Jars a set of files.
The basedir attribute is the reference directory from where to jar.
Note that file permissions will not be stored in the resulting jarfile.
It is possible to refine the set of files that are being jarred. This can be done with the includes, includesfile, excludes, excludesfile and defaultexcludes attributes. With the includes or includesfile attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The exclude or excludesfile attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the defaultexcludes attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on directory based tasks, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns.
This task forms an implicit FileSet and
supports most attributes of <fileset>
(dir
becomes basedir
) as well as the nested
<include>
, <exclude>
and
<patternset>
elements.
You can also use nested file sets for more flexibility, and specify multiple ones to merge together different trees of files into one JAR. The extended fileset and groupfileset child elements from the zip task are also available in the jar task. See the Zip task for more details and examples.
The update
parameter controls what happens if the JAR
file already exists. When set to yes
, the JAR file is
updated with the files specified. When set to no
(the
default) the JAR file is overwritten. An example use of this is
provided in the Zip task documentation. Please
note that ZIP files store file modification times with a granularity
of two seconds. If a file is less than two seconds newer than the
entry in the archive, Ant will not consider it newer.
If the manifest is omitted, a simple one will be supplied by Apache Ant.
The whenmanifestonly
parameter controls what happens when no
files, apart from the manifest file, or nested services, match.
If skip
, the JAR is not created and a warning is issued.
If fail
, the JAR is not created and the build is halted with an error.
If create
, (default) an empty JAR file (only containing a manifest and services)
is created.
(The Jar task is a shortcut for specifying the manifest file of a JAR file. The same thing can be accomplished by using the fullpath attribute of a zipfileset in a Zip task. The one difference is that if the manifest attribute is not specified, the Jar task will include an empty one for you.)
Manifests are processed by the Jar task according to the Jar file specification. Note in particular that this may result in manifest lines greater than 72 bytes being wrapped and continued on the next line.
The Jar task checks whether you specified package information according to the versioning specification.
Please note that the zip format allows multiple files of the same
fully-qualified name to exist within a single archive. This has been
documented as causing various problems for unsuspecting users. If you wish
to avoid this behavior you must set the duplicate
attribute
to a value other than its default, "add"
.
To cryptographically sign your JAR file, use the SignJar task on the JAR that you create from this task.
Attribute | Description | Required |
destfile | the JAR file to create. | Yes |
basedir | the directory from which to jar the files. | No |
compress | Not only store data but also compress them, defaults to true. Unless you set the keepcompression attribute to false, this will apply to the entire archive, not only the files you've added while updating. | No |
keepcompression | For entries coming from existing archives (like nested zipfilesets or while updating the archive), keep the compression as it has been originally instead of using the compress attribute. Defaults false. Since Ant 1.6 | No |
encoding | The character encoding to use for filenames
inside the archive. Defaults to UTF8. It is not
recommended to change this value as the created archive will
most likely be unreadable for Java otherwise.
See also the discussion in the zip task page |
No |
filesonly | Store only file entries, defaults to false | No |
includes | comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. | No |
includesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern | No |
excludes | comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. | No |
excludesfile | the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern | No |
defaultexcludes | indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. | No |
manifest | the manifest file to use. This can be either the location of a manifest, or the name of a jar added through a fileset. If its the name of an added jar, the task expects the manifest to be in the jar at META-INF/MANIFEST.MF | No |
filesetmanifest | behavior when a Manifest is found in a zipfileset or zipgroupfileset file is found. Valid values are "skip", "merge", and "mergewithoutmain". "merge" will merge all of the manifests together, and merge this into any other specified manifests. "mergewithoutmain" merges everything but the Main section of the manifests. Default value is "skip". | No |
update | indicates whether to update or overwrite the destination file if it already exists. Default is "false". | No |
whenmanifestonly | behavior when no files match. Valid values are "fail", "skip", and "create". Default is "create". | No |
duplicate | behavior when a duplicate file is found. Valid values are "add", "preserve", and "fail". The default value is "add". | No |
