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See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. --> <html lang="en"> <head> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../stylesheets/style.css"> <title>Zip Task</title> </head> <body> <h2 id="zip">Zip</h2> <h3>Description</h3> <p>Creates a zipfile.</p> <p>The <var>basedir</var> attribute is the reference directory from where to zip.</p> <p>Note that file permissions will not be stored in the resulting zipfile.</p> <p>It is possible to refine the set of files that are being zipped. This can be done with the <var>includes</var>, <var>includesfile</var>, <var>excludes</var>, <var>excludesfile</var> and <var>defaultexcludes</var> attributes. With the <var>includes</var> or <var>includesfile</var> attribute you specify the files you want to have included by using patterns. The <var>exclude</var> or <var>excludesfile</var> attribute is used to specify the files you want to have excluded. This is also done with patterns. And finally with the <var>defaultexcludes</var> attribute, you can specify whether you want to use default exclusions or not. See the section on <a href="../dirtasks.html#directorybasedtasks">directory based tasks</a>, on how the inclusion/exclusion of files works, and how to write patterns.</p> <p>This task forms an implicit <a href="../Types/fileset.html">FileSet</a> and supports most attributes of <code><fileset></code> (<var>dir</var> becomes <var>basedir</var>) as well as the nested <code><include></code>, <code><exclude></code> and <code><patternset></code> elements.</p> <p>Or, you may place within it nested file sets, or references to file sets. In this case <var>basedir</var> is optional; the implicit file set is <em>only used</em> if <var>basedir</var> is set. You may use any mixture of the implicit file set (with <var>basedir</var> set, and optional attributes like <var>includes</var> and optional subelements like <code><include></code>); explicit nested <code><fileset></code> elements so long as at least one fileset total is specified. The ZIP file will only reflect the relative paths of files <em>within</em> each fileset. The Zip task and its derivatives know a special form of a fileset named <code>zipfileset</code> that has additional attributes (described below).</p> <p>The Zip task also supports the merging of multiple zip files into the zip file. This is possible through either the <var>src</var> attribute of any nested filesets or by using the special nested fileset <code>zipgroupfileset</code>.</p> <p>The <var>update</var> parameter controls what happens if the ZIP file already exists. When set to <q>yes</q>, the ZIP file is updated with the files specified. (New files are added; old files are replaced with the new versions.) When set to <q>no</q> (the default) the ZIP file is overwritten if any of the files that would be added to the archive are newer than the entries inside the archive. Please note that ZIP files store file modification times with a granularity of 2 seconds. If a file is less than 2 seconds newer than the entry in the archive, Apache Ant will not consider it newer.</p> <p>The <var>whenempty</var> parameter controls what happens when no files match. If <q>skip</q> (the default), the ZIP is not created and a warning is issued. If <q>fail</q>, the ZIP is not created and the build is halted with an error. If <q>create</q>, an empty ZIP file (explicitly zero entries) is created, which should be recognized as such by compliant ZIP manipulation tools.</p> <p>This task will now use default JVM character encoding for filenames—this is consistent with the command line ZIP tools, but causes problems if you try to open them from within Java and your filenames contain non US-ASCII characters. Use the <var>encoding</var> attribute and set it to <q>UTF8</q> to create zip files that can safely be read by Java. For a more complete discussion, see <a href="#encoding">below</a></p> <p><em>Since Ant 1.5.2</em>, <code><zip></code> can store Unix permissions inside the archive (see description of the <var>filemode</var> and <var>dirmode</var> attributes for <a href="../Types/zipfileset.html"><zipfileset></a>). Unfortunately there is no portable way to store these permissions. Ant uses the algorithm used by <a href="http://www.info-zip.org" target="_top">Info-Zip's</a> implementation of the <kbd>zip</kbd> and <kbd>unzip</kbd> commands—these are the default versions of <kbd>zip</kbd> and <kbd>unzip</kbd> for many Unix(-like) systems.</p> <p><strong>Please note that the zip format allows multiple files of the same fully-qualified name to exist within a single archive. This has been documented as causing various problems for unsuspecting users. If you wish to avoid this behavior you must set the <var>duplicate</var> attribute to a value other than its default, <q>add</q>.