cat foo|head -n10|grep blee > bar
Apache Ant was not flexible enough. There was no way for the
<copy> task to do something similar. If you wanted
the <copy> task to get the first 10 lines, you would have
had to create special attributes:
<copy file="foo" tofile="bar" head="10" contains="blee"/>
The obvious problem thus surfaced: Ant tasks would not be able to accommodate such data transformation attributes as they would be endless. The task would also not know in which order these attributes were to be interpreted. That is, must the task execute the contains attribute first and then the head attribute or vice-versa? What Ant tasks needed was a mechanism to allow pluggable filter (data transformer) chains. Ant would provide a few filters for which there have been repeated requests. Users with special filtering needs would be able to easily write their own and plug them in.
The solution was to refactor data transformation oriented
tasks to support FilterChains. A FilterChain is a group of
ordered FilterReaders. Users can define their own FilterReaders
by just extending the java.io.FilterReader class. Such custom
FilterReaders can be easily plugged in as nested elements of
<filterchain> by using <filterreader> elements.
Example:
<copy file="${src.file}" tofile="${dest.file}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="your.extension.of.java.io.FilterReader">
<param name="foo" value="bar"/>
</filterreader>
<filterreader classname="another.extension.of.java.io.FilterReader">
<classpath>
<pathelement path="${classpath}"/>
</classpath>
<param name="blah" value="blee"/>
<param type="abra" value="cadabra"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</copy>
Ant provides some built-in filter readers. These filter readers
can also be declared using a syntax similar to the above syntax.
However, they can be declared using some simpler syntax also.Example:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<headfilter lines="15"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
is equivalent to:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.HeadFilter">
<param name="lines" value="15"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
The following built-in tasks support nested <filterchain> elements.| Attribute | Description | Required |
| classname | The class name of the filter reader. | Yes |
<filterreader> supports <classpath> and <param>
as nested elements. Each <param> element may take in the following
attributes - name, type and value.
The following FilterReaders are supplied with the default distribution.
This filters basic constants defined in a Java Class, and outputs them in lines composed of the format name=value. This filter uses the bcel library to understand the Java Class file. See Library Dependencies.
Important: This filter is different from most of the other filters. Most of the filters operate on a sequence of characters. This filter operates on the sequence of bytes that makes up a class. However the bytes arrive to the filter as a sequence of characters. This means that one must be careful on the choice of character encoding to use. Most encoding lose information on conversion from an arbitrary sequence of bytes to characters and back again to bytes. In particular the usual default character encodings (CP152 and UTF-8) do. For this reason, since Ant 1.7, the character encoding ISO-8859-1 is used to convert from characters back to bytes, so one has to use this encoding for reading the java class file.
<loadproperties srcfile="foo.class" encoding="ISO-8859-1">
<filterchain>
<classconstants/>
</filterchain>
</loadproperties>
This loads the constants from a Java class file as Ant properties,
prepending the names with a prefix.
<loadproperties srcfile="build/classes/org/acme/bar.class"
encoding="ISO-8859-1">
<filterchain>
<classconstants/>
<prefixlines prefix="ini."/>
</filterchain>
</loadproperties>
This filter converts its input by changing all non US-ASCII characters into their equivalent unicode escape backslash u plus 4 digits.
since Ant 1.6
<loadproperties srcfile="non_ascii_property.properties">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.EscapeUnicode"/>
</filterchain>
</loadproperties>
Convenience method:
<loadproperties srcfile="non_ascii_property.properties">
<filterchain>
<escapeunicode/>
</filterchain>
</loadproperties>
If the data contains data that represents Ant properties (of the form ${...}), that is substituted with the property's actual value.