index | whether to create an index
list to speed up classloading. This is a JDK 1.3+ specific
feature. Unless you specify additional jars with nested indexjars elements, only the
contents of this jar will be included in the index. Defaults to
false. |
No |
indexMetaInf | whether to include META-INF and its children in
the index. Doesn't have any effect if index is
false. Sun's jar implementation used to skip the META-INF directory and Ant followed that example. The behavior has been changed with Java 5. In order to avoid problems with Ant generated jars on Java 1.4 or earlier Ant will not include META-INF unless explicitly asked to. Ant 1.8.0 - Defaults to false. |
No |
manifestencoding | The encoding used to read the JAR manifest, when a manifest file is specified. The task will always use UTF-8 when writing the manifest. | No, defaults to the platform encoding. |
roundup | Whether the file modification times will be
rounded up to the next even number of seconds. Zip archives store file modification times with a granularity of two seconds, so the times will either be rounded up or down. If you round down, the archive will always seem out-of-date when you rerun the task, so the default is to round up. Rounding up may lead to a different type of problems like JSPs inside a web archive that seem to be slightly more recent than precompiled pages, rendering precompilation useless. Defaults to true. Since Ant 1.6.2 |
No |
level | Non-default level at which file compression should be performed. Valid values range from 0 (no compression/fastest) to 9 (maximum compression/slowest). Since Ant 1.7 | No |
strict | Configures how to handle breaks of the packaging version
specification:
|
No, defaults to ignore. |
preserve0permissions | when updating an archive or adding entries from a
different archive Ant will assume that a Unix permissions value of
0 (nobody is allowed to do anything to the file/directory) means
that the permissions haven't been stored at all rather than real
permissions and will instead apply its own default values. Set this attribute to true if you really want to preserve the original permission field.since Ant 1.8.0 |
No, default is false |
useLanguageEncodingFlag | Whether to set the language encoding flag if the
encoding is UTF-8. This setting doesn't have any effect if the
encoding is not UTF-8.
Since Ant 1.8.0.
See also the discussion in the zip task page |
No, default is true |
createUnicodeExtraFields | Whether to create unicode extra fields to store
the file names a second time inside the entry's metadata.
Possible values are "never", "always" and "not-encodeable" which will only add Unicode extra fields if the file name cannot be encoded using the specified encoding. Since Ant 1.8.0. See also the discussion in the zip task page |
No, default is "never" |
fallbacktoUTF8 | Whether to use UTF-8 and the language encoding
flag instead of the specified encoding if a file name cannot be
encoded using the specified encoding.
Since Ant 1.8.0.
See also the discussion in the zip task page |
No, default is false |
mergeClassPathAttributes | Whether to merge the Class-Path attributes found
in different manifests (if merging manifests). If false, only
the attribute of the last merged manifest will be preserved.
Since Ant 1.8.0.
unless you also set flattenAttributes to true this may result in manifests containing multiple Class-Path attributes which violates the manifest specification. |
No, default is false |
flattenAttributes | Whether to merge attributes occurring more than once in a section (this can only happen for the Class-Path attribute) into a single attribute. Since Ant 1.8.0. | No, default is false |
zip64Mode | When to use Zip64 extensions for entries. The
possible values are "never", "always" and "as-needed".
Since Ant 1.9.1.
See also the discussion in the zip task page |
No, default is "never" |
The nested metainf
element specifies a FileSet. All files included in this fileset will
end up in the META-INF
directory of the jar file. If this
fileset includes a file named MANIFEST.MF
, the file is
ignored and you will get a warning.
The manifest nested element allows the manifest for the Jar file to be provided inline in the build file rather than in an external file. This element is identical to the manifest task, but the file and mode attributes must be omitted.
If both an inline manifest and an external file are both specified, the manifests are merged.
When using inline manifests, the Jar task will check whether the manifest contents have changed (i.e. the manifest as specified is different in any way from the manifest that exists in the Jar, if it exists. If the manifest values have changed the jar will be updated or rebuilt, as appropriate.
since ant 1.6.2
The nested indexjars
element specifies a PATH like structure. Its content is
completely ignored unless you set the index attribute of the task to
true.
The index created by this task will contain indices for the archives contained in this path, the names used for the archives depend on your manifest:
This task will not create any index entries for archives that are
empty or only contain files inside the META-INF directory unless
the indexmetainf
attribute has been set
to true
.
since ant 1.7.0
The nested service
element specifies a service.
Services are described in the
service provider overview.
