All,

I have a NetBeans Platform project (not just a project I wrote in NetBeans, but one using the rich client framework provided by NetBeans). I can run the project via an ant run command. Now, I want to pass in an argument that will work its way through ant to be accessible via the System.getProperty method.

I understand that I need to use a <sysproperty> node to actually inject the key/value pair into the runtime environment, but for the life of me I cannot figure out how to get this to work with the convoluted build tree that NetBeans creates for you (build.xml depends on build-impl.xml, which in turn depends on ${harness.dir}/suite.xml, which in turn depends on ${harness.dir}/run.xml)

The simplest example I've found is

<target name="run" depends="compile">
    <java classname="prop"
          fork="true">
      <sysproperty key="test.property"
                   value="blue"
                   />
    </java>
  </target>

but the problem is that none of my xml files have an easily accessible <java> node like that. I think I've managed to trace the execution flow to where something is actually invoked (in ${harness.dir}/run.xml)

<target name="run" depends="-prepare-as-app,-prepare-as-platform">
        <touch file="${cluster}/.lastModified"/> <!-- #138427 -->
        <property name="run.args" value=""/>
        <property name="run.args.ide" value=""/>
        <property name="run.args.extra" value=""/>
        <condition property="run.args.mac" value="-J-Xdock:name=${app.name}" else="">
            <os family="mac"/>
        </condition>
        <exec osfamily="windows" executable="${run.exe}" failonerror="no" resultproperty="result.prop">
            <arg value="--jdkhome"/>
            <arg file="${run.jdkhome}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.common}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.prepared}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.ide}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.extra}"/>
        </exec>
        <exec osfamily="unix" dir="." executable="sh"
        failonerror="no" resultproperty="result.prop">
            <arg value="${run.sh}"/>
            <arg value="--jdkhome"/>
            <arg file="${run.jdkhome}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.common}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.prepared}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.ide}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.extra}"/>
            <arg line="${run.args.mac}"/>
        </exec>
        <fail>
The application is already running within the test user directory.
You must shut it down before trying to run it again.
            <condition>
                <and>
                    <isset property="result.prop" />
                    <or>
                        <!-- unknown option exit code as returned from IDE by org.netbeans.api.sendopts.CommandLine -->
                        <equals arg1="${result.prop}" arg2="50346" />
                        <!-- unknown option exit code as returned from platform app by org.netbeans.CLIHandler -->
                        <equals arg1="${result.prop}" arg2="2" />
                    </or>
                </and>
            </condition>
        </fail>
    </target>

As you can see, there is no <java> node underneath which I can put my custom sysproperty. Furthermore, it seems like a very wrong thing to do to have to muck around with harness xml files to inject a property that only affects one of my projects, not all of them. So what's the correct way to ensure that a command line property I pass to ant run ends up within a NetBeans Platform project?

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1 Answer

There is a folder etc in the distribution of your RCP app and in that folder is file yourapp.conf i think there is an answer you seek. For example from one of mine NB RCP app:

# ${HOME} will be replaced by user home directory according to platform
default_userdir="${HOME}/.${APPNAME}/dev"
default_mac_userdir="${HOME}/Library/Application Support/${APPNAME}/dev"

# options used by the launcher by default, can be overridden by explicit
# command line switches
default_options="--laf Metal --branding xmled -J-Xms24m -J-Xmx64m"
# for development purposes you may wish to append: -J-Dnetbeans.logger.console=true -J-ea

# default location of JDK/JRE, can be overridden by using --jdkhome <dir> switch
#jdkhome="/path/to/jdk"

# clusters' paths separated by path.separator (semicolon on Windows, colon on Unices)
#extra_clusters=
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I don't see this folder. (and doing a grep for these strings i.e. default_options turns up nothing). Is this only if you've created an installer? – I82Much Feb 24 '11 at 18:31
build zip dist for example and look inside there is etc/{name of your application}.conf. I guess you didn't substituted name of your application when used grep. So if your application is called Dune name of the file will be Dune.conf. The folder just have to be there. – Daniel Kec Feb 25 '11 at 17:55
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