Hi Tim, I hope I'm not misunderstanding your issue but have you tried this:
sudo ant -Duser.home=$HOME frameworks.install I noticed that the wiki was updated recently. http://wiki.wocommunity.org/display/documentation/Building+and+Installing+a+Framework+with+Ant Aloha, Johnny On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:20 AM, Timothy Worman <[email protected]> wrote: > On May 8, 2014, at 12:07 PM, Ray Kiddy <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Thu, 8 May 2014 00:31:22 -0700 > > Timothy Worman <[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> On May 7, 2014, at 11:26 PM, Ray Kiddy <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > >>> On Wed, 07 May 2014 19:56:45 -0700 > >>> Timothy Worman <[email protected]> wrote: > >>> > >>>> All: > >>>> > >>>> After running this: > >>>> > >>>> ant clean frameworks; sudo ant frameworks.install > >>>> > >>>> I get the following errors: > >>>> > >>>> BUILD FAILED > >>>> /Users/worman/Source/wonder/build.xml:18: The following error > >>>> occurred while executing this > >>>> line: /Users/worman/Source/wonder/Build/build/build.xml:1509: The > >>>> following error occurred while executing this > >>>> line: /Users/worman/Source/wonder/Build/build/build.xml:1500: The > >>>> following error occurred while executing this > >>>> line: /Users/worman/Source/wonder/Build/build/build.xml:58: The > >>>> following error occurred while executing this > >>>> line: /Users/worman/Source/wonder/Build/build/generic.xml:526: > /var/root/Roots/ERJars.framework > >>>> does not exist. > >>>> > >>> > >>> Very weird. I got this to work by doing: > >>> > >>> sudo ant -Dwo.external.root=/home/ray/Roots > >>> frameworks.install > >>> > >>> I do not know _why_ we would have to do this, though. I believe that > >>> this worked at some time in the past. Does anyone else have any > >>> theories about when this stopped working? > >>> > >>> And frankly, it seems odd that one could have ever run "sudo ant" > >>> and gotten a correct value for ${user.home}. Than again, it's been > >>> a long day. Maybe I am squinting at this wrong. > >>> > >>> - ray > >> > >> If you: > >> 1. sudo -s (to gain root privs) > >> 2. cd > >> 3. pwd > >> > >> The output should reflect your user home not root’s home. For me it > >> was /Users/worman. That is just the way sudo works. It doesn’t > >> clobber your environment variables - at least not on OS X-nix. So, > >> the build scripts should work with sudo. They definitely changed at > >> some point because I have always built wonder this way and the > >> BUILD.txt also instructs building this way. My wolips.properties and > >> build.properties have not changed in a long time so I don’t think it > >> is that. > >> > >> Tim > > > > I know what you are saying, but, for me, "ant frameworks" builds > > into /home/ray/Roots and "sudo ant frameworks.install" wants to pull > > from "/root/Roots". > > > > Check this out. The ${user.home} variable in the ant file is pulled > > automatically from one's System properties, so: > > > > $ cat whoami.java > > > > public class whoami { > > public static void main(String[] arg) { > > System.out.println("user.home:\"" + > > System.getProperty("user.home") > > + "\""); > > } > > } > > $ > > $ javac whoami.java > > $ java -classpath . whoami > > user.home: "/home/ray" > > $ sudo java -classpath . whoami > > [sudo] password for ray: > > user.home: "/root" > > $ > > > > What do you get? > > I get the same result on OS X Mavericks. And yet this exact procedure used > to work and didn’t used to seek the built frameworks in /var/root/Roots. > That’s a bit strange to me. I’m pretty sure the legacy need for the sudo > was because it was required to install into /Library/Frameworks - unless > you changed permissions on that directory. In any case, anyone who reads > the build directions and follows them may very well hit this same wall. So, > we definitely should make a change. > > > > > - ray > > > >> > >>> It appears `ant clean frameworks` is successful - build to ~/Roots > >>>> looks normal. It seems to be failing because it is looking in the > >>>> root user’s home for ERJars.framework. This looks good: > >>>> > >>>> global.framework.build: > >>>> [mkdir] Created dir: /Users/worman/Roots/ERJars.framework > >>>> > >>>> global.dummy: > >>>> [woframework] Installing ERJars in /Users/worman/Roots > >>>> [jar] Building jar: /Users/worman/Roots/ERJars-6.0.jar > >>>> > >>>> global.dummy: > >>>> [echo] ------------------------------------- > >>>> [echo] ERJars.framework done > >>>> [echo] ------------------------------------- > >>>> > >>>> Possibly the `sudo ` is causing something to interpret > >>>> ‘home' as root’s home instead of the my home? This has never > >>>> happened before and I’d love to know if I’ve suffered a > >>>> self-inflicted wound. Otherwise, I’d love to fix this up - or know > >>>> what the fix-up is! > >>>> > >>>> If I do `sudo ls ~` my user home is returned, not /var/root so I’m > >>>> pretty sure it isn’t an issue with my environment. > >>>> > >>>> Tim > >> > >> > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored. > Webobjects-dev mailing list ([email protected]) > Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: > > https://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/webobjects-dev/jlmiller%40kahalawai.com > > This email sent to [email protected] >
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