<echo
message="All these moments will be lost in time, like teardrops in the ${weather}"
file="loadfile1.tmp"
/>
<property name="weather" value="rain"/>
<loadfile property="modifiedmessage" srcFile="loadfile1.tmp">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.ExpandProperties"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<echo
message="All these moments will be lost in time, like teardrops in the ${weather}"
file="loadfile1.tmp"
/>
<property name="weather" value="rain"/>
<loadfile property="modifiedmessage" srcFile="loadfile1.tmp">
<filterchain>
<expandproperties/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
As of Ant 1.8.3, a nested PropertySet can be specified:
<property name="weather" value="rain"/>
<loadfile property="modifiedmessage" srcFile="loadfile1.tmp">
<filterchain>
<expandproperties>
<propertyset>
<propertyref name="weather" />
</propertyset>
</expandproperties>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| lines | Number of lines to be read.
Defaults to "10" A negative value means that all lines are passed (useful with skip) |
No |
| skip | Number of lines to be skipped (from the beginning). Defaults to "0" | No |
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.HeadFilter">
<param name="lines" value="15"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<headfilter lines="15"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This stores the first 15 lines, skipping the first 2 lines, of the supplied data
in the property src.file.head. (Means: lines 3-17)
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<headfilter lines="15" skip="2"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
See the testcases for more examples (src\etc\testcases\filters\head-tail.xml in the
source distribution).
| Parameter Type | Parameter Value | Required |
| contains | Substring to be searched for. | Yes |
| negate | Whether to select non-matching lines only. Since Ant 1.7 | No |
foo and
bar.
Convenience method:<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.LineContains"> <param type="contains" value="foo"/> <param type="contains" value="bar"/> </filterreader>
Negation:<linecontains> <contains value="foo"/> <contains value="bar"/> </linecontains>
or<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.LineContains"> <param type="negate" value="true"/> <param type="contains" value="foo"/> <param type="contains" value="bar"/> </filterreader>
<linecontains negate="true"> <contains value="foo"/> <contains value="bar"/> </linecontains>
| Parameter Type | Parameter Value | Required |
| regexp | Regular expression to be searched for. | Yes |
| negate | Whether to select non-matching lines only. Since Ant 1.7 | No |
| casesensitive | Perform a case sensitive match. Default is true. Since Ant 1.8.2 | No |
foo
Convenience method:<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.LineContainsRegExp"> <param type="regexp" value="foo*"/> </filterreader>
Negation:<linecontainsregexp> <regexp pattern="foo*"/> </linecontainsregexp>
or<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.LineContainsRegExp"> <param type="negate" value="true"/> <param type="regexp" value="foo*"/> </filterreader>
<linecontainsregexp negate="true"> <regexp pattern="foo*"/> </linecontainsregexp>
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| prefix | Prefix to be attached to lines. | Yes |
Foo to all lines.
Convenience method:<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.PrefixLines"> <param name="prefix" value="Foo"/> </filterreader>
<prefixlines prefix="Foo"/>
since Ant 1.8.0
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| suffix | Suffix to be attached to lines. | Yes |
Foo to all lines.
Convenience method:<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.SuffixLines"> <param name="suffix" value="Foo"/> </filterreader>
<suffixlines suffix="Foo"/>
| Parameter Type | Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| tokenchar | begintoken | Character marking the beginning of a token. Defaults to @ | No |
| tokenchar | endtoken | Character marking the end of a token. Defaults to @ | No |
| User defined String. | token | User defined search String. | Yes |
| Not applicable. | propertiesfile | Properties file to take tokens from. | No |
| Not applicable. | propertiesResource | Properties resource to take tokens from.
Note this only works is you use the
"convenience" <replacetokens> syntax.
