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Commit 85fe8311 authored by Brutzman, Don's avatar Brutzman, Don
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- You may freely edit this file. See commented blocks below for -->
<!-- some examples of how to customize the build. -->
<!-- (If you delete it and reopen the project it will be recreated.) -->
<!-- By default, only the Clean and Build commands use this build script. -->
<!-- Commands such as Run, Debug, and Test only use this build script if -->
<!-- the Compile on Save feature is turned off for the project. -->
<!-- You can turn off the Compile on Save (or Deploy on Save) setting -->
<!-- in the project's Project Properties dialog box.-->
<project name="TcpClient" default="default" basedir=".">
<description>Builds, tests, and runs the project TcpClient.</description>
<import file="nbproject/build-impl.xml"/>
<!--
There exist several targets which are by default empty and which can be
used for execution of your tasks. These targets are usually executed
before and after some main targets. They are:
-pre-init: called before initialization of project properties
-post-init: called after initialization of project properties
-pre-compile: called before javac compilation
-post-compile: called after javac compilation
-pre-compile-single: called before javac compilation of single file
-post-compile-single: called after javac compilation of single file
-pre-compile-test: called before javac compilation of JUnit tests
-post-compile-test: called after javac compilation of JUnit tests
-pre-compile-test-single: called before javac compilation of single JUnit test
-post-compile-test-single: called after javac compilation of single JUunit test
-pre-jar: called before JAR building
-post-jar: called after JAR building
-post-clean: called after cleaning build products
(Targets beginning with '-' are not intended to be called on their own.)
Example of inserting an obfuscator after compilation could look like this:
<target name="-post-compile">
<obfuscate>
<fileset dir="${build.classes.dir}"/>
</obfuscate>
</target>
For list of available properties check the imported
nbproject/build-impl.xml file.
Another way to customize the build is by overriding existing main targets.
The targets of interest are:
-init-macrodef-javac: defines macro for javac compilation
-init-macrodef-junit: defines macro for junit execution
-init-macrodef-debug: defines macro for class debugging
-init-macrodef-java: defines macro for class execution
-do-jar: JAR building
run: execution of project
-javadoc-build: Javadoc generation
test-report: JUnit report generation
An example of overriding the target for project execution could look like this:
<target name="run" depends="TcpClient-impl.jar">
<exec dir="bin" executable="launcher.exe">
<arg file="${dist.jar}"/>
</exec>
</target>
Notice that the overridden target depends on the jar target and not only on
the compile target as the regular run target does. Again, for a list of available
properties which you can use, check the target you are overriding in the
nbproject/build-impl.xml file.
-->
</project>
File added
File added
libs.CopyLibs.classpath=\
${base}/CopyLibs/org-netbeans-modules-java-j2seproject-copylibstask.jar
libs.CopyLibs.displayName=CopyLibs Task
libs.CopyLibs.prop-version=2.0
Manifest-Version: 1.0
X-COMMENT: Main-Class will be added automatically by build
This diff is collapsed.
build.xml.data.CRC32=cc795ec7
build.xml.script.CRC32=2417acdc
build.xml.stylesheet.CRC32=8064a381@1.75.2.48
# This file is used by a NetBeans-based IDE to track changes in generated files such as build-impl.xml.
# Do not edit this file. You may delete it but then the IDE will never regenerate such files for you.
nbproject/build-impl.xml.data.CRC32=cc795ec7
nbproject/build-impl.xml.script.CRC32=3c068103
nbproject/build-impl.xml.stylesheet.CRC32=876e7a8f@1.75.2.48
compile.on.save=true
user.properties.file=/Users/mcgredo/Library/Application Support/NetBeans/8.0/build.properties
annotation.processing.enabled=true
annotation.processing.enabled.in.editor=false
annotation.processing.processor.options=
annotation.processing.processors.list=
annotation.processing.run.all.processors=true
annotation.processing.source.output=${build.generated.sources.dir}/ap-source-output
