It is very easy to write your own task:
org.apache.tools.ant.Task
or another class that was desgined to be extended.public void
method that takes a single argument. The
name of the method must begin with set
, followed by the
attribute name, with the first character of the name in uppercase, and the rest in
lowercase*. That is, to support an attribute named
file
you create a method setFile
.
Depending on the type of the argument, Ant will perform some
conversions for you, see below.parallel
), your
class must implement the interface
org.apache.tools.ant.TaskContainer
. If you do so, your
task can not support any other nested elements. See
below.public void addText(String)
method. Note that Ant does not expand properties on
the text it passes to the task.public
method that takes no arguments and returns an
Object
type. The name of the create method must begin
with create
, followed by the element name. An add (or
addConfigured) method must be a public void
method that
takes a single argument of an Object
type with a
no-argument constructor. The name of the add (addConfigured) method
must begin with add
(addConfigured
),
followed by the element name. For a more complete discussion see
below.public void execute
method, with no arguments, that
throws a BuildException
. This method implements the task
itself.* Actually the case of the letters after the first one doesn't really matter to Ant, using all lower case is a good convention, though.
project
and
location
variables.id
attribute to this task,
the project
registers a reference to this newly created task, at parser
time.target
variable.init()
is called at parser time.createXXX()
methods or
instantiated and added to this task via its addXXX()
methods, at parser time.setXXX
methods, at runtime.addText
method, at runtime.setXXX
methods, at runtime.execute()
is called at runtime. While the above initialization
steps only occur once, the execute() method may be
called more than once, if the task is invoked more than once. For example,
if target1
and target2
both depend
on target3
, then running
'ant target1 target2'
will run all tasks in
target3
twice.Ant will always expand properties before it passes the value of an attribute to the corresponding setter method.
The most common way to write an attribute setter is to use a
java.lang.String
argument. In this case Ant will pass
the literal value (after property expansion) to your task. But there
is more! If the argument of you setter method is
boolean
, your method will be passed the value
true if the value specified in the build file is one of
true
, yes
, or on
and
false otherwise.char
or java.lang.Character
, your
method will be passed the first character of the value specified in
the build file.int
, short
and so on), Ant will convert the value of the attribute into this
type, thus making sure that you'll never receive input that is not a
number for that attribute.java.io.File
, Ant will first determine whether the
value given in the build file represents an absolute path name. If
not, Ant will interpret the value as a path name relative to the
project's basedir.org.apache.tools.ant.types.Path
, Ant will tokenize
the value specified in the build file, accepting :
and
;
as path separators. Relative path names will be
interpreted as relative to the project's basedir.java.lang.Class
, Ant will interpret the value
given in the build file as a Java class name and load the named
class from the system class loader.String
argument, Ant will use this constructor to
create a new instance from the value given in the build file.org.apache.tools.ant.types.EnumeratedAttribute
, Ant
will invoke this classes setValue
method. Use this if
your task should support enumerated attributes (attributes with
values that must be part of a predefined set of values). See
org/apache/tools/ant/taskdefs/FixCRLF.java
and the
inner AddAsisRemove
class used in setCr
for an example.What happens if more than one setter method is present for a given
attribute? A method taking a String
argument will always
lose against the more specific methods. If there are still more
setters Ant could chose from, only one of them will be called, but we
don't know which, this depends on the implementation of your Java
virtual machine.
Let's assume your task shall support nested elements with the name
inner
. First of all, you need a class that represents
this nested element. Often you simply want to use one of Ant's
classes like org.apache.tools.ant.types.FileSet
to
support nested fileset
elements.
Attributes of the nested elements or nested child elements of them will be handled using the same mechanism used for tasks (i.e. setter methods for attributes, addText for nested text and create/add/addConfigured methods for child elements).
Now you have a class NestedElement
that is supposed to
be used for your nested <inner>
elements, you have
three options:
public NestedElement createInner()
public void addInner(NestedElement anInner)
public void addConfiguredInner(NestedElement anInner)
What is the difference?
Option 1 makes the task create the instance of
NestedElement
, there are no restrictions on the type.
For the options 2 and 3, Ant has to create an instance of
NestedInner
before it can pass it to the task, this
means, NestedInner
must have a public
no-arg
constructor or a public
one-arg constructor
taking a Project class as a parameter.
This is the only difference between options 1 and 2.
The difference between 2 and 3 is what Ant has done to the object
before it passes it to the method. addInner
will receive
an object directly after the constructor has been called, while
addConfiguredInner
gets the object after the
attributes and nested children for this new object have been
handled.
