AspectJ build

This build module contains taskdefs and resources for doing builds and checking source licenses. This document describes our approach to builds and provides some notes for maintaining the build module and debugging builds. For information on running builds and doing testing for the AspectJ project, see readme-build-and-test-aspectj.html.

Approach

The AspectJ project source files are broken into modules, the subdirectories of the modules directory. (To eclipse users, each module is a Java or AspectJ project.) The modules are compiled independently and may be assembled by the build script into the release jar files. All required libraries are checked into the lib module. We use Ant to drive the build, but the logic for building and assembling modules resides in the BuildModule taskdef, which reads module dependencies from the Eclipse .classpath files and assembles the product according to the templates in the product directory. This makes it easy to change dependencies and add modules, but could make it difficult to debug if something were to go wrong.

Maintaining the build module

Because the BuildModule taskdef extracts dependencies from the Eclipse .classpath file, there is no need to update build scripts when adding or removing modules or changing their dependencies, so long as they are all in the base modules directory (usually the base of the eclipse workspace). Likewise, updating a product assembly should be easy, since they are based on introspection of the product directories. Still, the taskdef workings are not obvious in the build script, so this section makes clear some of the implicit logic in case it's required when debugging build failures or to make changes.

Build module code updates

The build module produces taskdefs used to run the build. The scripts avoid bootstrapping by using a build library jar checked in to lib/build/build.jar. That means code updates in the build module are not reflected in the build process until the build.jar produced by building this build module replaces that found in lib/build/build.jar. Once the module update is confirmed, the new lib/build/build.jar must be checked in to propogate the changes to other users. The scripts support an Ant variable check.build.jar by warning when lib/build/build.jar is out of date.

BuildModule task

The BuildModule taskdef implements an integrated module or product build.

Module builds are based on the Eclipse .classpath file, and can produce a jar with the module classes, with two variations:

If there is a file {moduleName}.mf.txt in the module directory, it will be used as the manifest for the module jar file.

Product builds are defined by introspection of a products subdirectory like products/tools for the AspectJ installer. These have an install directory for installer resources and a dist directory containing all files belonging in the distribution, including 0-length placeholders for the module build results (e.g., products/tools/dist/lib). These placeholder file names are mapped to the originating module by Builder.moduleAliasFor(String) using values in Builder.properties. (The "-all" suffix in the source jars means that the module and all required modules are included.)

Version synchronization

The version is expressed in the jar manifests, in the Version class, and in some documentation files. The build script ensures all version expressions are aligned. When not doing or testing release builds, developers use the default "DEVELOPMENT" version.

The build version is set in build-properties.xml and propogated using Ant copy filters out to the aspectjrt.jar manifest, the aspectjtools.jar manifest and to ../bridge/src/org/aspectj/bridge/Version.java which the build.xml init-version task generates from a template lib/BridgeVersion.java.txt. To avoid updating Version.java whenever build-properties.xml changes, a task src/org/aspectj/internal/tools/ant/taskdefs/VersionUptodate.java determines whether Version.java has the same version by scanning the source file. The scan is dim-witted; do not change the lines flagged in the template without also changing the scanning code in the task.

Temporary aj-{name} and persistant aspectj-{name}

Top-level temporary build directories are prefixed "aj-", so you can safely destroy any such directory or ignore it in CVS or the Eclipse package explorer. By default the build script puts them at the same level as other modules. In build scripts, property names follow a similar convention; those prefixed "aj-" may be deleted at will, while "aspectj-" names are source directories which should never be deleted.

Building Java 5 sources

Java 5 source is supported in {module}/java5-src directories. Under Ant, when building in a pre-Java-5 VM, this source will be ignored (hence, it must not be required to compile). Under Eclipse, developers not using Java 5 should close the corresponding modules.

Builder.properties, resources, and tree audit tests

In src/org/aspectj/internal/tools/build/Builder.properties you can set up

Regarding the patterns, if you add a resource with an unrecognized suffix to a source tree, the corresponding unit test in testsrc/BuildModuleTests.java will fail. You'll need to update the Builder.properties file (and recreate the build.jar) to ensure that the new resource is copied to the assembled module jar.

Debugging build problems

Running under Eclipse

When running Ant from eclipse, do not use the default Eclipse Ant classpath; remove those jars and add all the libraries in ../lib/ant/lib as well as in ../lib/junit. If the build is failing under eclipse or Ant and the problem appears to be in the build module, you can run the build directly in eclipse (not using the Ant script) by running the skipped JUnit tests in testsrc/org/aspectj/internal/build/ModulesTests.java.

Why new or changed modules might not work

The BuildModule taskdef makes some assumptions about the naming, position, and contents of module directories and files. Understand those (documented in BuildModule.java) before using non-standard module directories.

Silent classpath and build failures

warning: When Ant runs compile processes, sometimes Jar files are not closed until the process quits. When running Ant under Eclipse, that means the jar files are not writable until eclipse quits. This affects build products (e.g., installers) which are run under eclipse (e.g., by opening with the "default system editor") and libraries used when compiling under Javac (if not zip products or input). This problem presents as files not being writable, i.e., deleted or modified.

One workaround is to delete any existing build products before re-creating them. The problem with this is that Ant provides no notice of that deletes fail when deleting with quiet="on", but when not running in quiet mode, deletes will fail if the directory does not exist. The workaround-workaround would be to create any required directories before trying to deleting any files, with the result of creating unused empty directories.

Currently BuildModule tasks forks the Javac command to try to work around this problem, but the Zip commands do not work around it. If under Eclipse, you get strange behavior with Ant builds, clear out everything and build from the command line. In some cases, you have to exit Eclipse before files can be deleted. (*sigh*)