ant/ant-antlr.spec

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#
# spec file for package ant-antlr
#
# Copyright (c) 2012 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# Copyright (c) 2000-2009, JPackage Project
# All rights reserved.
#
# All modifications and additions to the file contributed by third parties
# remain the property of their copyright owners, unless otherwise agreed
# upon. The license for this file, and modifications and additions to the
# file, is the same license as for the pristine package itself (unless the
# license for the pristine package is not an Open Source License, in which
# case the license is the MIT License). An "Open Source License" is a
# license that conforms to the Open Source Definition (Version 1.9)
# published by the Open Source Initiative.
# Please submit bugfixes or comments via http://bugs.opensuse.org/
#
#
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%define with() %{expand:%%{?with_%{1}:1}%%{!?with_%{1}:0}}
%define without() %{expand:%%{?with_%{1}:0}%%{!?with_%{1}:1}}
%define bcond_with() %{expand:%%{?_with_%{1}:%%global with_%{1} 1}}
%define bcond_without() %{expand:%%{!?_without_%{1}:%%global with_%{1} 1}}
##### WARNING: please do not edit this auto generated spec file. Use the ant.spec! #####
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%global bootstrap 0
%if ! %with bootstrap
# disable javadoc build on arm platform - it delays a build a lot
%if %{_arch} != arm
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%global build_javadoc 1
%endif
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%global with_manifest_only 0
%global ant_home %{_datadir}/ant
%global major_version 1.8
%global cvs_version 1.8.2
Name: ant-antlr
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Version: 1.8.2
Release: 0
Summary: Antlr Task for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Url: http://ant.apache.org/
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Source0: http://www.apache.org/dist/ant/source/apache-ant-%{cvs_version}-src.tar.bz2
Source2: apache-ant-%{major_version}.ant.conf
Source1000: pre_checkin.sh
Patch1: apache-ant-bz163689.patch
Patch3: apache-ant-no-test-jar.patch
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Patch4: apache-ant-class-path-in-manifest.patch
%if %bootstrap
BuildRequires: java-1_5_0-gcj-compat-devel
#!BuildIgnore: java-1_6_0-openjdk java-1_6_0-openjdk-devel
#!BuildIgnore: java-1_7_0-openjdk java-1_7_0-openjdk-devel
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%else
BuildRequires: java-devel >= 1.5.0
%endif
BuildRequires: antlr-bootstrap
BuildRequires: jpackage-utils >= 1.7.5
BuildRequires: unzip
BuildRequires: xerces-j2-bootstrap
BuildRequires: xml-commons-apis-bootstrap
%if ! %bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
BuildRequires: ant = %{version}
BuildRequires: junit
BuildRequires: xalan-j2
BuildRequires: xerces-j2
BuildRequires: xml-commons-apis
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
#!BuildIgnore: antlr
%endif
%if %bootstrap
Requires: java-devel >= 1.5.0
Requires: jaxp_parser_impl
Requires: jpackage-utils >= 1.7.5
Requires: xerces-j2 >= 2.7.1-2
Requires: xml-commons-apis
Requires: xml-commons-resolver
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Obsoletes: apache-ant < %{version}
Provides: apache-ant = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-nodeps < %{version}
Provides: ant-nodeps = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-trax < %{version}
Provides: ant-trax = %{version}
%else
# ant-antlr requires
Requires: antlr
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
Provides: ant-antlr = %{version}-%{release}
%endif
BuildArch: noarch
BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-build
%description
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool. In theory, it is kind of like
Make, but without Make's wrinkles.
Why another build tool when there is already make, gnumake, nmake, jam,
and others? Because all those tools have limitations that Ant's
original author could not live with when developing software across
multiple platforms. Make-like tools are inherently shell-based--they
evaluate a set of dependencies then execute commands, not unlike what
you would issue in a shell. This means that you can easily extend these
tools by using or writing any program for the OS that you are working
on. However, this also means that you limit yourself to the OS, or at
least the OS type, such as Unix, that you are working on.
Makefiles are inherently evil as well. Anybody who has worked on them
for any time has run into the dreaded tab problem. "Is my command not
executing because I have a space in front of my tab???" said the
original author of Ant way too many times. Tools like Jam took care of
this to a great degree, but still have yet another format to use and
remember.
Ant is different. Instead of a model where it is extended with
shell-based commands, Ant is extended using Java classes. Instead of
writing shell commands, the configuration files are XML-based, calling
out a target tree where various tasks are executed. Each task is run by
an object that implements a particular task interface.
