Take a look at Triggers: http://ant.apache.org/ivy/history/latest-milestone/settings/triggers.html
at the end there is an example of an unzip. HTH On 25 March 2010 14:55, Clarke, Trevor <[email protected]> wrote: > I work on an application primarily written in C++ and we've been > searching for a better dependency management system. We'll have to write > something if we can't find a suitable alternative. > > Looking at ivy, it appears to have all the features we need (transitive > dependencies, multiple package repository support, multiple > configuration support, etc.) However, I'm wondering if I can use it for > non-java projects. We have a bunch of .zip files with pre-built > libraries and include files. We'd need to have ivy download and unzip > them to a workspace where our existing build system can locate them. Is > this something that's easy to accomplish? Where should I start looking? > I've read enough to believe that the standalone ivy (without ant) is > probably what I need but I'm not sure how to go about configuring ivy to > perform the unzip. > > ------------------ > Trevor R.H. Clarke > Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp > Opticks, Free Your Imagery (http://opticks.org) > GPG key available on random.sks.keyserver.penguin.de > > > > > > This message and any enclosures are intended only for the addressee. Please > notify the sender by email if you are not the intended recipient. If you are > not the intended recipient, you may not use, copy, disclose, or distribute > this > message or its contents or enclosures to any other person and any such actions > may be unlawful. Ball reserves the right to monitor and review all messages > and enclosures sent to or from this email address. > -- Alex Foreman
