~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more ~~ contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with ~~ this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. ~~ The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 ~~ (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with ~~ the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at ~~ ~~ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 ~~ ~~ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software ~~ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, ~~ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. ~~ See the License for the specific language governing permissions and ~~ limitations under the License. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --- Custom Types --- Custom Types It is possible to provide license matchers or license families of your own by implementing one of the Rat interfaces and providing the implementation as an Ant type. This example will show how to use a custom license matcher. To be suitable as an Ant type your class must provide a public no-arg constructor (or no constructor at all). If you want to support configuration of your instance via XML attributes or nested elements your type must provide methods that follow Ant's method naming conventions. For details see the {{{http://ant.apache.org/manual/develop.html#writingowntask} Writing Your Own Task}} section in Ant's manual. For this example let us assume you want to match a license that looks like ------------------------------------------------------------------ /** * Yet Another Software License, 1.0 * * Lots of text, specifying the users rights, and whatever ... */ ------------------------------------------------------------------ and to make things a bit more interesting the version number shall be configurable as an attribute on your type. An implementation of this matcher could look like ------------------------------------------------------------------ package org.example; import org.apache.rat.analysis.IHeaderMatcher; import org.apache.rat.analysis.RatHeaderAnalysisException; import org.apache.rat.api.Document; import org.apache.rat.api.MetaData; import org.apache.rat.api.MetaData.Datum; /** Just a POJO with no constructor at all */ public class YASLMatcher implements IHeaderMatcher { private final String MATCH = "Yet Another Software License, "; private final String FAMILY = "YASL"; private final String ONE = "1.0"; private String matchWithVersion = MATCH + ONE; private String familyWithVersion = FAMILY + ONE; /** becomes the version attribute */ public void setVersion(String v) { matchWithVersion = MATCH + v; familyWithVersion = FAMILY + v; } public void reset() { } /** trivial implementation that looks for a fixed string */ public boolean match(Document subject, String line) throws RatHeaderAnalysisException { if (line.indexOf(matchWithVersion) >= 0) { // this is what matchers are supposed to do when they find a // match, even though it is not documented very well subject.getMetaData().set(new Datum(MetaData.RAT_URL_LICENSE_FAMILY_CATEGORY, familyWithVersion)); return true; } return false; } } ------------------------------------------------------------------ Actually it would be easier to use Rat's <<>> implementation or the built-in {{{../types.html#substringMatcher}<<>>}}, but this is just an example. In order to use your matcher it has to be defined as an Ant type. You do so by either using {{{http://ant.apache.org/manual/Tasks/typedef.html} <<>>}} or {{{http://ant.apache.org/manual/Tasks/componentdef.html} <<>>}}. If you are using Ant 1.8.x you should use <<>>. In the most simple case this means ------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------ Since you will be using classes from Rat's core in both the Report task and your implementation you must ensure they get loaded via the same classloader. If you are using the <<<-lib>>> command line switch Rat's core will be part of Ant's core classloader and you don't need to reference it in the <<>> for <<>> at all. If you define the Rat Antlib via a <<>> task with a nested <<>> then you just use the same <<>> when defining your custom matcher as well and set <<>> to the same name. I.e. ------- ... other dependencies ... ------- With a definition like this you can use your matcher as in ------ ----- to detect Version 1.0 or ------ ----- for 2.0.