Bingo. -----Original Message----- From: Robert r. Sanders [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, January 03, 2005 6:31 PM To: Ant Users List Subject: Re: Ant should have an ext directory
Yeah, but I don't think this is what the question was about. It would be nice to have a place to put the (global) ant extensions you are using to keep them separate from the main/default ant libraries to help with file management, etc... The best I can think of: Create an ext directory in a central location, then use a build process to merge it with a base ANT install; then copy the results out to everyone in your department. Not as nice as if ANT supported this directly, but it might help. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > "Dick, Brian E." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > Understood, but I want to create a department-wide ant distribution that > > is augmented with common extension libraries. None of the options you > > list make this particularly clean and easy to manage. > >You may want to look into Maven for this one. You keep your sources >on a common server, describe these in a ".xml" file. Maven downloads >the sources to the local development environments, caching them there >as well as executing the build targets in your ant files. > >I'm going to be looking into it to keep track of which/where SQLServer >and Oracle jars are, as well as the beanshell and other distributions. >Seems quite promising. > >I'm pretty sure you could define all your extension libraries, >versions and where they go in the maven descriptor files. It also >allows different projects to have different distributions. (I believe >it uses an override mechanism) > >HTH. > > > -- Robert r. Sanders Chief Technologist iPOV www.ipov.net --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]