build.classes.dir=${build.dir}/classes
build.classes.excludes=**/*.java,**/*.form
# This directory is removed when the project is cleaned:
build.dir=build
build.generated.dir=${build.dir}/generated
build.generated.sources.dir=${build.dir}/generated-sources
# Only compile against the classpath explicitly listed here:
build.sysclasspath=ignore
build.test.classes.dir=${build.dir}/test/classes
build.test.results.dir=${build.dir}/test/results
# Uncomment to specify the preferred debugger connection transport:
#debug.transport=dt_socket
debug.classpath=\
${run.classpath}
debug.test.classpath=\
${run.test.classpath}
# Files in build.classes.dir which should be excluded from distribution jar
dist.archive.excludes=
# This directory is removed when the project is cleaned:
dist.dir=dist
dist.jar=${dist.dir}/TcpClient.jar
dist.javadoc.dir=${dist.dir}/javadoc
excludes=
includes=**
jar.compress=false
javac.classpath=
# Space-separated list of extra javac options
javac.compilerargs=
javac.deprecation=false
javac.processorpath=\
${javac.classpath}
javac.source=1.8
javac.target=1.8
javac.test.classpath=\
${javac.classpath}:\
${build.classes.dir}
javac.test.processorpath=\
${javac.test.classpath}
javadoc.additionalparam=
javadoc.author=false
javadoc.encoding=${source.encoding}
javadoc.noindex=false
javadoc.nonavbar=false
javadoc.notree=false
javadoc.private=false
javadoc.splitindex=true
javadoc.use=true
javadoc.version=false
javadoc.windowtitle=
main.class=tcpclient.TcpClient
manifest.file=manifest.mf
meta.inf.dir=${src.dir}/META-INF
mkdist.disabled=false
platform.active=default_platform
run.classpath=\
${javac.classpath}:\
${build.classes.dir}
# Space-separated list of JVM arguments used when running the project.
# You may also define separate properties like run-sys-prop.name=value instead of -Dname=value.
# To set system properties for unit tests define test-sys-prop.name=value:
run.jvmargs=
run.test.classpath=\
${javac.test.classpath}:\
${build.test.classes.dir}
source.encoding=UTF-8
src.dir=src
test.src.dir=test
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project xmlns="http://www.netbeans.org/ns/project/1">
<type>org.netbeans.modules.java.j2seproject</type>
<configuration>
<data xmlns="http://www.netbeans.org/ns/j2se-project/3">
<name>TcpClient</name>
<source-roots>
<root id="src.dir"/>
</source-roots>
<test-roots>
<root id="test.src.dir"/>
</test-roots>
</data>
<libraries xmlns="http://www.netbeans.org/ns/ant-project-libraries/1">
<definitions>./lib/nblibraries.properties</definitions>
</libraries>
</configuration>
</project>
package tcpclient;
import java.net.*;
import java.io.*;
public class TcpClient
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
try
{
// Do a DNS lookup on the server we want, and return a Java
// object that represents the IP number.
InetAddress server = InetAddress.getByName("nps.edu");
// Establish a socket connection to the server specified, on the port.
Socket connection = new Socket(server, 80);
// Input stream and output stream are very simple objects that
// let us read or write bytes.
OutputStream os = connection.getOutputStream();
InputStream is = connection.getInputStream();
System.out.println("established socket connection");
// PrintWriter is a little better at handling text, which
// is what web servers expect. The http request standard
// (https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec5.html)
// can be picky about things like whether a line ends with a
// the invisible control characters "<CR><LF>" or not. This
// adds to returns.
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(os);
// Send a HTTP request to the server
pw.println("GET /index.html HTTP/1.0");
pw.println();
pw.flush();
// Set up the classes to read the response. BufferedReader
// is what we use to read the response back, line by line.
InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
// Loop through the response, reading line by line. When we get
// a null response back from an attempted line read, we know
// the input has ended. Print out the lines as they come back.
String response;
while( (response = br.readLine()) != null)
{
System.out.println("Response is " + response);
}
}
catch(Exception e)
{
System.out.println(e);
}
}
}
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- You may freely edit this file. See commented blocks below for -->
<!-- some examples of how to customize the build. -->
<!-- (If you delete it and reopen the project it will be recreated.) -->
<!-- By default, only the Clean and Build commands use this build script. -->
<!-- Commands such as Run, Debug, and Test only use this build script if -->
<!-- the Compile on Save feature is turned off for the project. -->
<!-- You can turn off the Compile on Save (or Deploy on Save) setting -->
<!-- in the project's Project Properties dialog box.-->
<project name="TcpServer" default="default" basedir=".">
<description>Builds, tests, and runs the project TcpServer.</description>
<import file="nbproject/build-impl.xml"/>
<!--
There exist several targets which are by default empty and which can be
used for execution of your tasks. These targets are usually executed
before and after some main targets. They are:
-pre-init: called before initialization of project properties
-post-init: called after initialization of project properties
-pre-compile: called before javac compilation
-post-compile: called after javac compilation
-pre-compile-single: called before javac compilation of single file
-post-compile-single: called after javac compilation of single file
-pre-compile-test: called before javac compilation of JUnit tests
-post-compile-test: called after javac compilation of JUnit tests
-pre-compile-test-single: called before javac compilation of single JUnit test
-post-compile-test-single: called after javac compilation of single JUunit test
-pre-jar: called before JAR building
-post-jar: called after JAR building
-post-clean: called after cleaning build products
(Targets beginning with '-' are not intended to be called on their own.)