Granted, this removes some of the expressive power that is inherent by
being able to construct a shell command such as `find . -name foo -exec
rm {}`, but it gives you the ability to be cross-platform--to work
anywhere and everywhere. If you really need to execute a shell command,
Ant has an <exec> task that allows different commands to be executed
based on the OS used.
%if %bootstrap
%package -n ant-jmf
Summary: Optional jmf tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: ant = %{version}
Provides: ant-jmf = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-jmf
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional jmf tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-swing
Summary: Optional swing tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: ant = %{version}
Provides: ant-swing = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-swing
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional swing tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-scripts
Summary: Additional scripts for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: %{_bindir}/perl
Requires: %{_bindir}/python
Requires: ant = %{version}
%description -n ant-scripts
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains additional perl and python scripts for Apache
Ant.
%endif #if bootstrap
%if ! %bootstrap
%package -n ant-apache-bsf
Summary: Optional apache bsf tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: bsf
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: bsf
Provides: ant-apache-bsf = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-apache-bsf
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache bsf tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-apache-resolver
Summary: Optional apache resolver tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: xml-commons-resolver
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: xml-commons-resolver
Provides: ant-apache-resolver = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-apache-resolver
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache resolver tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-commons-logging
Summary: Optional commons logging tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: jakarta-commons-logging
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: jakarta-commons-logging
Provides: ant-commons-logging = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-commons-logging
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional commons logging tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-commons-net
Summary: Optional commons net tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: jakarta-commons-net
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: jakarta-commons-net
Provides: ant-commons-net = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-commons-net
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional commons net tasks for Apache Ant.
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# Disable because we don't ship the dependencies
%if 0
%package -n ant-jai
Summary: Optional jai tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: jai
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: jai
Provides: ant-jai = %{version}-%{release}
%description -n ant-jai
Optional jai tasks for ant.
%endif
%package -n ant-apache-bcel
Summary: Optional apache bcel tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: bcel
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: bcel
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-apache-bcel = %{version}
Provides: ant-jakarta-bcel = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-jakarta-bcel < %{version}
%description -n ant-apache-bcel
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache bcel tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-apache-log4j
Summary: Optional apache log4j tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: log4j
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: log4j-mini
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-apache-log4j = %{version}
Provides: ant-jakarta-log4j = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-jakarta-log4j < %{version}
%description -n ant-apache-log4j
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache log4j tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-apache-oro
Summary: Optional apache oro tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: oro
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: oro
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-apache-oro = %{version}
Provides: ant-jakarta-oro = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-jakarta-oro < %{version}
%description -n ant-apache-oro
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache oro tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-apache-regexp
Summary: Optional apache regexp tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: regexp
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: regexp
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-apache-regexp = %{version}
Provides: ant-jakarta-regexp = %{version}
Obsoletes: ant-jakarta-regexp < %{version}
%description -n ant-apache-regexp
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional apache regexp tasks for Apache Ant.
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%package -n ant-apache-xalan2
Summary: Optional apache xalan2 tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Group: Development/Tools/Building
BuildRequires: regexp
Requires: regexp
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-apache-xalan2 = %{version}
%description -n ant-apache-xalan2
Optional apache xalan2 tasks for %{name}.
%package -n ant-javamail
Summary: Optional javamail tasks for ant
License: Other uncritical OpenSource License ; Common Development and Distribution License
Group: Development/Tools/Building
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
BuildRequires: javamail >= 1.2-5jpp
Requires: javamail >= 1.2-5jpp
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-javamail = %{version}
%description -n ant-javamail
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional javamail tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-jdepend
Summary: Optional jdepend tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: jdepend
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: jdepend
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-jdepend = %{version}
%description -n ant-jdepend
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional jdepend tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-jsch
Summary: Optional jsch tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: jsch
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
BuildRequires: jsch
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-jsch = %{version}
%description -n ant-jsch
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional jsch tasks for Apache Ant.
%package -n ant-junit
Summary: Optional junit tasks for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: junit
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-junit = %{version}
%description -n ant-junit
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional JUnit tasks for Apache Ant.
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%package -n ant-testutil
Summary: Test utility classes for ant
License: Apache-2.0
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Group: Development/Tools/Building
Requires: junit
Requires: ant = %(echo `rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' ant`)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
Provides: ant-testutil = %{version}
%description -n ant-testutil
Test utility tasks for %{name}.
%package -n ant-manual
Summary: Manual for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
%description -n ant-manual
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains the manual for Apache Ant.
%if 0%{?build_javadoc}
%package -n ant-javadoc
Summary: Javadoc for ant
License: Apache-2.0
Group: Development/Tools/Building
%description -n ant-javadoc
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains the javadoc documentation for Apache Ant.