since Ant 1.8.0 |
No |
| User defined String. | value | Replace-value for the token | No |
<tstamp/>
<!-- just for explaining the use of the properties -->
<property name="src.file" value="orders.csv"/>
<property name="src.file.replaced" value="orders.replaced"/>
<!-- do the loading and filtering -->
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.replaced}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.ReplaceTokens">
<param type="token" name="DATE" value="${TODAY}"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
<!-- just for explaining the use of the properties -->
<echo message="${orders.replaced}"/>
Convenience method:
<tstamp/>
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.replaced}">
<filterchain>
<replacetokens>
<token key="DATE" value="${TODAY}"/>
</replacetokens>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This will treat each properties file entry in sample.properties as a token/key pair :
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.replaced}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.ReplaceTokens">
<param type="propertiesfile" value="sample.properties"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This reads the properties from an Ant resource referenced by its id:
<string id="embedded-properties">
foo=bar
baz=xyzzy
</string>
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.replaced}">
<filterchain>
<replacetokens propertiesResource="${ant.refid:embedded-properties}"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
<loadfile srcfile="${java.src.file}" property="${java.src.file.nocomments}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.StripJavaComments"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${java.src.file}" property="${java.src.file.nocomments}">
<filterchain>
<stripjavacomments/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| linebreaks | Characters that are to be stripped out. Defaults to "\r\n" | No |
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.contents}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.StripLineBreaks"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.contents}">
<filterchain>
<striplinebreaks/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This treats the '(' and ')' characters as line break characters and
strips them.
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.contents}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.StripLineBreaks">
<param name="linebreaks" value="()"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
| Parameter Type | Parameter Value | Required |
| comment | Strings that identify a line as a comment when they appear at the start of the line. | Yes |
Convenience method:<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.StripLineComments"> <param type="comment" value="#"/> <param type="comment" value="--"/> <param type="comment" value="REM "/> <param type="comment" value="rem "/> <param type="comment" value="//"/> </filterreader>
<striplinecomments> <comment value="#"/> <comment value="--"/> <comment value="REM "/> <comment value="rem "/> <comment value="//"/> </striplinecomments>
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| tablength | Defaults to "8" | No |
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.notab}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.TabsToSpaces"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.notab}">
<filterchain>
<tabstospaces/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| lines | Number of lines to be read.
Defaults to "10" A negative value means that all lines are passed (useful with skip) |
No |
| skip | Number of lines to be skipped (from the end). Defaults to "0" | No |
| Content | Filter | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Line 1 |
|
|||||||||||||
| Line 2 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 3 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 4 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 5 | ||||||||||||||
| Lines ... | ||||||||||||||
| Line 95 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 96 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 97 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 98 | ||||||||||||||
| Line 99 |
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.tail}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.TailFilter">
<param name="lines" value="15"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.tail}">
<filterchain>
<tailfilter lines="15"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This stores the last 5 lines of the first 15 lines of the supplied
data in the property ${src.file.mid}
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.mid}">
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.HeadFilter">
<param name="lines" value="15"/>
</filterreader>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.TailFilter">
<param name="lines" value="5"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
Convenience method:
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="${src.file.mid}">
<filterchain>
<headfilter lines="15"/>
<tailfilter lines="5"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This stores the last 10 lines, skipping the last 2 lines, of the supplied data
in the property src.file.head. (Means: if supplied data contains 60 lines,
lines 49-58 are extracted)
<loadfile srcfile="${src.file}" property="src.file.head">
<filterchain>
<tailfilter lines="10" skip="2"/>
</filterchain>
</loadfile>
This filter deletes specified characters.
since Ant 1.6
This filter is only available in the convenience form.
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| chars | The characters to delete. This attribute is backslash enabled. | Yes |
<deletecharacters chars="\t\r"/>
This filter prepends or appends the content file to the filtered files.
since Ant 1.6
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| prepend | The name of the file which content should be prepended to the file. | No |
| append | The name of the file which content should be appended to the file. | No |
<filterchain>
<concatfilter/>
</filterchain>
Adds a license text before each java source:
<filterchain>
<concatfilter prepend="apache-license-java.txt"/>
</filterchain>
since Ant 1.6
Only one tokenizer element may be used, the LineTokenizer is the default if none are specified. A tokenizer splits the input into token strings and trailing delimiter strings.
There may be zero or more string filters. A string filter processes a token and either returns a string or a null. It the string is not null it is passed to the next filter. This proceeds until all the filters are called. If a string is returned after all the filters, the string is outputs with its associated token delimiter (if one is present). The trailing delimiter may be overridden by the delimOutput attribute.
backslash interpretation A number of attributes (including delimOutput) interpret backslash escapes. The following are understood: \n, \r, \f, \t and \\.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| delimOutput | This overrides the tokendelimiter returned by the tokenizer if it is not empty. This attribute is backslash enabled. | No |
The following tokenizers are provided by the default distribution.