Example of inserting an obfuscator after compilation could look like this:
<target name="-post-compile">
<obfuscate>
<fileset dir="${build.classes.dir}"/>
</obfuscate>
</target>
For list of available properties check the imported
nbproject/build-impl.xml file.
Another way to customize the build is by overriding existing main targets.
The targets of interest are:
-init-macrodef-javac: defines macro for javac compilation
-init-macrodef-junit: defines macro for junit execution
-init-macrodef-debug: defines macro for class debugging
-init-macrodef-java: defines macro for class execution
-do-jar: JAR building
run: execution of project
-javadoc-build: Javadoc generation
test-report: JUnit report generation
An example of overriding the target for project execution could look like this:
<target name="run" depends="TcpServer-impl.jar">
<exec dir="bin" executable="launcher.exe">
<arg file="${dist.jar}"/>
</exec>
</target>
Notice that the overridden target depends on the jar target and not only on
the compile target as the regular run target does. Again, for a list of available
properties which you can use, check the target you are overriding in the
nbproject/build-impl.xml file.
-->
</project>
File added
libs.CopyLibs.classpath=\
${base}/CopyLibs/org-netbeans-modules-java-j2seproject-copylibstask.jar
libs.CopyLibs.displayName=CopyLibs Task
libs.CopyLibs.prop-version=2.0
Manifest-Version: 1.0
X-COMMENT: Main-Class will be added automatically by build
This diff is collapsed.
build.xml.data.CRC32=76ff3440
build.xml.script.CRC32=7d42d858
build.xml.stylesheet.CRC32=8064a381@1.75.2.48
# This file is used by a NetBeans-based IDE to track changes in generated files such as build-impl.xml.
# Do not edit this file. You may delete it but then the IDE will never regenerate such files for you.
nbproject/build-impl.xml.data.CRC32=76ff3440
nbproject/build-impl.xml.script.CRC32=26088224
nbproject/build-impl.xml.stylesheet.CRC32=876e7a8f@1.75.2.48
annotation.processing.enabled=true
annotation.processing.enabled.in.editor=false
annotation.processing.processor.options=
annotation.processing.processors.list=
annotation.processing.run.all.processors=true
annotation.processing.source.output=${build.generated.sources.dir}/ap-source-output
build.classes.dir=${build.dir}/classes
build.classes.excludes=**/*.java,**/*.form
# This directory is removed when the project is cleaned:
build.dir=build
build.generated.dir=${build.dir}/generated
build.generated.sources.dir=${build.dir}/generated-sources
# Only compile against the classpath explicitly listed here:
build.sysclasspath=ignore
build.test.classes.dir=${build.dir}/test/classes
build.test.results.dir=${build.dir}/test/results
# Uncomment to specify the preferred debugger connection transport:
#debug.transport=dt_socket
debug.classpath=\
${run.classpath}
debug.test.classpath=\
${run.test.classpath}
# Files in build.classes.dir which should be excluded from distribution jar
dist.archive.excludes=
# This directory is removed when the project is cleaned:
dist.dir=dist
dist.jar=${dist.dir}/TcpServer.jar
dist.javadoc.dir=${dist.dir}/javadoc
excludes=
includes=**
jar.compress=false
javac.classpath=
# Space-separated list of extra javac options
javac.compilerargs=
javac.deprecation=false
javac.processorpath=\
${javac.classpath}
javac.source=1.8
javac.target=1.8
javac.test.classpath=\
${javac.classpath}:\
${build.classes.dir}
javac.test.processorpath=\
${javac.test.classpath}
javadoc.additionalparam=
javadoc.author=false
javadoc.encoding=${source.encoding}
javadoc.noindex=false
javadoc.nonavbar=false
javadoc.notree=false
javadoc.private=false
javadoc.splitindex=true
javadoc.use=true
javadoc.version=false
javadoc.windowtitle=
main.class=tcpserver.TcpServer
manifest.file=manifest.mf
meta.inf.dir=${src.dir}/META-INF
mkdist.disabled=false
platform.active=default_platform
run.classpath=\
${javac.classpath}:\
${build.classes.dir}
# Space-separated list of JVM arguments used when running the project.
# You may also define separate properties like run-sys-prop.name=value instead of -Dname=value.
# To set system properties for unit tests define test-sys-prop.name=value:
run.jvmargs=
run.test.classpath=\
${javac.test.classpath}:\
${build.test.classes.dir}
source.encoding=UTF-8
src.dir=src
test.src.dir=test
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