Why not use lib.repo instead of root?  Many other projects are already
using this variable to point to the location where Java libraries are
rooted.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

> jefft       02/03/18 17:30:59
>
>   Modified:    digester build.properties.sample
>   Log:
>   More properties parametrization
>   
>   Revision  Changes    Path
>   1.5       +5 -3      jakarta-commons/digester/build.properties.sample
>   
>   Index: build.properties.sample
>   ===================================================================
>   RCS file: /home/cvs/jakarta-commons/digester/build.properties.sample,v
>   retrieving revision 1.4
>   retrieving revision 1.5
>   diff -u -r1.4 -r1.5
>   --- build.properties.sample 27 Feb 2002 00:50:33 -0000      1.4
>   +++ build.properties.sample 19 Mar 2002 01:30:59 -0000      1.5
>   @@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
>   -jaxp.jaxp.jar=/java/jars/jaxp.jar
>   -jaxp.parser.jar=/java/jars/crimson.jar
>   +root=/java/jars
>   +jaxp.home=${root}
>   +jaxp.jaxp.jar=${jaxp.home}/jaxp.jar
>   +jaxp.parser.jar=${jaxp.home}/crimson.jar
>    
>    # Commons projects -- correct if 'ant dist' is run on each project in the
>    # default CVS directory layout
>   @@ -11,4 +13,4 @@
>    commons-logging.jar=${commons-logging.home}/commons-logging.jar
>    
>    # junit.jar - JUnit 3.7+ Classpath
>   -junit.jar=/java/jars/junit.jar
>   +junit.jar=${root}/junit.jar

--
To unsubscribe, e-mail:   <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Reply via email to