How to disable maven blocking external HTTP repositories? - maven

Maven blocks external HTTP repositories by default since version 3.8.1 (see https://maven.apache.org/docs/3.8.1/release-notes.html)
Is there a way to disable that or to exempt a repository from this rule?

I found a solution to do this by inspecting the commit in the Maven git repository that is responsible for the default HTTP blocking: https://github.com/apache/maven/commit/907d53ad3264718f66ff15e1363d76b07dd0c05f
My solution is as follows:
In the Maven settings (located in ${maven.home}/conf/settings.xml or ${user.home}/.m2/settings.xml), the following entry must be removed:
<mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
</mirror>
If you work in a project and cannot make sure the Maven settings are always like that, e.g. because you share code with other people or want to use CI/CD with automated testing, you may do the following: Add a directory named .mvn in the project. In the .mvn directory, add a file named maven.config with the content --settings ./.mvn/local-settings.xml. In the .mvn directory, add a file named local-settings.xml. This file should look like this:
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.2.0"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.2.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.2.0.xsd">
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-repository-http-unblocker</id>
<mirrorOf>my-blocked-http-repository</mirrorOf>
<name></name>
<url>http://........</url>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
</settings>
Where inside the <mirrorOf> tag, you need to specify the id of the blocked repository, and in the <url> tag, you specify the original url of the repository again. You need to create this unblocker mirror for every repository you have that is blocked.
Example:
If you have the following HTTP repositories defined in the pom.xml:
<repositories>
<repository>
<snapshots>
<enabled>false</enabled>
</snapshots>
<id>central</id>
<name>libs-release</name>
<url>http://my-url/libs-release</url>
</repository>
<repository>
<id>snapshots</id>
<name>libs-snapshot</name>
<url>http://my-url/libs-snapshot</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
Then you need in the .mvn/local-settings.xml:
<settings>
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>release-http-unblocker</id>
<mirrorOf>central</mirrorOf>
<name></name>
<url>http://my-url/libs-release</url>
</mirror>
<mirror>
<id>snapshot-http-unblocker</id>
<mirrorOf>snapshots</mirrorOf>
<name></name>
<url>http://my-url/libs-snapshot</url>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
</settings>
I hope my work can help other people who stumble upon this. However, if you have a more elegant or better solution, please share!

In my case, I just added a dummy mirror with the id maven-default-http-blocker to override the existing one. This disable HTTP blocking for all repositories.
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.2.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.2.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.2.0.xsd">
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>dummy</mirrorOf>
<name>Dummy mirror to override default blocking mirror that blocks http</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
</settings>

Another possible solution/workaround is to override the new default http-blocking behavior by commenting out the maven-default-http-blocker mirror in the <mirrors> section of the maven's 'main' settings.xml file (under /opt/maven/conf in my case);
<!--mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
<blocked>false</blocked>
</mirror-->
P.S. Whether unblocking all the insucure http repositories is a good idea is a whole other story.

You should just add a mirror to your http repository that allows http in your maven settings. You shouldn't eliminate the default maven behavior for all repositories. Then tell your devops team to use https!
in .m2/settings.xml:
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-repo-mirror</id>
<name>My Repo HTTP Mirror</name>
<url>http://url-to.my/repo</url>
<mirrorOf>my-repo</mirrorOf>
</mirror>
</mirrors>

In macOS Monterey, and using Intellij Ultimate 2021.3 (and up), with maven NOT INSTALLED in the system and using maven as a plugin inside Intellij, i found the "settings.xml" file in the path:
${user.home}/Library/Application Support/JetBrains/Toolbox/apps/IDEA-U/ch-0/213.5744.223/IntelliJ IDEA.app/Contents/plugins/maven/lib/maven3/conf/settings.xml
Note: the above path is when the Intellij is installed using the Jetbrains Toolbox App, and the version number indicated (213.5744.223) can defer if you have another version, verify when travelling the path to the file.
Open the "settings.xml" file with your favourite editor, and comment the next lines:
<!--<mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
<blocked>true</blocked>
</mirror>-->
Hope it helped.

I solved the issue by simply replacing "http" with "https" in .xml file (in my case pom.xml).
This solved my error.

