeout="4000000"
taskname="startAnt"
>
<classpath>
<pathelement location="${ant.home}/lib/ant-launcher.jar"/>
</classpath>
<arg value="-buildfile"/>
<arg file="${sub.buildfile}"/>
<arg value="-Dthis=this"/>
<arg value="-Dthat=that"/>
<arg value="-Dbasedir=${sub.builddir}"/>
<arg value="-Dthe.other=the.other"/>
<arg value="${sub.target}"/>
</java>