What happens if you use more than one of the options? Only one of the methods will be called, but we don't know which, this depends on the implementation of your Java virtual machine.
public void add(Type type)
public void addConfigured(Type type)
For example suppose one wanted to handle objects object of type org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.condition.Condition, one may have a class:
public class MyTask extends Task { private List conditions = new ArrayList(); public void add(Condition c) { conditions.add(c); } public void execute() { // iterator over the conditions } }
One may define and use this class like this:
<taskdef name="mytask" classname="MyTask" classpath="classes"/> <typedef name="condition.equals" classname="org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.conditions.Equals"/> <mytask> <condition.equals arg1="${debug}" arg2="true"/> </mytask>
A more complicated example follows:
public class Sample { public static class MyFileSelector implements FileSelector { public void setAttrA(int a) {} public void setAttrB(int b) {} public void add(Path path) {} public boolean isSelected(File basedir, String filename, File file) { return true; } } interface MyInterface { void setVerbose(boolean val); } public static class BuildPath extends Path { public BuildPath(Project project) { super(project); } public void add(MyInterface inter) {} public void setUrl(String url) {} } public static class XInterface implements MyInterface { public void setVerbose(boolean x) {} public void setCount(int c) {} } }
This class defines a number of static classes that implement/extend Path, MyFileSelector and MyInterface. These may be defined and used as follows:
<typedef name="myfileselector" classname="Sample$MyFileSelector" classpath="classes" loaderref="classes"/> <typedef name="buildpath" classname="Sample$BuildPath" classpath="classes" loaderref="classes"/> <typedef name="xinterface" classname="Sample$XInterface" classpath="classes" loaderref="classes"/> <copy todir="copy-classes"> <fileset dir="classes"> <myfileselector attra="10" attrB="-10"> <buildpath path="." url="abc"> <xinterface count="4"/> </buildpath> </myfileselector> </fileset> </copy>
The TaskContainer
consists of a single method,
addTask
that basically is the same as an add method for nested elements. The task
instances will be configured (their attributes and nested elements
have been handled) when your task's execute
method gets
invoked, but not before that.
When we said execute
would be
called, we lied ;-). In fact, Ant will call the perform
method in org.apache.tools.ant.Task
, which in turn calls
execute
. This method makes sure that Build Events will be triggered. If you
execute the task instances nested into your task, you should also
invoke perform
on these instances instead of
execute
.
Let's write our own task, which prints a message on the
System.out
stream.
The
task has one attribute, called message
.
package com.mydomain; import org.apache.tools.ant.BuildException; import org.apache.tools.ant.Task; public class MyVeryOwnTask extends Task { private String msg; // The method executing the task public void execute() throws BuildException { System.out.println(msg); } // The setter for the "message" attribute public void setMessage(String msg) { this.msg = msg; } }
It's really this simple ;-)
Adding your task to the system is rather simple too:
<taskdef>
element to your project.
This actually adds your task to the system.<?xml version="1.0"?> <project name="OwnTaskExample" default="main" basedir="."> <taskdef name="mytask" classname="com.mydomain.MyVeryOwnTask"/> <target name="main"> <mytask message="Hello World! MyVeryOwnTask works!"/> </target> </project>
<taskdef>
declaration inside a target
after the compilation. Use the classpath
attribute of
<taskdef>
to point to where the code has just been
compiled.
<?xml version="1.0"?> <project name="OwnTaskExample2" default="main" basedir="."> <target name="build" > <mkdir dir="build"/> <javac srcdir="source" destdir="build"/> </target> <target name="declare" depends="build"> <taskdef name="mytask" classname="com.mydomain.MyVeryOwnTask" classpath="build"/> </target> <target name="main" depends="declare"> <mytask message="Hello World! MyVeryOwnTask works!"/> </target> </project>
Another way to add a task (more permanently), is to add the task name and
implementing class name to the default.properties
file in the
org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs
package. Then you can use it as if it were a built-in task.
Ant is capable of generating build events as it performs the tasks necessary to build a project. Listeners can be attached to Ant to receive these events. This capability could be used, for example, to connect Ant to a GUI or to integrate Ant with an IDE.
To use build events you need to create an ant Project
object. You can then call the
addBuildListener
method to add your listener to the project. Your listener must implement
the org.apache.tools.antBuildListener
interface. The listener will receive BuildEvents
for the following events
If you wish to attach a listener from the command line you may use the
-listener
option. For example:
ant -listener org.apache.tools.ant.XmlLogger
will run Ant with a listener that generates an XML representation of the build progress. This listener is included with Ant, as is the default listener, which generates the logging to standard output.
Note: A listener must not access System.out and System.err directly since ouput on these streams is redirected by Ant's core to the build event system. Accessing these streams can cause an infinite loop in Ant. Depending on the version of Ant, this will either cause the build to terminate or the Java VM to run out of Stack space. A logger, also, may not access System.out and System.err directly. It must use the streams with which it has been configured.
Please consult the Getting Involved pages on the Jakarta web site for details on how to fetch the latest source and how to submit changes for reincorporation into the source tree.
Ant also has some task guidelines which provides some advice to people developing and testing tasks. Even if you intend to keep your tasks to yourself, you should still read this as it should be informative.
Copyright © 2000-2004 The Apache Software Foundation. All rights Reserved.