# 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. require 'java' require 'jruby' # Buildr runs along side a JVM, using either RJB or JRuby. The Java module allows # you to access Java classes and create Java objects. # # Java classes are accessed as static methods on the Java module, for example: # str = Java.java.lang.String.new('hai!') # str.toUpperCase # => 'HAI!' # Java.java.lang.String.isInstance(str) # => true # Java.com.sun.tools.javac.Main.compile(args) # # The classpath attribute allows Buildr to add JARs and directories to the classpath, # for example, we use it to load Ant and various Ant tasks, code generators, test # frameworks, and so forth. # # When using an artifact specification, Buildr will automatically download and # install the artifact before adding it to the classpath. # # For example, Ant is loaded as follows: # Java.classpath << 'org.apache.ant:ant:jar:1.7.0' # # Artifacts can only be downloaded after the Buildfile has loaded, giving it # a chance to specify which remote repositories to use, so adding to classpath # does not by itself load any libraries. You must call Java.load before accessing # any Java classes to give Buildr a chance to load the libraries specified in the # classpath. # # When building an extension, make sure to follow these rules: # 1. Add to the classpath when the extension is loaded (i.e. in module or class # definition), so the first call to Java.load anywhere in the code will include # the libraries you specify. # 2. Call Java.load once before accessing any Java classes, allowing Buildr to # set up the classpath. # 3. Only call Java.load when invoked, otherwise you may end up loading the JVM # with a partial classpath, or before all remote repositories are listed. # 4. Check on a clean build with empty local repository. module Java # Since we already have a JVM loaded, we can use it to guess where JAVA_HOME is. # We set JAVA_HOME early so we can use it without calling Java.load first. ENV['JAVA_HOME'] ||= java.lang.System.getProperty("java.home") # This version is the minimal version Buildr will support. # Any older version of JRuby will raise an exception. JRUBY_MIN_VERSION = '1.5.1' raise "JRuby must be at least at version #{JRUBY_MIN_VERSION}" unless JRUBY_VERSION >= JRUBY_MIN_VERSION class << self # Returns the classpath, an array listing directories, JAR files and # artifacts. Use when loading the extension to add any additional # libraries used by that extension. # # For example, Ant is loaded as follows: # Java.classpath << 'org.apache.ant:ant:jar:1.7.0' def classpath @classpath ||= [] end # Most platforms requires tools.jar to be on the classpath, tools.jar contains the # Java compiler (OS X and AIX are two exceptions we know about, may be more). # Guess where tools.jar is from JAVA_HOME, which hopefully points to the JDK, # but maybe the JRE. Return nil if not found. def tools_jar #:nodoc: @tools_jar ||= ['lib/tools.jar', '../lib/tools.jar'].map { |path| File.expand_path(path, ENV['JAVA_HOME']) }. find { |path| File.exist?(path) } end # Loads the JVM and all the libraries listed on the classpath. Call this # method before accessing any Java class, but only call it from methods # used in the build, giving the Buildfile a chance to load all extensions # that append to the classpath and specify which remote repositories to use. def load return self if @loaded # Adding jars to the jruby's $CLASSPATH should be the correct thing, however it # seems like some tools require their jars on system class loader (javadoc, junit, etc) # cp.each { |path| $CLASSPATH << path } # Use system ClassLoader to add classpath sysloader = java.lang.ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader add_url_method = java.lang.Class.forName('java.net.URLClassLoader'). getDeclaredMethod('addURL', [java.net.URL.java_class].to_java(java.lang.Class)) add_url_method.setAccessible(true) add_path = lambda { |path| add_url_method.invoke(sysloader, [java.io.File.new(path).toURI.toURL].to_java(java.net.URL)) } # Most platforms requires tools.jar to be on the classpath. add_path[tools_jar] if tools_jar classpath.map! { |path| Proc === path ? path.call : path } Buildr.artifacts(classpath).map(&:to_s).each do |path| file(path).invoke add_path[path] end @loaded = true self end end end