The approach is to have providers JARs include files named by the service
provided, for example,
META-INF/services/javax.script.ScriptEngineFactory
which can include implementation class names, one per line (usually just one per JAR).
The name of the
service is set by the "type" attribute. The classname implementing
the service is the the "provider" attribute, or it one wants to
specify a number of classes that implement the service, by
"provider" nested elements.
Attribute | Description | Required |
type | The name of the service. | Yes |
provider | The classname of the class implementing the service. | Yes, unless there is a nested
<provider> element. |
The provider classname is specified either by the "provider" attribute, or by a nested <provider> element, which has a single "classname" attribute. If a JAR file has more that one implementation of the service, a number of nested <provider> elements may be used.
<jar destfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes"/>
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory into a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory.
<jar destfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" excludes="**/Test.class" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory into a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory. Files
with the name Test.class
are excluded.
<jar destfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar" basedir="${build}/classes" includes="mypackage/test/**" excludes="**/Test.class" />
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory into a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory. Only
files under the directory mypackage/test
are used, and files with
the name Test.class
are excluded.
<jar destfile="${dist}/lib/app.jar"> <fileset dir="${build}/classes" excludes="**/Test.class" /> <fileset dir="${src}/resources"/> </jar>
jars all files in the ${build}/classes
directory and also
in the ${src}/resources
directory together into a file
called app.jar
in the ${dist}/lib
directory.
Files with the name Test.class
are excluded.
If there are files such as ${build}/classes/mypackage/MyClass.class
and ${src}/resources/mypackage/image.gif
, they will appear
in the same directory in the JAR (and thus be considered in the same package
by Java).
<jar destfile="build/main/checksites.jar"> <fileset dir="build/main/classes"/> <zipfileset includes="**/*.class" src="lib/main/some.jar"/> <manifest> <attribute name="Main-Class" value="com.acme.checksites.Main"/> </manifest> </jar>
Creates an executable jar file with a main class "com.acme.checksites.Main", and
embeds all the classes from the jar lib/main/some.jar
.
<jar destfile="build/main/checksites.jar"> <fileset dir="build/main/classes"/> <restrict> <name name="**/*.class"/> <archives> <zips> <fileset dir="lib/main" includes="**/*.jar"/> </zips> </archives> </restrict> <manifest> <attribute name="Main-Class" value="com.acme.checksites.Main"/> </manifest> </jar>
Creates an executable jar file with a main class "com.acme.checksites.Main", and
embeds all the classes from all the jars in lib/main
.
<jar destfile="test.jar" basedir="."> <include name="build"/> <manifest> <!-- If this is an Applet or Web Start application, include the proper attributes from http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/jweb/index.html --> <attribute name="Permissions" value="sandbox"/> <attribute name="Codebase" value="example.com"/> <!-- Who is building this jar? --> <attribute name="Built-By" value="${user.name}"/> <!-- Information about the program itself --> <attribute name="Implementation-Vendor" value="ACME inc."/> <attribute name="Implementation-Title" value="GreatProduct"/> <attribute name="Implementation-Version" value="1.0.0beta2"/> <!-- details --> <section name="common/MyClass.class"> <attribute name="Sealed" value="false"/> </section> </manifest> </jar>
This is an example of an inline manifest specification including the version of the build program (Implementation-Version). Note that the Built-By attribute will take the value of the Ant property ${user.name}. The manifest produced by the above would look like this:
Manifest-Version: 1.0 Permissions: sandbox Codebase: example.com Built-By: conor Implementation-Vendor: ACME inc. Implementation-Title: GreatProduct Implementation-Version: 1.0.0beta2 Created-By: Apache Ant 1.9.2 Name: common/MyClass.class Sealed: false
The following shows how to create a jar file specifying a service with an implementation of the JDK6 scripting interface:
<jar jarfile="pinky.jar"> <fileset dir="build/classes"/> <service type="javax.script.ScriptEngineFactory" provider="org.acme.PinkyLanguage"/> </jar>
The following shows how to create a jar file specifing a service with two implementations of the JDK6 scripting interface:
<jar jarfile="pinkyandbrain.jar"> <fileset dir="classes"/> <service type="javax.script.ScriptEngineFactory"> <provider classname="org.acme.PinkyLanguage"/> <provider classname="org.acme.BrainLanguage"/> </service> </jar>