Unblock a Specific HTTP Repository
To unblock a specific repository, you may define a dummy mirror of it in your settings by adding a <mirror> with the same url, and its <mirrorOf> value matching your repository's id. Nothing else needs to change for this to work.
For example:
If your repo id is team-internal-repo, then a mirror added to your ~/.m2/settings.xml might look like this:
<settings>
...
<!-- Add a mirror. -->
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>team-internal-repo-mirror</id>
<mirrorOf>team-internal-repo</mirrorOf> <!-- Must match repository id. -->
<name>Dummy mirror to unblock the team repo server</name>
<url>http://insecure-internal-server/repository/team-repo/</url>
<!-- <blocked>false</blocked> --> <!-- This is not needed, the mirror is unblocked by default. -->
</mirror>
</mirrors>
<!-- Existing profile does not need to change. -->
<profiles>
<profile>
<id>default_profile</id>
<activation>
<activeByDefault>true</activeByDefault>
</activation>
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>team-internal-repo</id>
<name>Dev Team Internal Artifacts</name>
<url>http://insecure-internal-server/repository/team-repo/</url>
<snapshots>
<enabled>true</enabled>
</snapshots>
</repository>
</repositories>
...
</profile>
</profiles>
</settings>
The <blocked> tag is not needed here. Other users have commented that the tag breaks older versions of maven. I tested an http repo with and without this tag and it worked both ways. (Tested using maven 3.8.2.)
Unblocking one or more explicit repos is better than universally unblocking all http repositories. Doing that may be a bad idea:
It presents a greater security risk. There's a reason apache made this change, and it is discussed in the release notes referenced by OP: https://maven.apache.org/docs/3.8.1/release-notes.html#cve-2021-26291
Modifying the internal configuration of your Maven installation (i.e. the settings file in /opt/apache-maven-3.8.1 instead of your own in ~/.m2) could create a headache when updating or reinstalling future releases of maven. If that file gets overridden, your repo might suddenly be blocked again.

Same problem with macOS Monterey 12.3.1 and IntelliJ 2022.1 using bundled maven (3.8.1). The solution is similar to the one proposed by MrBitwise but the settings file has a different path (it is the one embedded inside the app contents folder):
/Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ CE.app/Contents/plugins/maven/lib/maven3/conf/settings.xml
Then I commented the following code:
<mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
<blocked>true</blocked>
</mirror>

You could follow the official recommendation from the Maven documentation, it is explained in the same link that you shared: https://maven.apache.org/docs/3.8.1/release-notes.html#how-to-fix-when-i-get-a-http-repository-blocked
Options to fix are:
upgrade the dependency version to a newer version that replaced the
obsolete HTTP repository URL with a HTTPS one,
keep the dependency version but define a mirror in your settings.
It includes a link to Maven - Guide to Mirror Settings
As others mentioned, you should not override the default security settings.

Sometimes, when your local version of settings.xml is low and your maven version is higher than that, then removing this configuration cannot solve the problem:
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-repository-http-unblocker</id>
<mirrorOf>my-blocked-http-repository</mirrorOf>
<name></name>
<url>http://........</url>
</mirror>
Maybe see if adding <blocked>false</blocked> will solve the problem:
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-repository-http-unblocker</id>
<mirrorOf>my-blocked-http-repository</mirrorOf>
<name></name>
<url>http://your blocked url</url>
<blocked>false</blocked>
</mirror>
</mirrors>

Use the latest versions of your dependencies and plugins. I had the same issue with libraries from 'com.sun.xml.ws', but changing their versions from 3.8.3 to 4.0.0 fixed it.

If you are using maven version 3.8 or greater HTTP is not supported. Try to use a lower version or upgrade the repo to HTTPS For more information please refer
https://help.mulesoft.com/s/article/Maven-error-when-building-application-Blocked-Mirror-for-repositories#:~:text=Upgrade%20the%20Maven%20repository%20so,of%20the%20obsolete%20HTTP%20one.&text=Define%20a%20mirror%20in%20your%20settings.&text=Define%20an%20exception%20for%20a%20specific%20repository.&text=The%20false%3C%2F,be%20used%20as%20an%20exception.

A bit different solution that has helped me, is more related to our corporate environment and involves the fact that we are slowly moving out of maven to another dep/build tool, but there is still a 'corporate' settings.xml file defined.
So just rename it to a different file (instead of deleting), like mv settings.xml settings-backup.xml, and returning maven again would help you to check if it's the issue.

