Variable number of parameters using <macrodef> and exec - ant

I am using exec to invoke a command line program multiple times from an ant build.xml. This command line program takes variable number of arguments for different cases.
At the moment I am calling this external program multiple time using exec and code looks cluttered. For example:
<exec dir="./deploy_abc/bin" executable="python" failonerror="true" >
<arg line="tests.py"/>
<arg line="-h aaa"/>
<arg line="-u bbb"/>
<arg line="-p ccc"/>
</exec>
<exec dir="./deploy_abc/bin" executable="python" failonerror="true" >
<arg line="tests.py"/>
<arg line="-h ddd"/>
<arg line="-u eee"/>
<arg line="-p fff"/>
<arg value="this is second test"/>
</exec>
<exec dir="./deploy_abc/bin" executable="python" failonerror="true" >
<arg line="tests.py"/>
<arg line="-u bbb"/>
<arg line="-p ccc"/>
<arg value="this is another test"/>
</exec>
So I am planning to refactor this build.xml file using macrodef.
My question is how to pass variable number of parameters to macrodef. As it is shown above I need to pass different arguments to the exec-ed program based on the scenario.

You can use a macrodef element to support this:
This is used to specify nested elements of the new task. The contents
of the nested elements of the task instance are placed in the
templated task at the tag name.
For example, you might define your macro like this:
<macrodef name="call-exec">
<attribute name="dir"/>
<attribute name="executable"/>
<attribute name="failonerror"/>
<element name="arg-elements"/>
<sequential>
<exec dir="#{dir}" executable="#{executable}"
failonerror="#{failonerrer}" >
<arg-elements />
</exec>
</sequential>
</macrodef>
And call it like this:
<call-exec dir="./deploy_abc/bin" executable="python" failonerror="true" >
<arg-elements>
<arg line="tests.py"/>
<arg line="-u bbb"/>
<arg line="-p ccc"/>
<arg value="this is another test"/>
</arg-elements>
</call-exec>

Related

How to run multiple commands with arguments from single Ant exec task

On windows, I am trying to execute two commands (.cmd and .exe) later requiring parameters,in one exec() task. This is to avoid using two shell ,however only first command is getting executed.
Following is the Ant snippet
<exec executable="cmd" dir="C:\PROGRA~1\IBM\IIB\10.0.0.7\server\bin\">
<arg value="/c mqsiprofile.cmd & C:\PROGRA~1\IBM\IIB\10.0.0.7\server\bin\mqsideploy.exe" />
<arg value="IIBNODE1" />
<arg value="-e" />
<arg value="default" />
<arg value="-a" />
<arg value="${bar.name}" />
</exec>
I also ran it without &amp and replacing "PROGRA~1" with "Program Files", still the same issue. Please suggest.
You can include both in a single target:
<target name="execute.this">
<exec dir="${testworkspace}\${moduleName}"
executable="cmd" failonerror="true"
output="${testworkspace}/${moduleName}/BuildConsole_TC${tc_num}.log"
resultproperty="execrc">
<arg value="/c echo Download Status is ${DownloadStatus}"/>
<exec dir="${testworkspace}\${moduleName}"
executable="cmd" failonerror="true"
output="${testworkspace}/${moduleName}/BuildConsole_TC${tc_num}.log"
resultproperty="execrc">
<arg value="/c Load.bat ${moduleName} ${Intapp} ${CcvStatus}"/>
</exec>
Or better yet, just use the <echo> task:
<echo message="/c echo Download Status is ${DownloadStatus}"/>
<exec dir="${testworkspace}\${moduleName}"
executable="cmd"
failonerror="true"
output="${testworkspace}/${moduleName}/BuildConsole_TC${tc_num}.log"
resultproperty="execrc">
<arg value="/c Load.bat ${moduleName} ${Intapp} ${CcvStatus}"/>
</exec>
If you need the output of the echo task in the same file, you can use the file parameter in the echo command, and the append parameter in the exec task.
Ref: How to run multiple commands from ant exec task

Open a new window with <exec> in Apache Ant

I have a build.xml for my ant in which I use
<exec executable="cmd">
<arg line = "start"/>
<arg value ="/c test3.bat"/>
</exec>
to start the given bat-file.
This works fine, but what I really want is that it opens the test3.bat in a new cmd-window. Is it possible to achieve this?
Works like that =
<exec executable="cmd">
<arg value="/c"/>
<arg value = "start"/>
<arg value ="test3.bat"/>
</exec>
In case oft doubt, use multiple <arg value=.../> for the parameters instead of <arg line=.../>,
works better.

