110

I have used copydir to copy a directory tree but it is deprecated. My directory contains some sub-directories, and some of those contain files and others contain more sub-directories.

How can I copy the entire tree?

1
  • 5
    Sounds like you want to do a recursive copy. And that's the solution that Omnipresent gave. More people may find this question if the word "recursive" appeared in the question.
    – Jason
    Apr 26, 2012 at 18:28

11 Answers 11

129

Copy contents including the directory itself.

<copy todir="${dest.dir}" >  
    <fileset dir="${src.dir.parent}">  
        <include name="${src.dir}/**"/>
    </fileset>
</copy>

Note: ${src.dir} is relative to ${src.dir.parent}, and not a full path

7
  • 12
    this should be the CORRECT answer. The other answer are for the question "How do you copy the contents of a directory using Ant". There is a subtle difference.
    – cmcginty
    Jan 26, 2013 at 0:41
  • "this should be the CORRECT answer": Absolutely, though the difference is not so subtle when you can't load your resources with the expected pathnames. Jul 10, 2013 at 18:48
  • 1
    it doesn't work for ant 1.8, it seems nothing happened.
    – CCC
    Jan 19, 2016 at 9:27
  • 8
    @CCC ensure ${src.dir} is relative to ${src.dir.parent}, and not a full path Feb 2, 2016 at 22:26
  • very misleading how x.parent is supposed to NOT BE the parent of x... -_-
    – nonchip
    May 3, 2018 at 13:30
126
<copy todir="${dest.dir}" >  
    <fileset dir="${src.dir}" includes="**"/>  
</copy> 

believe that will do what you want... (Recursive copy done)

6
  • 4
    apparently, the includes is not necessary when you want everything (see answer by user s1n)
    – Abel
    Aug 17, 2010 at 7:13
  • 44
    This copies the contents of {src.dir}, but not the actual directory
    – cmcginty
    Jan 26, 2013 at 0:42
  • Copies not a did but it's content.
    – A-Live
    May 30, 2013 at 19:15
  • Since you are the accepted answer, you might correct it to become the correct answer (ery's answer is correct) ;-) Sep 8, 2013 at 19:42
  • I gather that the idea of SO is collective curation, which is why anyone can edit someone else's question (though you need a lot of rep to skip the edit review). Oct 10, 2013 at 11:23
26

You should only have to specify the directory (sans the includes property):

<copy todir="../new/dir">
    <fileset dir="src_dir"/>
</copy>

See the manual for more details and examples.

1
  • 13
    @s1n This commands only copies all the contents of src_dir to ../new/dir and not the src_dir. How do we copy src_dir (directory) to another location? Dec 3, 2011 at 19:24
17

Copy contents including the directory itself.

<copy todir="${dest.dir}" >  
  <fileset dir="${src.dir.parent}" includes="${src.dir}/**"/>
</copy>
1
2

A fine point: ant will only copy the sub-directories if the source files are newer than the destination files. [1] In my case, the sub-dirs were not being copied (I am using verbose="true"), since there were no changes and they were already in the destination. You can use "overwrite" to force it, or touch some of the files in your source sub-dirs.

2

I used include tags as shown in below code snippet in my build.xml file to copy individul jar files inside a directory.

<target name="devInstall" depends="generateXsl" description="testing">
<copy flatten="true" todir="${test}/WEB-INF/lib" overwrite="${overwrite}">
                <fileset refid="buildJars"/>
                <fileset dir="lib">
                    <include name="commons-collections-*.jar"/>
                    <include name="commons-io-*.jar"/>              
                    <include name="kodo/*.jar"/>
                    <include name="mail*.jar"/>    
                    <include name="activation*.jar"/>               
                    <include name="guava*.jar"/>
                    <include name="jna*.jar"/>                          
                </fileset>          
            </copy>
</target>
1

From the example here, you can write a simple Ant file using copy task.

<project name="MyProject" default="copy" basedir=".">
    <target name="copy">
        <copy todir="./new/dir">
           <fileset dir="src_dir"/>
        </copy>
    </target>
</project>

This should copy everything inside src_dir (excluding it) to new/dir.

1
  • 6
    this is just copying the contents of the directory. not the contents including the directly. :(
    – ghostCoder
    Nov 21, 2011 at 7:55
1

I'm adding a more generic pattern to copy all subfolders.

<copy todir="${dest.dir}" >  
  <fileset dir="${src.dir}" includes="**/*"/>
</copy>

See Patterns for details.

2
  • what should i replace dest.dir and src.dir with. i have nearly 6 directories to be copied to dest dir and make a war file and deply it in tomcat server Aug 11, 2022 at 16:48
  • @deepakl.2000 - note the ${...} construct indicates we're working with an Ant variable you define in your script elsewhere. see ant.apache.org/manual/using.html#properties
    – sartoris
    Aug 11, 2022 at 22:47
1

Another ant task is Copydir. The key part here is to include the name of the directory you want to copy after the dest directory. The sub-directories and files will be copied automatically.

<target name="-post-jar">
    <copydir src="config" dest="${dist.dir}/config/"/>
</target>
1
  • From your link: This task has been deprecated. Use the Copy task instead.
    – Jim
    Oct 25, 2017 at 19:38
0

This code should copy the folder as well as its contents. It also uses the basename task to avoid having to do any manual path parsing.

<project name="Build" default="doCopy">
  <property name="source.dir" value="SourceDirPathGoesHere"/>
  <property name="dest.dir" value="DestinationDirPathGoesHere"/>
  <target name="doCopy">
    <basename property="source.dir.base.name" file="${source.dir}"/>
    <copy todir="${dest.dir}">
      <fileset dir="${source.dir}/.." includes="${source.dir.base.name}/**"/>
    </copy>
  </target>
</project>
0

I finally copied using following code

<copy todir="${root.dir}/dist/src">  
                <fileset dir="${root.dir}/build/src" includes="**"/>  
            </copy>

This will copy the src folder from dist to build.

Hope this helps someone.

1
  • it literally says it would copy the other way around though :P
    – nonchip
    May 3, 2018 at 13:32

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