I encountered this issue when I installed a new version of maven. Fixed this by renaming .m2 directory to whatever or like .m2-old then run maven again. it will recreate the directory, the drawback is it will redownload all jar since the new .m2 is empty. Then just transfer your settings.xml to that new .m2 directory.
I've yet to test if copy the repository directory from the old .m2 to the new one will just work fine.
Update : copying the repository directory from ~/.m2-old to the new ~/.m2 didnt cause any errors when running maven afterwards

For your local environment, the quickest way is to set the blocked value from true to false in your .m2\settings.xml
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
<blocked>false</blocked>
</mirror>

I was able to compile by commenting the code:
/Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA.app/Contents/plugins/maven/lib/maven3/conf/settings.xml
<!--<mirror>
<id>maven-default-http-blocker</id>
<mirrorOf>external:http:*</mirrorOf>
<name>Pseudo repository to mirror external repositories initially using HTTP.</name>
<url>http://0.0.0.0/</url>
<blocked>false</blocked>
</mirror>-->
Pude compilar comentando el codigo dentro de la ruta
/Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA.app/Contents/plugins/maven/lib/maven3/conf/settings.xml

Unblock a password protected HTTP repository
I didn't like to modify the global settings.xml of IntelliJ (probably requires fix again after every update), and the method unblocking all http-repos didn't work for me - I guess because our HTTP-repo is password protected.
What worked for me finally was a mirror entry that exactly fits the original repo:
Same ID as the repo.
Same URL as the repo (it's just a fake mirror)
mirrorOf also has that same ID.
blocked set to false of course.
Thus the mirror mirrors exactly the HTTP repo and nothing else - you need a mirror for each HTTP repo. But since the mirror has the same ID as the Repo, the authentication settings in the "server" section that refers to that repo also fits to the mirror and allows access.
<mirror>
<id>repoId</id><!-- Must fit to serverID!!! (can be same as repoID) -->
<name>My Mirror</name>
<!-- URL of the mirror - in our case just the same as the repo itself. -->
<url>http://mvn-host/content/repositories/myrepo/</url>
<mirrorOf>repoId</mirrorOf><!-- Mirrors exactly the repo itself -->
<blocked>false</blocked><!-- Unblock http access - only works in mirrors, and that's why we need a mirror. -->
</mirror>
The key to all this is that the mirror needs a server entry if it is protected.

You can use a Maven wrapper to help you with the problem, the version below 3.8.1 work well with it.
To create a Maven wrapper do
mvn -N io.takari:maven:0.7.7:wrapper -Dmaven=3.6.1
After this settings --> build, Execution, Deployment --> build tools --> Maven
Select the Maven Home Path to *Use Maven Wrapper*
Go back to your project and from the Maven Settings
This solved my issue, hope it will help you too.

Related

How to Change Maven repository to inbuilt repository in same network

In our project we need to setup a repository in a remote machine and I need to point to that repository. I have tried changing settings.xml.
But that didn't work. Then I added repository directly in pom.
This works. But still I am seeing the artifacts are downloaded from central repository. When I checked the effective pom, I am seeing that central repository is been mentioned along with mentioned internal repository
I dont need artifacts to be downloaded from central repository. Instead I need to download from my remote repository. How can I achieve it. TIA :)
You can force Maven to use a single repository by having it mirror all repository requests. The repository must contain all of the desired artifacts, or be able to proxy the requests to other repositories. This setting is most useful when using an internal company repository with the Maven Repository Manager to proxy external requests.
To achieve this, set mirrorOf to *.
<settings>
...
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>internal-repository</id>
<name>Maven Repository Manager running on repo.mycompany.com</name>
<url>http://repo.mycompany.com/proxy</url>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
...
</settings>
more details here