%endif #javadoc
%endif
%prep
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%setup -q -n apache-ant-%{cvs_version}
#Fixup version
find -name build.xml -o -name pom.xml | xargs sed -i -e s/-SNAPSHOT//
#https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=47669
sed -i -e "s|IMAGE_FILE_TYPE|BINARY_FILE_TYPE|g" src/main/org/apache/tools/ant/taskdefs/optional/net/FTP.java
# Fix some places where copies of classes are included in the wrong jarfiles
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# Disable the style and xmlvalidate tasks on ppc64 and s390x (#163689).
%ifarch ppc64 s390x
%patch1 -p1 -b .sav1
%endif
# When bootstrapping, we don't have junit
%if %bootstrap
%patch3 -p1
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# Fix class-path-in-manifest rpmlint warning
%patch4
# clean jar files
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_bindir}/find -name "*.jar" | %{_bindir}/xargs -t rm
#install jars
%if ! %bootstrap
build-jar-repository -s -p lib/optional xerces-j2 xml-commons-jaxp-1.3-apis antlr-bootstrap bcel javamail/mailapi jdepend junit log4j oro regexp bsf commons-logging commons-net jsch xalan-j2 xml-commons-resolver
%endif
# Fix file-not-utf8 rpmlint warning
iconv KEYS -f iso-8859-1 -t utf-8 -o KEYS.utf8
mv KEYS.utf8 KEYS
iconv LICENSE -f iso-8859-1 -t utf-8 -o LICENSE.utf8
mv LICENSE.utf8 LICENSE
# Provides: exclude perl(oata), perl(examples)
cat <<__EOF__ > %{name}-perl.prov
#!/bin/sh
/usr/lib/rpm/perl.prov \$* | grep -v '^perl(oata)$' | grep -v '^perl(examples)$'
__EOF__
%define __perl_provides %{_builddir}/apache-ant-%{cvs_version}/%{name}-perl.prov
chmod +x %{__perl_provides}
# Requires: exclude bogus perl(the)
cat <<__EOF__ > %{name}-perl.req
#!/bin/sh
/usr/lib/rpm/perl.req \$* | grep -v '^perl(the)$'
__EOF__
%define __perl_requires %{_builddir}/apache-ant-%{cvs_version}/%{name}-perl.req
chmod +x %{__perl_requires}
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
%build
export OPT_JAR_LIST=:
%if ! %bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
export CLASSPATH=$(build-classpath xerces-j2 xml-commons-jaxp-1.3-apis antlr bcel jaf javamail/mailapi jdepend junit log4j oro regexp bsf commons-logging commons-net jsch xalan-j2 xml-commons-resolver)
%{ant} -Dbuild.sysclasspath=first dist-lite
%if 0%{?build_javadoc}
%{ant} dist_javadocs
%endif
%else
export GC_MAXIMUM_HEAP_SIZE="134217728" #128M
export JAVA_HOME=%{java_home}
export CLASSPATH=$JAVA_HOME/lib/tools.jar
export BOOTJAVAC_OPTS="-C -Wno-deprecated"
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
sh -x ./build.sh --noconfig jars
%endif
%install
# ANT_HOME and subdirs
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{ant_home}/{lib,etc}
# jars
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
install -d -m 755 %{buildroot}%{_javadir}/ant
install -d -m 755 %{buildroot}%{_datadir}/maven2/poms
for jar in build/lib/*.jar
do
jarname=$(basename $jar .jar)
pomname="JPP.ant-${jarname}.pom"
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
#Determine where to put it
case $jarname in
#These go into %%{_javadir}, pom files have different names
ant | ant-bootstrap | ant-launcher)
%if %bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
destdir=%{buildroot}%{_javadir}; destname="";pomname="JPP-$jarname.pom"
%else
continue
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
;;
#Bootstracp builds an incomplete ant-junit, don't ship it
%if %bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
ant-junit) continue;;
%else
ant-jmf|ant-swing) continue;;
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
#These go into %%{_javadir}/ant
*) destdir=%{buildroot}%{_javadir}/ant; destname="/ant";
esac
#instal jar
install -m 644 ${jar} ${destdir}/${jarname}.jar
# jar aliases
ln -sf ../../java${destname}/${jarname}.jar %{buildroot}%{ant_home}/lib/${jarname}.jar
#bootstrap does not have a pom
[ $jarname == ant-bootstrap ] && continue
#install pom
install -m 644 src/etc/poms/${jarname}/pom.xml %{buildroot}%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/${pomname}
%add_to_maven_depmap org.apache.ant ${jarname} %{version} JPP${destname} ${jarname}
done
%if %bootstrap
# add backward compatibility for nodeps jar that is now part of
# main jar
%add_to_maven_depmap org.apache.ant ant-nodeps %{version} JPP ant
#ant-parent pom
install -m 644 src/etc/poms/pom.xml %{buildroot}%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP-ant-parent.pom
%add_to_maven_depmap org.apache.ant ant-parent %{version} JPP ant-parent
# scripts: remove dos and os/2 scripts
rm -f src/script/*.bat
rm -f src/script/*.cmd
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# XSLs
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
cp -p src/etc/*.xsl %{buildroot}%{ant_home}/etc
rm -f %{buildroot}%{ant_home}/etc/{maudit-frames,jdepend,jdepend-frames,junit-frames,junit-noframes}.xsl
%else
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
cp -p src/etc/{maudit-frames,jdepend,jdepend-frames,junit-frames,junit-noframes}.xsl %{buildroot}%{ant_home}/etc
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%if %bootstrap
# install everything else
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{_bindir}
cp -p src/script/* %{buildroot}%{_bindir}/
%endif
%if %bootstrap
# default ant.conf
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}
cp -p %{SOURCE2} %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.conf
# OPT_JAR_LIST fragments
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/%{name}.d
echo "ant/ant-jmf" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/%{name}.d/jmf
echo "ant/ant-swing" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/%{name}.d/swing
%else
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
echo "antlr ant/ant-antlr" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/antlr
echo "bsf ant/ant-apache-bsf" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-bsf
echo "xml-commons-resolver ant/ant-apache-resolver" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-resolver
echo "jakarta-commons-logging ant/ant-commons-logging" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/commons-logging
echo "jakarta-commons-net ant/ant-commons-net" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/commons-net
#echo "jai ant/ant-jai" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jai
