Hi,
strange =
<project name="bla" default="main" basedir=".">
<!-- Import AntContrib -->
<taskdef resource="net/sf/antcontrib/antlib.xml" />
<target name="depends">
<timestampselector
outputsetid="mypath"
count="1"
age="eldest" >
<path>
<fileset dir="Y:/bla">
<include name="*.jar" />
</fileset>
</path>
</timestampselector>
<pathconvert refid="mypath" property="myfixedpath"
targetos="unix"/>
<echo>myfixedpath === ${myfixedpath}</echo>
<echo
file="Y:/bla/foobar1.properties">filepath=${myfixedpath}</echo>
<echo
file="Y:/bla/foobar2.properties">filepath=${myfixedpath}</echo>
</target>
<target name="main" depends="depends">
<propertyfile file="Y:/bla/foobar1.properties" />
<echo>Targetfile === ${filepath}</echo>
</target>
</project>
foobar1.properties, the file which is loaded in the main target looks
like =
#Wed Sep 27 07:53:37 CEST 2006
filepath=Y\:/bla/corba.jar
foobar2.properties looks like =
filepath=Y:/bla/aktecorba.jar
so it seems like the timestamp gets added when loading the propertyfile
with <loadfile> but what is really fishy is that the path goes bad
from : Y:/bla/aktecorba.jar to: Y\:/bla/corba.jar
What's responsible for that ?
and
how to make the example above working ?
Regards, Gilbert
> <echo
file="Y:/bla/foobar.properties">filepath=${myfixedpath}</echo>
> The foobar.properties looks like =
> #Tue Sep 26 17:40:31 CEST 2006
> filepath=Y\:/bla/corba.jar
This is fishy because <echo> would never add the timestamp, like
java.util.Property#store would. So something else created the file
you're showing...
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