maven - mirror depending on project

I have a mirror for maven central setup like this in settings.xml:
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>artifactory-other</id>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
<url>http://some.internal.site/artifactory/repo</url>
<name>Artifactory</name>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
But this server is accessible only from the internal network. When I'm at home and tinker with some side projects I need to access the real repositories. For now I just comment this mirror out, but it's cumbersome.
How can I make it automatic? Is it possible to define a profile with separate mirrors and automatically activated based on project path? Is there some simple solution?
Unfortunately there is not an out-of-the-box solution with Maven. Usual i check in my settings.xml via git and having different branches for different networks like at work, home etc. The result is reduced to a simple
git checkout HOME
or
git checkout WORK
etc.
The solution is not using mirror-any, but using specific repository declarations with dependencies pom cleanups.
This way you'll be as protected from going to unauthorized repos as with mirror-any and you'll be able to declare profiles (work and home) with different servers in each of them.
With new maven (3.3.1+), use the project-settings-extension to load the project settings, and put project specific mirrors into ${basedir}/.mvn/settings.xml in each project.
in ${basedir}/.mvn/extensions.xml
<extensions xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/EXTENSIONS/1.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/EXTENSIONS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/core-extensions-1.0.0.xsd">
<extension>
<groupId>com.github.gzm55.maven</groupId>
<artifactId>project-settings-extension</artifactId>
<version>0.0.1</version>
</extension>
</extensions>
in ${basedir}/.mvn/settings.xml
<settings>
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>id</id>
<url>https://internal-repo/</url>
<mirrorOf>central</mirrorOf>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
</settings>
Then the project will be built out-of-box in the internal network with mvn test, and not pollute your personal .m2/settings.xml

Difference between using a single repository and a single mirror

The maven documentation says:
http://maven.apache.org/guides/mini/guide-mirror-settings.html
Using A Single Repository. You can force Maven to use a single
repository by having it mirror all repository requests. The repository
must contain all of the desired artifacts, or be able to proxy the
requests to other repositories. This setting is most useful when using
an internal company repository with the Maven Repository Manager to
proxy external requests.
To achieve this, set mirrorOf to *.
<settings>
...
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>internal-repository</id>
<name>Maven Repository Manager running on repo.mycompany.com</name>
<url>http://repo.mycompany.com/proxy</url>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
...
</settings>
I don't understand this paragraph.
Shouldn't it be something like this?
Using A Single Mirror You can force Maven to use a single
mirror by having it mirror all repository requests. The mirror must contain all of the desired artifacts for all the
repositories, or be able to proxy the requests to other
repositories. This setting is most useful when using an internal
company repository with the Maven Repository Manager to proxy external
requests. To achieve this, set mirrorOf to *.
<settings>
...
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>internal-mirror</id>
<name>Maven Mirror Manager running on mirror.mycompany.com</name>
<url>http://mirror.mycompany.com/proxy</url>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
...
</settings>
Where is my miss-understanding?
I mean, <mirror><id>internal-repository</id>... seems just wrong to me.
Mirror means a repository that is used as a passerelle/proxy to an other repository.
When using a repository manager like Nexus, Artiafactory, Archiva... you dispose of one local entreprise repository wich proxifies remotes ones.
So there is no need to declare too many repositories in your pom or setting.xml. Using Just one mirror which redirect all requests to the repository manager you have will be sufficient.
That is the meaning of the documentation.
As maven documentation says:
Repositories can be declared inside a project, which means that if you have your own custom repositories, those sharing your project easily get the right settings out of the box. However, you may want to use an alternative mirror for a particular repository without changing the project files.
For repositories in settings.xml, declaring mirrors for them is redundant because you can just replace the repositories directly. You should use mirrors for repositories in pom.xml.
For example. Project X is a public project that list all the repos it required in its pom.xml.
Most people can just download and build the project directly.
Alex wants to build the project on his working PC at company, and his company has an internal enterprice repo. So he uses the company repo in his settings.xml as a mirror for the project repos.
Bob cannot access some project repos directly due to connection issue. He can use other public mirrors for that repo.
Repos in pom.xml is used as default implements and mirrors should be used for special cases.

Set maven to use archiva repositories WITHOUT using activeByDefault?