</strong></p> <p><strong>Please also note</strong> that different ZIP tools handle timestamps differently when it comes to applying timezone offset calculations of files. Some ZIP libraries will store the timestamps as they've been read from the filesystem while others will modify the timestamps both when reading and writing the files to make all timestamps use the same timezone. A ZIP archive created by one library may extract files with "wrong timestamps" when extracted by another library.</p> <p>Ant's ZIP classes use the same algorithm as the InfoZIP tools and zlib (timestamps get adjusted), Windows' "compressed folders" function and WinZIP don't change the timestamps. This means that using the <code>unzip</code> task on files created by Windows' compressed folders function may create files with timestamps that are "wrong", the same is true if you use Windows' functions to extract an Ant generated ZIP archive.</p> <h3>Parameters</h3> <table class="attr"> <tr> <th scope="col">Attribute</th> <th scope="col">Description</th> <th scope="col">Required</th> </tr> <tr> <td>destfile</td> <td>the zip file to create.</td> <td rowspan="2">Exactly one of the two</td> </tr> <tr> <td>zipfile</td> <td class="left"><em><u>deprecated</u></em> old name of <var>destfile</var>.</td> </tr> <tr> <td>basedir</td> <td>the directory from which to zip the files.</td> <td>No</td> </tr> <tr> <td>compress</td> <td>Not only store data but also compress them. Unless you set the <var>keepcompression</var> attribute to <q>false</q>, this will apply to the entire archive, not only the files you've added while updating.</td> <td>No; defaults to <q>true</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>keepcompression</td> <td>For entries coming from existing archives (like nested <code>zipfileset</code>s or while updating the archive), keep the compression as it has been originally instead of using the <var>compress</var> attribute. <em>Since Ant 1.6</em></td> <td>No; defaults to <q>false</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>encoding</td> <td>The character encoding to use for filenames inside the zip file. For a list of possible values see the <a href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/intl/encoding.doc.html" target="_top">Supported Encodings</a>.</td> <td>No; defaults to default JVM character encoding</td> </tr> <tr> <td>filesonly</td> <td>Store only file entries.</td> <td>No; defaults to <q>false</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>includes</td> <td>comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be included.</td> <td>No; defaults to all (<q>**</q>)</td> </tr> <tr> <td>includesfile</td> <td>name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern.</td> <td>No</td> </tr> <tr> <td>excludes</td> <td>comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded.</td> <td>No; defaults to default excludes or none if <var>defaultexcludes</var> is <q>no</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>excludesfile</td> <td>name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern.</td> <td>No</td> </tr> <tr> <td>defaultexcludes</td> <td>indicates whether default excludes should be used or not (<q>yes|no</q>).</td> <td>No; defaults to <q>yes</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>update</td> <td>indicates whether to update or overwrite the destination file if it already exists.</td> <td>No; default is <q>false</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>whenempty</td> <td>behavior when no files match. Valid values are <q>fail</q>, <q>skip</q>, and <q>create</q>.</td> <td>No; default is <q>skip</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>duplicate</td> <td>behavior when a duplicate file is found. Valid values are <q>add</q>, <q>preserve</q>, and <q>fail</q>.</td> <td>No; default is <q>add</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>roundup</td> <td>Whether the file modification times will be rounded up to the next even number of seconds.<br/>Zip archives store file modification times with a granularity of 2 seconds, so the times will either be rounded up or down. If you round down, the archive will always seem out-of-date when you rerun the task, so the default is to round up. Rounding up may lead to a different type of problems like JSPs inside a web archive that seem to be slightly more recent than precompiled pages, rendering precompilation useless. <em>Since Ant 1.6.2</em></td> <td>No; defaults to <q>true</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>comment</td> <td>Comment to store in the archive. <em>Since Ant 1.6.3</em></td> <td>No</td> </tr> <tr> <td>level</td> <td>Non-default level at which file compression should be performed. Valid values range from <q>0</q> (no compression/fastest) to <q>9</q> (maximum compression/slowest). <em>Since Ant 1.7</em></td> <td>No</td> </tr> <tr> <td>preserve0permissions</td> <td>when updating an archive or adding entries from a different archive Ant will assume that a Unix permissions value of 0 (nobody is allowed to do anything to the file/directory) means that the permissions haven't been stored at all rather than real permissions and will instead apply its own default values.