ASAIK there are plans (ideas? wishes?) on the Dev-List for realizing a async-option (or task) for <java>, <exec> and <apply>.
But I´m not sure - especially when it will be done. Jan Matčrne -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: Philip Aston [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Gesendet am: Dienstag, 11. Februar 2003 15:48 An: Ant Users List Betreff: Re: pingURL: A better way to start and stop application servers? Philip Aston writes last April: > [old thread, I've been busy] Positively historic now. > Steve Loughran writes: > > You can use <waitfor> to probe a url with controlled sleep time > > and timeout interval, sets a property on success, etc. > > > > All pingurl does is add a container wrapper, but it only allows > > url 2XX conditions to be evaluated (presumably); <waitfor> can > > probe any port for being openable, plus all the other conditions > > that are possible > > Yep, waitfor is more generic and wins. Roll on 1.5 :-) I _finally_ got around to trying this. I used something like: <target name="start-server"> <parallel> <sequential> <java><!-- start server --></java> </sequential> <waitfor><http url="http://localhost:7001/"/></waitfor> </parallel> </target> However, this doesn't do the same as: <target name="start-server"> <pingURL testURL="http://localhost:7001/" waitUntil="alive"> <java><!-- start server --></java> </pingURL> </target> The difference between the two is that the <parallel> construct does not exit until the server exits, whereas pingURL launches the "start server" work in its own thread. With pingURL I can have my unit test targets depend on start-server. AFAICS, I can't achieve the same with standard ANT tasks. As a random suggestion, perhaps there could be a "asynchronous" option for <java> so you could do: <java asynchronous="true"><!-- start server --></java> <waitfor><http url="http://localhost:7001/"/></waitfor> Any comments? - Phil --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]