No output running yui-compressor from Ant

I'm going to minify my js files by yuicomressor via ant, I wrote this:
<property name="concat-js-file-name" value="main.concat.js"/>
<property name="concat-js-file-path" value="${temp-folder}/js/${concat-js-file-name}"/>
<property name="yui-jar-path" value="lib/yuicompressor-2.4.7.jar"/>
<target name="minification" depends="concatation">
<echo>---Minification is started</echo>
<java jar="${yui-jar-path}" fork="true">
<arg value="${concat-js-file-path}"/>
<arg value="-o minified.js"/>
</java>
<echo>---Minification is finished successfully...</echo>
</target>
The problem is the output file is not generated!
Any idea?
You should set <java ... failonerror="true"/> and increase the noiselevel to see what's going on, means start your ant build with ant -f yourbuild.xml -debug
Actually, after some tries I found a solution:
I used <arg line="-o outputfile inputfile"/> instead, and it worked.
I suggest using <arg value="..."> instead of <arg line="...">. <arg value="..."> ensures that each command line argument has quotes around it, if necessary.
In the case of yui-compressor, the "-o" and "<file>" arguments should each go in their own <arg value="..."> elements:
<java jar="${yui-jar-path}" fork="true">
<arg value="-o"/>
<arg value="minified.js"/>
<arg value="${concat-js-file-path}"/>
</java>

How to pass a list of files to <exec>?

This is a part of my ant script:
<target>
<exec executable="find" outputproperty="found">
<arg value="src/main/java"/>
<arg line="-name '*.java'"/>
</exec>
<exec executable="xgettext">
<arg value="-k_"/>
<arg line="-o gettext.pot"/>
<arg line="${found}"/>
</exec>
</target>
Doesn't work because xgettext receives a quoted list of files and treats this list as a single file name. How to solve it?
You'd need to separate out each file to a separate arg for that to work.
You can supply a list-of-files file to process to 'xgettext' using the --files-from option.
How about something like this: write the 'find' output to a file, then reload into 'xgettext':
<target>
<exec executable="find" outputproperty="found">
<arg value="src/main/java"/>
<arg line="-name '*.java'"/>
</exec>
<echo file="xgettext.files" message="${found}" />
<exec executable="xgettext">
<arg value="-k_"/>
<arg value="-o" />
<arg value="gettext.pot"/>
<arg value="--files-from=xgettext.files"/>
</exec>
</target>
Alternatively, here's a variation that assumes you have the Bourne Shell sh - if you have something else you can probably adapt. This pipes the 'find' output directly to 'xgettext':
<exec executable="sh">
<arg value="-c"/>
<arg value="find src/main/java -name '*.java' | xgettext -k_ -o gettext.pot -f -"/>
</exec>

Ant exec refactoring

I've this code in my build.xml:
<exec executable="cmd" osfamily="winnt">
<arg value="/c"/>
<arg value="xsltproc\bin\xsltproc.exe"/>
<arg value="--xinclude"/>
<arg value="-o"/>
<arg value="dist/html/main.html"/>
<arg value="xsl/html/docbook.xsl"/>
<arg value="xml/main.xml"/>
</exec>
<exec executable="xsltproc" osfamily="unix">
<arg value="--xinclude"/>
<arg value="-o"/>
<arg value="dist/html/main.html"/>
<arg value="xsl/html/docbook.xsl"/>
<arg value="xml/main.xml"/>
</exec>
the sequence is the same... I'm wondering about how refactoring this small fragment in order to keep it DRY.
maybe try using a property for the common bits with arg-line? something like this:
<property name="xslt.common" value="--xinclude -o dist/html/main.html xsl/html/docbook.xsl xml/main.xml"/>
<exec executable="cmd" osfamily="winnt">
<arg value="/c"/>
<arg value="xsltproc\bin\xsltproc.exe"/>
<arg line="${xslt.common}"/>
</exec>
<exec executable="xsltproc" osfamily="unix">
<arg line="${xslt.common}"/>
</exec>
Define a macro.
You can glob the shared portions in an element, and conditionally execute the specific parts.
I think the Unix version will work under NT if you have the xsltproc.exe available in via the PATH environment variable. You could try removing the osfamily and see.

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