echo "bcel ant/ant-apache-bcel" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-bcel
echo "log4j ant/ant-apache-log4j" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-log4j
echo "oro ant/ant-apache-oro" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-oro
echo "regexp ant/ant-apache-regexp" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-regexp
echo "xalan-j2 ant/ant-apache-xalan2" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-xalan2
echo "javamail jaf ant/ant-javamail" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/javamail
echo "jdepend ant/ant-jdepend" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jdepend
echo "jsch ant/ant-jsch" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jsch
echo "junit ant/ant-junit" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/junit
echo "testutil ant/ant-testutil" > %{buildroot}%{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/testutil
%endif
%if ! %bootstrap
%if 0%{?build_javadoc}
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{_javadocdir}/ant
cp -pr build/javadocs/* %{buildroot}%{_javadocdir}/ant
%endif #javadoc
%endif
%if 0%{?build_javadoc}
# fix link between manual and javadoc
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
(cd docs/manual; ln -sf %{_javadocdir}/%{name} api)
%endif #javadoc
%if %bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
find %{buildroot}%{_datadir}/ant/etc -type f -name "*.xsl" \
-a ! -name ant-update.xsl \
-a ! -name changelog.xsl \
-a ! -name coverage-frames.xsl \
-a ! -name junit-frames-xalan1.xsl \
-a ! -name log.xsl \
-a ! -name mmetrics-frames.xsl \
-a ! -name tagdiff.xsl \
| xargs -t rm
%endif
%post
%update_maven_depmap
%postun
%update_maven_depmap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%if %bootstrap
%files
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
%doc KEYS LICENSE NOTICE README WHATSNEW
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/%{name}.conf
%attr(0755,root,root) %{_bindir}/ant
%attr(0755,root,root) %{_bindir}/antRun
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/%{name}.jar
%{_javadir}/%{name}-launcher.jar
%{_javadir}/%{name}-bootstrap.jar
%dir %{_javadir}/%{name}
%dir %{ant_home}
%dir %{ant_home}/etc
%{ant_home}/etc/ant-update.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/changelog.xsl
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{ant_home}/etc/coverage-frames.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/mmetrics-frames.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/log.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/tagdiff.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/junit-frames-xalan1.xsl
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
# % {ant_home}/etc/common2master.xsl
# % {ant_home}/etc/printFailingTests.xsl
%dir %{ant_home}/lib
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%dir %{_sysconfdir}/%{name}.d
%{ant_home}/lib/ant.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-bootstrap.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-launcher.jar
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%dir %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d
# % {_datadir}/maven2/poms/*
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP-ant-launcher.pom
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP-ant-parent.pom
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP-ant.pom
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%config(noreplace) %{_mavendepmapfragdir}/*
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%else
# ant-antlr filelist
%files
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-antlr.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-antlr.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/antlr
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-antlr.pom
%config %{_mavendepmapfragdir}/ant-antlr
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%endif
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
### Basic ant subpackages
%if %bootstrap
%files -n ant-jmf
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-jmf.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-jmf.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jmf
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-jmf.pom
%files -n ant-swing
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-swing.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-swing.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/swing
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-swing.pom
%files -n ant-scripts
%defattr(0755,root,root,0755)
%{_bindir}/*.pl
%{_bindir}/*.py*
%endif #if bootstrap
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%if ! %bootstrap
%files -n ant-apache-bsf
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-bsf.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-bsf.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-bsf
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-bsf.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-apache-resolver
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-resolver.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-resolver.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-resolver
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-resolver.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-commons-logging
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-commons-logging.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-commons-logging.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/commons-logging
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-commons-logging.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-commons-net
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-commons-net.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-commons-net.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/commons-net
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-commons-net.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
# Disable as we dont ship the dependencies
%if 0
%files -n ant-jai
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-jai.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-jai.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jai