<br/> Set this attribute to <q>true</q> if you really want to preserve the original permission field. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em> </td> <td>No; default is <q>false</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>useLanguageEncodingFlag</td> <td>Whether to set the language encoding flag if the encoding is UTF-8. This setting doesn't have any effect if the encoding is not UTF-8. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em>.<br/>See also the <a href="#encoding">discussion below</a></td> <td>No; default is <q>true</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>createUnicodeExtraFields</td> <td>Whether to create Unicode extra fields to store the file names a second time inside the entry's metadata.<br/>Possible values are <q>never</q>, <q>always</q> and <q>not-encodeable</q> which will only add Unicode extra fields if the file name cannot be encoded using the specified encoding. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em>.<br/>See also the <a href="#encoding">discussion below</a></td> <td>No; default is <q>never</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>fallbacktoUTF8</td> <td>Whether to use UTF-8 and the language encoding flag instead of the specified encoding if a file name cannot be encoded using the specified encoding. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em>.<br/>See also the <a href="#encoding">discussion below</a></td> <td>No; default is <q>false</q></td> </tr> <tr> <td>zip64Mode</td> <td>When to use Zip64 extensions for entries. The possible values are <q>never</q>, <q>always</q> and <q>as-needed</q>. <em>Since Ant 1.9.1</em>.<br/>See also the <a href="#zip64">discussion below</a></td> <td>No; default is <q>as-needed</q></td> </tr> </table> <h3 id="encoding">Encoding of file names</h3> <p>Traditionally the ZIP archive format uses CodePage 437 as encoding for file name, which is not sufficient for many international character sets.</p> <p>Over time different archivers have chosen different ways to work around the limitation—the <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> packages simply uses UTF-8 as its encoding for example.</p> <p>Ant has been offering the <q>encoding</q> attribute of the <code>zip</code> and <code>unzip</code> task as a way to explicitly specify the encoding to use (or expect) <em>since Ant 1.4</em>. It defaults to default JVM character encoding for <code>zip</code> and UTF-8 for <code>jar</code> and other jar-like tasks (<code>war</code>, <code>ear</code>, ...) as well as the <code>unzip</code> family of tasks.</p> <p>More recent versions of the ZIP specification introduce something called the <q>language encoding flag</q> which can be used to signal that a file name has been encoded using UTF-8. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em>, all zip, jar and similar archives written by Ant will set this flag, if the encoding has been set to UTF-8. Our interoperability tests with existing archivers didn't show any ill effects (in fact, most archivers ignore the flag to date), but you can turn off the <q>language encoding flag</q> by setting the attribute <var>useLanguageEncodingFlag</var> to <q>false</q> on the <code>zip</code> task if you should encounter problems.</p> <p>The <code>unzip</code> task (and similar tasks) will recognize the language encoding flag and ignore the encoding set on the task if it has been found.</p> <p>The InfoZIP developers have introduced new ZIP extra fields that can be used to add an additional UTF-8 encoded file name to the entry's metadata. Most archivers ignore these extra fields. <em>Since Ant 1.8.0</em>, the <code>zip</code> family of tasks support an option <var>createUnicodeExtraFields</var>, which makes Ant write these extra fields either for all entries (<q>always</q>) or only those whose name cannot be encoded using the specified encoding (<q>not-encodeable</q>), it defaults to <q>never</q> since the extra fields create bigger archives.</p> <p>The <var>fallbackToUTF8</var> attribute of <code>zip</code> can be used to create archives that use the specified encoding in the majority of cases but UTF-8 and the language encoding flag for filenames that cannot be encoded using the specified encoding.