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The reason is long and boring, but I need to run an Ant script to compile Java 1.5 code from a Java 1.4 app. I keep getting this error, though:

BUILD FAILED

build.xml:16: Unable to find a javac compiler;
com.sun.tools.javac.Main is not on the classpath.
Perhaps JAVA_HOME does not point to the JDK.
It is currently set to "C:\j2sdk1.4.2_16\jre"

In my code, I have:

Project p = new Project();
p.setUserProperty("ant.file", buildFile.getAbsolutePath());
p.setProperty("java.home", "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_04");
p.fireBuildStarted();
p.init();
// so on and so forth

but it ignores it. I've also tried p.setUserProperty(String, String), but that doesn't do the trick, either. Is there a way to do it without launching a separate process?

1
  • FYI: java.home must be set to $JAVA_HOME/jre, not to $JAVA_HOME itself. Jan 25, 2015 at 19:26

5 Answers 5

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Does the javac task in your buildfile have fork="yes"? If not, then it doesn't matter what the java.home property is set to; ant will attempt to call the javac Main method in the same java process, which from your error is a JRE, not a JDK.

EDIT Try setting the executable property of your javac task to the full path to the javac binary and add compiler="extJavac" to the task.

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  • Adding fork="yes" does help -- at least javac runs, but it's still the wrong version.
    – Adam Crume
    Mar 16, 2009 at 23:00
  • I was looking for something like the "executable" property and just didn't see it. It's annoying that I have to set it for each javac task, but it works. Thanks.
    – Adam Crume
    Mar 17, 2009 at 14:07
0

Shouldn't the backslashes be doubled?

p.setProperty("java.home", "C:\\Program Files\\Java\\jdk1.6.0_04");
1
  • They were. I think something went wrong when pasting to StackOverflow.
    – Adam Crume
    Mar 16, 2009 at 22:31
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Have you set environment variables JAVA_HOME and ANT_HOME properly? If you are setting via code it should work though.

Also check if your %JAVA_HOME%\bin directory %ANT_HOME%\bin should be in the environment variable 'path'.

Your problem seems to be with the %JAVA_HOME%\bin not being present in the envt. variable path though.

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Another way to make this work is to add 'tools.jar' to your classpath. The javac compiler is contained within this jar.

java -cp $JAVA_HOME/lib/tools.jar ...

0

javac option is available in tools.jar. In eclipse, even if your JRE HOME points to a jdk, all the system libraries point to JDK_HOME\jre\lib. There is no tools.jar. You can add tools.jar as an external Jar file. This should solve your issue

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