LineTokenizer
FileTokenizer
StringTokenizer
ReplaceString
ContainsString
ReplaceRegex
ContainsRegex
Trim
IgnoreBlank
DeleteCharacters
UniqFilter
This tokenizer splits the input into lines. The tokenizer delimits lines by "\r", "\n" or "\r\n". This is the default tokenizer.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| includeDelims | Include the line endings in the token. Default is false. | No |
Remove blank lines.<tokenfilter delimoutput="\n"/>
<tokenfilter>
<ignoreblank/>
</tokenfilter>
This tokenizer treats all the input as a token. So be
careful not to use this on very large input.
<tokenfilter>
<filetokenizer/>
<replaceregex pattern="([\n\r]+[ \t]*|^[ \t]*)package"
flags="s"
replace="\1//package"/>
</tokenfilter>
This tokenizer is based on java.util.StringTokenizer.
It splits up the input into strings separated by white space, or
by a specified list of delimiting characters.
If the stream starts with delimiter characters, the first
token will be the empty string (unless the delimsaretokens
attribute is used).
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| delims | The delimiter characters. White space is used if this is not set. (White space is defined in this case by java.lang.Character.isWhitespace()). | No |
| delimsaretokens | If this is true, each delimiter character is returned as a token. Default is false. | No |
| suppressdelims | If this is true, delimiters are not returned. Default is false. | No |
| includeDelims | Include the delimiters in the token. Default is false. | No |
<tokenfilter>
<stringtokenizer/>
<replaceregex pattern="(.+)" replace="[\1]"/>
</tokenfilter>
This is a simple filter to replace strings.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| from | The string that must be replaced. | Yes |
| to | The new value for the replaced string. When omitted an empty string is used. | No |
<tokenfilter>
<replacestring from="sun" to="moon"/>
</tokenfilter>
This is a simple filter to filter tokens that contains
a specified string.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| contains | The string that the token must contain. | Yes |
<tokenfilter>
<containsstring contains="foo"/>
</tokenfilter>
This string filter replaces regular expressions.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
See Regexp Type concerning the choice of the implementation.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| pattern | The regular expression pattern to match in the token. | Yes |
| replace | The substitution pattern to replace the matched regular expression. When omitted an empty string is used. | No |
| flags | See ReplaceRegexp for an explanation of regex flags. | No |
<tokenfilter>
<replaceregex pattern="hello" replace="world" flags="gi"/>
</tokenfilter>
This filters strings that match regular expressions.
The filter may optionally replace the matched regular expression.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
See Regexp Type concerning the choice of regular expression implementation.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| pattern | The regular expression pattern to match in the token. | Yes |
| replace | The substitution pattern to replace the matched regular expression. When omitted the original token is returned. | No |
| flags | See ReplaceRegexp for an explanation of regex flags. | No |
<tokenfilter>
<containsregex pattern="(hello|world)" flags="i"/>
</tokenfilter>
This example replaces lines like "SUITE(TestSuite, bits);" with
"void register_bits();" and removes other lines.
<tokenfilter>
<containsregex
pattern="^ *SUITE\(.*,\s*(.*)\s*\).*"
replace="void register_\1();"/>
</tokenfilter>
This filter trims whitespace from the start and end of
tokens.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
This filter removes empty tokens.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
This filter deletes specified characters from tokens.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| chars | The characters to delete. This attribute is backslash enabled. | Yes |
<tokenfilter>
<deletecharacters chars="\t"/>
<trim/>
<ignoreblank/>
</tokenfilter>
Suppresses all tokens that match their ancestor token. It is most useful if combined with a sort filter.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
This is an optional filter that executes a script in a Apache BSF or JSR 223 supported language. See the Script task for an explanation of scripts and dependencies.<tokenfilter> <uniqfilter/> </tokenfilter>
The script is provided with an object self that has getToken() and setToken(String) methods. The getToken() method returns the current token. The setToken(String) method replaces the current token.
