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-<html>
-<head>
-<title>Welcome to Ant1.5</title>
-</head>
-<body bgcolor="#ffffff">
-<h1>Welcome to Ant1.5</h1>
-Hello, and welcome to Ant1.5
-<p>
-For new users to Ant, welcome to a new way to build your software.
-<p>
-For veteran Ant users, its been, what nine months since Ant 1.4.1
-shipped, and we've been as busy enhancing it as you've been using it.
-<p>
-
-We know you've been using Ant, not just from the all the bug reports we
-see, but from the awards we've been getting from JavaWorld and SD Magazine
-and from the fact that it is now clearly a mainstream product. Every quality IDE,
-from the Open Source projects: Emacs, NetBeans, Eclipse, JEdit, to the
-commercial offerings such as IntelliJ IDEA and JBuilder now have high
-quality Ant integration either built in or available as a
-download. And they do that not just because it improves their products,
-giving users the best of both worlds -great editors and a great build
-process, but because Java developers are starting to expect Ant (and
-JUnit) everywhere.
-<p>
-Even in mid-2001, if you said you were using Ant in your project, people
-would stare at you. Now, as long as you are talking with Java developers
-and not management or your family and friends, people will nod, shrug
-and maybe ask you questions about build file and Ant configurations. The good
-news: Ant 1.5 includes more helpful error messages and a new
-<tt>-diagnostics</tt> command to look at your Ant installation and help work out why
-things arent working.
-<p>
-Now, when you tell people you work on Ant in your spare time,
-people used to give you very funny stares; now they ask you about how to
-set up automated build processes, or deploy to some random app server.
-The good news: Ant 1.5 makes it easier to answer those questions.
-
-The other sign of mainstream is that there are also books on the
-subject, first Java Tools for Extreme Programming, then Ant: The
-Definitive Guide, and the first Ant1.5 book, Java Development with Ant,
-due to ship at the end of the month. (Steve says: I prefer the one with
-my name on the cover as co-author, but I'm biased).
-As usual, the manual has improved too:
-regardless of whether you need a book to work with Ant or not, you need
-that on-line documentation. And as usual, any extra contributions to the
-docs are welcome indeed.
-<p>
-Ant has also influenced how projects are built. Now when you download
-any open source project, or work with a closed source team, you expect
-to see a file called build.xml there. Equally important, you expect that
-build file to compile and run a set of tests using JUnit or a derivative
-thereof; if they are missing, you worry.
-<p>
-Together, Ant and JUnit have transformed the mainstream process for
-building and deploying Java projects. And that's pretty profound, when
-you think about it. What is equally impressive is that this was all done
-as a co-operative effort. Nobody works on Ant full-time; everybody uses
-it to solve their problems, to address their build crises and generally
-get something done in a hurry. It just so happens that the architectural
-model of Java classes bound via introspection to the XML build file
-makes it easy for people to add new tasks, extend existing ones and
-generally ease their way into developing and extending Ant. It is the
-users that have helped Ant become the success it is today, and will keep
-it that way tomorrow.
-<p>
-<h2>What has changed</h2>
-<p>
-So, what is new in Ant1.5? Lots of stuff. You will have to look at the
-<a href="WHATSNEW">whatsnew</a> file to see, but basically the changes
-fall into a number of categories
-<ol>
-<li>Bug fixes. We know, some things were broken in 1.4. In ant1.5 we
-have moved the bugs, fixing the ones we could, and no doubt adding
-different ones. Hopefully the total bug count has decreased.
-<li>Scalability. Changes in &lt;ant&gt; and a few other tasks should
-make it easier to write large, scalable build files.
-<li>Deployment. Take a look at the new &lt;serverdeploy&gt; task, add support
-for your server if it isnt there. Tomcat 4.1 has its own deployment
-tasks incidentally -fetch them from the tomcat pages.
-<li>Ease of use. We have added new attributes to make the archive tasks
-consistent with each other, new error messages for common problems (you
-get a screenful of help when a task wont instantiate, for example), and
-generally try and be helpful. As usual, we will accept contributions to
-the documentation or the code for even more helpfulness. Hey, in ant1.5
-you dont need to double escape the $ sign to preserve it in a string!
-<li>Java 1.4 support. We build and test fine on Java 1.4, and have the
-extensions to javac needed to build code with assertions in. We should
-point out that we have more work to do in this area: if someone wants to
-write an &lt;assertionset&gt; datatype to give users control of which assertions
-to enable, and patch this in to things like the &lt;junit&gt; and
-&lt;java&gt; tasks, things would get very interesting.
-<li>Continuous builds. Automated build tools are becoming more widely
-used; fork options on &lt;javac&gt; and &lt;javadoc&gt; are there to
-stop memory use growth on a continuous process.
-<li>New platforms: MacOS X for owners of those cute little laptops,
-Novell Netware servers, and even z/OS and OS/390 for mainframe
-developers who write their build files on their virtual card punches.
-<li>Conditions. Take a look at the &lt;condition&gt; tag to see what you can
-look for, then at &lt;waitfor&gt; to use the same tests in deployment.
-Finally, notice the <tt>if</tt> and <tt>unless</tt> attributes on
-&lt;fail&gt; for easy halting of the build on a condition, without
-having to resort to conditional targets.
-</ol>
-
-There are many more enhancements, so we hope you will find your build
-projects easier. We have, as usual, jumped through hoops to keep
-existing builds working, even those build files that went out their way
-to not work on Java 1.4 (hint: dont ask for the classic compiler, it has
-gone away). If your build file stops working, and it isnt something listed
-on the 'changes that may break your build' part of the WHATSNEW file, or
-something we know about on bugzilla, please dont hesitate to file a new
-bug report, preferably one with a replicable test and a patch to fix the
-problem.
-<p>
-Thanks,
-<p>
-The Ant development team.
-<p>
-PS: many thanks for Magesh to being the build manager for this release!
-He has been busy since Feb/March organizing it. Magesh -you are so good
-at this you should do it next time too :)
-</body></html>
-