</p> <p>The <code>unzip</code> task will recognize the Unicode extra fields by default and read the file name information from them, unless you set the optional attribute <var>scanForUnicodeExtraFields</var> to <q>false</q>.</p> <h4>Recommendations for interoperability</h4> <p>The optimal setting of flags depends on the archivers you expect as consumers/producers of the ZIP archives. Below are some test results which may be superseded with later versions of each tool.</p> <ul> <li>The <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> package used by the <kbd>jar</kbd> executable or to read jars from your <code>CLASSPATH</code> reads and writes UTF-8 names, it doesn't set or recognize any flags or unicode extra fields.</li> <li>Since Java 7, <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> writes UTF-8 by default and uses the language encoding flag. It is possible to specify a different encoding when reading/writing ZIPs via new constructors. The package now recognizes the language encoding flag when reading and ignores the Unicode extra fields.</li> <li>7Zip writes CodePage 437 by default but uses UTF-8 and the language encoding flag when writing entries that cannot be encoded as CodePage 437 (similar to the <code>zip</code> task with <var>fallbacktoUTF8</var> set to <q>true</q>). It recognizes the language encoding flag when reading and ignores the Unicode extra fields.</li> <li>WinZIP writes CodePage 437 and uses Unicode extra fields by default. It recognizes the Unicode extra field and the language encoding flag when reading.</li> <li>Windows' "compressed folder" feature doesn't recognize any flag or extra field and creates archives using the default platform encoding—and expects archives to be in that encoding when reading them.</li> <li>InfoZIP based tools can recognize and write both, it is a compile time option and depends on the platform so your mileage may vary.</li> <li>PKWARE zip tools recognize both and prefer the language encoding flag. They create archives using CodePage 437 if possible and UTF-8 plus the language encoding flag for file names that cannot be encoded as CodePage 437.</li> </ul> <p>So, what to do?</p> <p>If you are creating jars, then <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> is your main consumer. We recommend you set the encoding to UTF-8 and keep the language encoding flag enabled. The flag won't help or hurt <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> prior to Java 7 but archivers that support it will show the correct file names.</p> <p>For maximum interoparability it is probably best to set the encoding to UTF-8, enable the language encoding flag and create Unicode extra fields when writing ZIPs. Such archives should be extracted correctly by <code class="code">java.util.zip</code>, 7Zip, WinZIP, PKWARE tools and most likely InfoZIP tools. They will be unusable with Windows' "compressed folders" feature and bigger than archives without the Unicode extra fields, though.</p> <p>If Windows' "compressed folders" is your primary consumer, then your best option is to explicitly set the encoding to the target platform. You may want to enable creation of Unicode extra fields so the tools that support them will extract the file names correctly.</p> <h3 id="zip64">Zip64 extensions</h3> <p>Zip64 extensions provide a way to create archives bigger than 4 GB or holding more than 65535 entries—or add individual entries bigger than 4 GB using the ZIP extension field mechanism. These extensions are supported by most modern ZIP implementations.</p> <p>When Ant writes compressed entries into the archive it creates it doesn't know the compressed size of an entry before it has been written. Unfortunately the decision whether a Zip64 extra field will be written has to be made before writing the entry's content.</p> <p>Ant 1.9.0 introduced support for Zip64 extensions but didn't provide any control over their usage. <em>Since Ant 1.9.1</em>, a new <var>zip64mode</var> attribute was added to the <code>zip</code> family of tasks. It supports three values: <ul> <li><q>never</q> means no Zip64 extra fields will ever be written. This is the behavior of Ant prior to 1.9.0 and the default behavior of <code>jar</code>, <code>ear</code> and <code>war</code> <em>since Ant 1.9.1</em>.</li> <li><q>always</q> means Zip64 extra fields are written for all entries.</li> <li><q>as-needed</q> means Zip64 extra fields are written for all compressed entries to the "local file header" (by default these are all files but not the directories) but only written to the central directory if the entry really required Zip64 features. This is the default behavior of Ant 1.9.0 and remains the default behavior of the <code>zip</code> task.