This filter may be used directly within a filterchain.
| Attribute | Description | Required |
| language | The programming language the script is written in. Must be a supported Apache BSF or JSR 223 language | Yes |
| manager | The script engine manager to use. See the script task for using this attribute. | No - default is "auto" |
| src | The location of the script as a file, if not inline | No |
| setbeans | whether to have all properties, references and targets as global variables in the script. since Ant 1.8.0 | No, default is "true". |
| classpath | The classpath to pass into the script. | No |
| classpathref | The classpath to use, given as a reference to a path defined elsewhere. | No |
This filter can take a nested <classpath> element. See the script task on how to use this element.
<tokenfilter>
<scriptfilter language="javascript">
self.setToken(self.getToken().toUpperCase());
</scriptfilter>
</tokenfilter>
Remove lines containing the string "bad" while
copying text files:
<copy todir="dist">
<fileset dir="src" includes="**/*.txt"/>
<filterchain>
<scriptfilter language="beanshell">
if (self.getToken().indexOf("bad") != -1) {
self.setToken(null);
}
</scriptfilter>
</filterchain>
</copy>
<typedef/>. For
example a string filter that capitalizes words may be declared as:
package my.customant;
import org.apache.tools.ant.filters.TokenFilter;
public class Capitalize
implements TokenFilter.Filter
{
public String filter(String token) {
if (token.length() == 0)
return token;
return token.substring(0, 1).toUpperCase() +
token.substring(1);
}
}
This may be used as follows:
<typedef name="capitalize" classname="my.customant.Capitalize"
classpath="my.customant.path"/>
<copy file="input" tofile="output">
<filterchain>
<tokenfilter>
<stringtokenizer/>
<capitalize/>
</tokenfilter>
</filterchain>
</copy>
since Ant 1.8.0
The sort filter reads all lines and sorts them. The sort order can
be reversed and it is possible to specify a custom implementation of
the java.util.Comparator interface to get even more
control.
| Parameter Name | Parameter Value | Required |
| reverse | whether to reverse the sort order, defaults to false. Note: this parameter is ignored if the comparator parameter is present as well. | No |
| comparator | Class name of a class that
implements java.util.Comparator for Strings. This
class will be used to determine the sort order of lines. |
No |
This filter is also available using the
name sortfilter. The reverse parameter
becomes an attribute, comparator can be specified by
using a nested element.
<copy todir="build">
<fileset dir="input" includes="*.txt"/>
<filterchain>
<sortfilter/>
</filterchain>
</copy>
Sort all files *.txt from src location
into build location. The lines of each file are sorted in
ascendant order comparing the lines via the
String.compareTo(Object o) method.
<copy todir="build">
<fileset dir="input" includes="*.txt"/>
<filterchain>
<sortfilter reverse="true"/>
</filterchain>
</copy>
Sort all files *.txt from src location into reverse
order and copy them into build location.
<copy todir="build">
<fileset dir="input" includes="*.txt"/>
<filterchain>
<filterreader classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.SortFilter">
<param name="comparator" value="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.EvenFirstCmp"/>
</filterreader>
</filterchain>
</copy>
Sort all files *.txt from src location using as
sorting criterium EvenFirstCmp class, that sorts the file
lines putting even lines first then odd lines for example. The modified files
are copied into build location. The EvenFirstCmp,
has to an instanciable class via Class.newInstance(),
therefore in case of inner class has to be static. It also has to
implement java.util.Comparator interface, for example:
package org.apache.tools.ant.filters;
...(omitted)
public final class EvenFirstCmp implements <b>Comparator</b> {
public int compare(Object o1, Object o2) {
...(omitted)
}
}
The example above is equivalent to:
<componentdef name="evenfirst"
classname="org.apache.tools.ant.filters.EvenFirstCmp"/>
<copy todir="build">
<fileset dir="input" includes="*.txt"/>
<filterchain>
<sortfilter>
<evenfirst/>
</sortfilter>
</filterchain>
</copy>