%endif
%files -n ant-apache-bcel
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-bcel.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-bcel.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-bcel
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-bcel.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-apache-log4j
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-log4j.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-log4j.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-log4j
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-log4j.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-apache-oro
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-oro.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-oro.jar
%{ant_home}/etc/maudit-frames.xsl
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-oro
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-oro.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-apache-regexp
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%defattr(-,root,root,-)
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-regexp.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-regexp.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-regexp
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-regexp.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%files -n ant-apache-xalan2
%defattr(-,root,root,-)
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-apache-xalan2.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-apache-xalan2.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/apache-xalan2
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-apache-xalan2.pom
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%files -n ant-javamail
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-javamail.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-javamail.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/javamail
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-javamail.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-jdepend
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-jdepend.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-jdepend.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jdepend
%{ant_home}/etc/jdepend.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/jdepend-frames.xsl
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-jdepend.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-jsch
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-jsch.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-jsch.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/jsch
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-jsch.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
%files -n ant-junit
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-junit.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-junit.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/junit
%{ant_home}/etc/junit-frames.xsl
%{ant_home}/etc/junit-noframes.xsl
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-junit.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%files -n ant-testutil
%defattr(-,root,root,-)
%{_javadir}/ant/ant-testutil.jar
%{ant_home}/lib/ant-testutil.jar
%config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/ant.d/testutil
%{_datadir}/maven2/poms/JPP.ant-ant-testutil.pom
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/
%dir %{_datadir}/maven2/poms
- Update to ant 1.8.2 * performance improvements in directory scanning * XSLT task honors classpath again (bugrep 49271) * distinction between core tasks and optional tasks is abolished * new task augment allows to add attributes or nested elements to previously defined references * Lexically scoped local properties, i.e. properties that are only defined inside a target, sequential block or similar environment. This is very useful inside of <macrodef>s where a macro can now define a temporary property that will disappear once the task has finished. * <import> can now import from any file- or URL-providing resource - this includes <javaresource>. This means <import> can read build file snippets from JARs or fixed server URLs. There are several other improvements in the area of import. * Various improvements to the directory scanning code that help with symbolic link cycles (as can be found on MacOS X Java installations for example) and improve scanning performance. For big directory trees the improvement is dramatic. * The way developers can extend Ant's property expansion algorithm has been rewritten (breaking the older API) to be easier to use and be more powerful. The whole local properties mechanism is implemented using that API and could be implemented in a separate library without changes in Ant's core. Things like the yet-to-be-released props Antlib can now provide often required "scripty" fuctions without touching Ant itself. At the same time the if and unless attributes have been rewritten to do the expected thing if applied to a property expansion (i.e. if="${foo}" will mean "yes, do it" if ${foo} expands to true, in Ant 1.7.1 it would mean "no" unless a property named "true" existed). This adds "testing conditions" as a new use-case to property expansion. * A new top-level element <extension-point> assists in writing re-usable build files that are meant to be imported. <extension-point> has a name and a dependency-list like <target> and can be used like a <target> from the command line or a dependency-list but the importing build file can add targets to the <extension-point>'s depends list. * Ant now requires Java 1.4 or later new task include provides an alternative to <import> that should be preferred when you don't want to override any targets * numerous bug fixes and improvements as documented in Bugzilla and in WHATSNEW - merge the nodeps and trax packages to main one - build ant-antlr.spec using openjdk - add ant-apache-xalan2 and ant-testutil OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/Java:packages/ant?expand=0&rev=16
2011-03-09 10:05:56 +01:00
%files -n ant-manual
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
%doc docs/*
%if 0%{?build_javadoc}
%files -n ant-javadoc
%defattr(0644,root,root,0755)
%{_javadocdir}/ant
%endif #javadoc
%endif
%changelog