FileSet

A FileSet is a group of files. These files can be found in a directory tree starting in a base directory and are matched by patterns taken from a number of PatternSets and Selectors.

PatternSets can be specified as nested <patternset> elements. In addition, FileSet holds an implicit PatternSet and supports the nested <include>, <includesfile>, <exclude> and <excludesfile> elements of PatternSet directly, as well as PatternSet's attributes.

Selectors are available as nested elements within the FileSet. If any of the selectors within the FileSet do not select the file, the file is not considered part of the FileSet. This makes a FileSet equivalent to an <and> selector container.

Attribute Description Required
dir the root of the directory tree of this FileSet. Either dir or file must be specified
file shortcut for specifying a single-file fileset
defaultexcludes indicates whether default excludes should be used or not (yes | no); default excludes are used when omitted. 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
casesensitive Must the include and exclude patterns be treated in a case sensitive way? Defaults to true. No
followsymlinks Shall symbolic links be followed? Defaults to true. See the note below. No
erroronmissingdir Specify what happens if the base directory does not exist. If true a build error will happen, if false, the fileset will be ignored/empty. Defaults to true. Since Apache Ant 1.7.1 (default is true for backward compatibility reasons.) No

Note: All files/directories for which the canonical path is different from its path are considered symbolic links. On Unix systems this usually means the file really is a symbolic link but it may lead to false results on other platforms.

Examples

<fileset dir="${server.src}" casesensitive="yes">
  <include name="**/*.java"/>
  <exclude name="**/*Test*"/>
</fileset>

Groups all files in directory ${server.src} that are Java source files and don't have the text Test in their name.

<fileset dir="${server.src}" casesensitive="yes">
  <patternset id="non.test.sources">
    <include name="**/*.java"/>
    <exclude name="**/*Test*"/>
  </patternset>
</fileset>

Groups the same files as the above example, but also establishes a PatternSet that can be referenced in other <fileset> elements, rooted at a different directory.

<fileset dir="${client.src}" >
  <patternset refid="non.test.sources"/>
</fileset>

Groups all files in directory ${client.src}, using the same patterns as the above example.

<fileset dir="${server.src}" casesensitive="yes">
  <filename name="**/*.java"/>
  <filename name="**/*Test*" negate="true"/>
</fileset>

Groups the same files as the top example, but using the <filename> selector.

<fileset dir="${server.src}" casesensitive="yes">
  <filename name="**/*.java"/>
  <not>
    <filename name="**/*Test*"/>
  </not>
</fileset>

Groups the same files as the previous example using a combination of the <filename> selector and the <not> selector container.

<fileset dir="src" includes="main/" />

Selects all files in src/main (e.g. src/main/Foo.java or src/main/application/Bar.java).