</li> </ul> <p><q>as-needed</q> provides a good compromise if you don't know whether you archive will exceed the limits of traditional zip files but don't want to waste too much space (the Zip64 extensions take up extra space). Unfortunately some ZIP implementations don't understand Zip64 extra fields or fail to parse archives with extra fields in local file headers that are not present in the central directory, one such implementation is the <code class="code">java.util.zip</code> package of Java 5, that's why the <code>jar</code> tasks default to <q>never</q>. Archives created with <q>as-needed</q> can be read without problems with Java 6 and later.</p> <h3>Parameters specified as nested elements</h3> <h4>any resource collection</h4> <p><a href="../Types/resources.html#collection">resource collections</a> are used to select groups of files to archive.</p> <p>Prior to Ant 1.7 only <code><fileset></code> and <code><zipfileset></code> have been supported as nested elements.</p> <h4 id="zipgroupfileset">zipgroupfileset</h4> <p>A <code><zipgroupfileset></code> allows for multiple zip files to be merged into the archive. Each file found in this fileset is added to the archive the same way that <code>zipfileset</code> <var>src</var> files are added.</p> <p><code><zipgroupfileset></code> is a <a href="../Types/fileset.html">fileset</a> and supports all of its attributes and nested elements.</p> <h3>Examples</h3> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory into a file called <samp>manual.zip</samp> in the <samp>${dist}</samp> directory.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual"/></pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory into a file called <samp>manual.zip</samp> in the <samp>${dist}</samp> directory. If <samp>manual.zip</samp> doesn't exist, it is created; otherwise it is updated with the new/changed files.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" update="true"/></pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory. Files in the directory <samp>mydocs</samp>, or files with the name <samp>todo.html</samp> are excluded.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" excludes="mydocs/**, **/todo.html"/></pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory. Only <samp>html</samp> files under the directory <samp>api</samp> are zipped, and files with the name <samp>todo.html</samp> are excluded.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip" basedir="htdocs/manual" includes="api/**/*.html" excludes="**/todo.html"/></pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory, and also add the file <samp>ChangeLog.txt</samp> in the current directory. <samp>ChangeLog.txt</samp> will be added to the top of the ZIP file, just as if it had been located at <samp>htdocs/manual/ChangeLog.txt</samp>.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip"> <fileset dir="htdocs/manual"/> <fileset dir="." includes="ChangeLog.txt"/> </zip></pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory into the <samp>docs/user-guide</samp> directory in the archive, adds the file <samp>ChangeLog27.txt</samp> in the current directory as <samp>docs/ChangeLog.txt</samp>, and includes all the <samp>html</samp> files in <samp>examples.zip</samp> under <samp>docs/examples</samp>.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip"> <zipfileset dir="htdocs/manual" prefix="docs/user-guide"/> <zipfileset dir="." includes="ChangeLog27.txt" fullpath="docs/ChangeLog.txt"/> <zipfileset src="examples.zip" includes="**/*.html" prefix="docs/examples"/> </zip></pre> <p>The archive might end up containing the files:</p> <pre> docs/user-guide/html/index.html docs/ChangeLog.txt docs/examples/index.html</pre> <p>Zip all files in the <samp>htdocs/manual</samp> directory into the <samp>docs/user-guide</samp> directory in the archive and include all the files in any file that matches <samp>examples*.zip</samp>, such as all files within <samp>examples1.zip</samp> or <samp>examples_for_brian.zip</samp>.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip"> <zipfileset dir="htdocs/manual" prefix="docs/user-guide"/> <zipgroupfileset dir="." includes="examples*.zip"/> </zip></pre> <p>The same can be achieved with</p> <pre> <zip destfile="${dist}/manual.zip"> <mappedresources> <fileset dir="htdocs/manual"/> <globmapper from="*" to="docs/user-guide/*"/> </mappedresources> <archives> <zips> <fileset dir="." includes="examples*.zip"/> </zips> </archives> </zip></pre> <p>Re-package a TAR archive as a ZIP archive. If Unix file permissions have been stored as part of the TAR file, they will be retained in the resulting ZIP archive.</p> <pre> <zip destfile="release.zip"> <tarfileset src="release.tar"/> </zip></pre> </body> </html>