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Exec

Description

Executes a system command. When the os attribute is specified, then the command is only executed when Ant is run on one of the specified operating systems.

Parameters

Attribute Description Required
command the command to execute with all command line arguments. deprecated, use executable and nested <arg> elements instead. Exactly one of the two.
executable the command to execute without any command line arguments.
dir the directory in which the command should be executed. No
os list of Operating Systems on which the command may be executed. If the current OS's name is contained in this list, the command will be executed. The OS's name is determined by the Java Virtual machine and is set in the "os.name" system property. No
output the file to which the output of the command should be redirected. No
append whether output should be appended to or overwrite an existing file. Defaults to false. No
outputproperty the name of a property in which the output of the command should be stored. No
resultproperty the name of a property in which the return code of the command should be stored. Only of interest if failonerror=false No
timeout Stop the command if it doesn't finish within the specified time (given in milliseconds). No
failonerror Stop the buildprocess if the command exits with a returncode other than 0. Defaults to false No
failifexecutionfails Stop the build if we can't start the program. Defaults to true. No
newenvironment Do not propagate old environment when new environment variables are specified. No, default is false
vmlauncher Run command using the Java VM's execution facilities where available. If set to false the underlying OS's shell, either directly or through the antRun scripts, will be used. Under some operating systems, this gives access to facilities not normally available through the VM including, under Windows, being able to execute scripts, rather than their associated interpreter. If you want to specify the name of the executable as a relative path to the directory given by the dir attribute, it may become necessary to set vmlauncher to false as well. No, default is true

Examples


<exec dir="${src}" executable="cmd.exe" os="Windows 2000" output="dir.txt">

  <arg line="/c dir"/>

</exec>

Parameters specified as nested elements

arg

Command line arguments should be specified as nested <arg> elements. See Command line arguments.

env

It is possible to specify environment variables to pass to the system command via nested <env> elements.

Attribute Description Required
key The name of the environment variable. Yes
value The literal value for the environment variable. Exactly one of these.
path The value for a PATH like environment variable. You can use ; or : as path separators and Ant will convert it to the platform's local conventions.
file The value for the environment variable. Will be replaced by the absolute filename of the file by Ant.

Errors and return codes

By default the return code of a <exec> is ignored; when you set failonerror="true" then any non zero response is treated as an error. Alternatively, you can set resultproperty to the name of a property and have it assigned to the result code (barring immutability, of course).

If the attempt to start the program fails with an OS dependent error code, then <exec> halts the build unless failifexecutionfails is set. You can use that to run a program if it exists, but otherwise do nothing.

What do those error codes mean? Well, they are OS dependent. On Windows boxes you have to look in include\error.h in your windows compiler or wine files; error code 2 means 'no such program', which usually means it is not on the path. Any time you see such an error from any ant task, it is usually not an ant bug, but some configuration problem on your machine.

Examples


<exec executable="emacs">

  <env key="DISPLAY" value=":1.0"/>

</exec>

starts emacs on display 1 of the X Window System.


<exec ... >

  <env key="PATH" path="${java.library.path}:${basedir}/bin"/>

</exec>

adds ${basedir}/bin to the PATH of the system command.

Note: Although it may work for you to specify arguments using a simple arg-element and separate them by spaces it may fail if you switch to a newer version of the JDK. JDK < 1.2 will pass these as separate arguments to the program you are calling, JDK >= 1.2 will pass them as a single argument and cause most calls to fail.

Note2: If you are using Ant on Windows and a new DOS-Window pops up for every command which is executed this may be a problem of the JDK you are using. This problem may occur with all JDK's < 1.2.

Timeouts: If a timeout is specified, when it is reached the sub process is killed and a message printed to the log. The return value of the execution will be "-1", which will halt the build if failonerror=true, but be ignored otherwise.


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