I am very close to finally having a working setup with archiva and maven.
The last thing that's really boggling me, is how to set up my internal and snapshot repositories - without using a profile which contains activeByDefault set to true.
I am using a SUPER super pom - a company-wide pom which contains distributionManagement information for releases. I was thinking that I could specify the repositories in this pom, and configure the authentication settings in settings.xml? Can I use repositories tag without a profile? There should be no "profile" for my internal and snapshot repositories, as they will never change...
What I'm trying to steer clear from, is using a "default" profile, which is active all the time. I hear activeByDefault is NOT a best practice and I don't intend to use it.
With that said, how should I go about doing this? My internal repo is a mirror of the maven central repo, so I would like to lock down my developers to ONLY use our internal artifact server. Remember - I do NOT want a profile with activeByDefault set to true. I cannot stress this enough! Should I use Maven mirrors? Should I "add" additional repositories?
If I take the repositories tag instead of the mirrors tag, will maven force builds to use ONLY my archiva settings, instead of the default maven central?
Or is what I seek to accomplish able to be done using only the mirrors tag in maven? I know how to configure repo credentials when using repositories tag, but not with mirrors. How is this done? Is providing credentials for anything in mirrors tags the same as for anything in repositories tags?
Am I missing something obvious? I've had it up to here with getting things up and running using maven. I know it will be worthwhile in the end, but it is surely causing me a ton of aggravation and resources seem to be sparse. Either that, or people are content using it however they please without regard to best-practices.
Thank you
To use your internal repo as a mirror of central you need to setup a mirror like this (in settings.xml):
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-internal-repo</id>
<mirrorOf>central</mirrorOf> // use * for do mirror of all
<name>Clinker Maven Repository</name>
<url>http://my-repo-host/my-repo-path</url>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
If my-internal-repo is protected you can set credentials:
<servers>
<server>
<id>my-internal-repo</id>
<username>youruser</username>
<password>yourpassword</password>
</server>
</servers>
Please, note the server id tag content should match the id of your mirror.
To use your internal-snapshots repository you must set a repository in your project POM, since the use of snapshots artifact should be controlled and clearly defined at the project level, not at the settings level:
<repository>
<id>internal-snapshots</id>
<url>http://your-repo-host/internal-snapshots-path</url>
<releases>
<enabled>false</enabled>
</releases>
<snapshots>
<enabled>true</enabled>
</snapshots>
</repository>
And finally, you must exclude internal-snapshots from the mirror:
<mirrors>
<mirror>
<id>my-internal-repo</id>
<mirrorOf>central, !internal-snapshots</mirrorOf> // use * to do mirror of all
<name>Clinker Maven Repository</name>
<url>http://my-repo-host/my-repo-path</url>
</mirror>
</mirrors>
and add a server (if it's protected):
<servers>
<server>
<id>my-internal-repo</id>
<username>youruser</username>
<password>yourpassword</password>
</server>
<server>
<id>internal-snapshots</id>
<username>youruser</username>
<password>yourpassword</password>
</server>
</servers>

Maven unable to download from remote repository

I'm trying to build a Maven module that depends on SVNKit.
So my pom.xml looks like this:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.tmatesoft.svnkit</groupId>
<artifactId>svnkit</artifactId>
<version>1.3.7</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>tmatesoft-releases</id>
<url>http://maven.tmatesoft.com/content/repositories/releases/</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
When I try to do a mvn clean install, it looks like it attemps to look into a Nexus repository, and obviously cannot find it. I'm obviously trying to download the artifact from a remote repository at: http://maven.tmatesoft.com/content/repositories/releases
I took a look at my settings.xml file in my ~/.m2/ folder and I see that there is a mirror that looks like this:
<mirror>
<!--This sends everything else to /public -->
<id>nexus</id>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
<url>http://Our_Nexus_Repository</url>
</mirror>
I thought that, if you define a <reposotiry> tag, your module's pom.xml will take precedence over what's defined in your settings.xml file.
Any help is appreciated. Thank you.
this is because the mirror will mirror all the repositories, : <mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
you can change replace it like this : <mirrorOf>*,!tmatesoft-releases</mirrorOf>
more info please visit : http://maven.apache.org/guides/mini/guide-mirror-settings.html
With the way that you're using the mirror statement in your settings.xml, you're directing maven to always go to your repository. If that is indeed the behavior that you wish, you should create a proxy for the tmatesoft-releases repository inside your nexus installation.
A common methodology for doing this is to setup a repository group for all releases you wish to have on your nexus installation. Then just add proxy repos to the group as needed, and users won't need to change their settings.xml to instantly have visibility to the new repos you add.

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