I have a multi module project, in which one of the module ( say MODULE-A) generates sources and classes using xmlbeans plugin. So everytime when I do a clean install of parent project, eclipse recognizes all of the generated sources as new classes, and I don't want to commit the same files again and again when there is no schema change. To overcome this problem, I wrapped xmlbeans build under a profile so that I can build it with profile whenever there is a schema change. But it didn't solve the problem completely.
Whenever I try to do clean build of parent, MODULE-A is not creating 'schemaorg_apache_xmlbeans' under build directory ( which is something only generated by xmlbean plugin when I run with profile ). I can tell maven to exclude 'schemaorg_apache_xmlbeans' from the clean task. But I want to know if this is the right way to handle.
Appreciate your responses.
Thanks in advance
One alternative to this approach is to add this plugin:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>add-source</id>
<phase>generate-sources</phase>
<goals>
<goal>add-source</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<sources>
<source>${project.build.directory}/generated-sources/</source>
</sources>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
This will allow the generated-sources to be added as a source folder so every time it generates you will have them built and available. You wouldn't commit these but when the actual jar gets built/released they will be in there and work all the same. This allows you to always be using code most up to date with your schema. This may not be the best solution for you but I found it to be a good idea when I ran into a similar situation.
Related
This question, just to be sure my interpretation is correct :
I'm using Mojohaus jaxb2-maven-plugin to generate java classes from .xsd files, and by default it puts them in target/generated-sources
Now, I want to get track of these classes in source control (target is of course excluded), and I may one day slightly customize one with an annotation or a line of code, and I may even change my class generation plugin, so what do is I copy these classes and packages in src/main/java
This upsets Maven when I try to compile because he considers "target/generated-sources" as a source directory and he finds all clases twice. For what I understand, I can exclude classes inside a source directory, but I can't remove a source directory from Maven build, am I right ?
So the only solution would be to configure my jaxb2 plugin to generate the classes elsewhere, right ?
UPDATE :
Ok, this doesn't work as I thought, if I change the outputDirectory of my jaxb plugin, it's still included as a source directory by Maven, and I have no clue why.
<configuration>
<outputDirectory>${project.build.directory}/tatata/jaxb</outputDirectory>
</configuration>
UPDATE 2 : The explanation is the plugin is adding the outputDirectory as a maven source directory during the generate-sources phase of the build, and it's not optionnal or customizable.
First things first, do not add generation code to source control. Do not modify it manually. You will get into trouble. Believe me, I've seen it too many times. A new version of the schema and you're lost.
Ok, now to your question.
With maven-jaxb2-plugin you could turn off adding generation directory as a compile source root with:
<configuration>
<addCompileSourceRoot>false</addCompileSourceRoot>
</configuration>
Disclaimer: I'm the author of maven-jaxb2-plugin.
The answer from Lexicore is an interesting lead but my question was about the plugin I'm currently using, not how to do it with an other plugin.
So here is the workaround for the Mojohaus plugin : you can just skip the generate-sources by default (no need to do this task at every build when your model changes once in a week, then once in a year), and trigger it only when needed using a dedicated maven profile : How to skip generate-sources in Maven
you can always specify the target directory(generateDirectory) in pom config file as below. Hope it helps
`
<plugin>
<groupId>org.jvnet.jaxb2.maven2</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-jaxb2-plugin</artifactId>
<version>0.12.3</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>generate</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<schemaLanguage>WSDL</schemaLanguage>
<generateDirectory>${basedir}/src/main/java</generateDirectory>
<generatePackage>com.myproj.proxy</generatePackage>
<schemas>
<schema>
<!-- <url>${project.basedir}/src/main/resources/wsdl/test.wsdl</url> -->
<fileset>
<!-- Defaults to schemaDirectory. -->
<directory>${basedir}/src/main/resources/wsdl</directory>
<!-- Defaults to schemaIncludes. -->
<includes>
<include>*.wsdl</include>
</includes>
</fileset>
</schema>
</schemas>
</configuration>
</plugin>
`
I have this issue that I have been trying to solve for the better part of a day, but can't really seem to do.
I have set up my maven so that it fails if findbugs finds any bugs. However, because of reasons, I would like to ignore all the bugs that currently exist in the project, and only fail if new bugs are found. A baseline.
I am able to generate an XML file containing a <BugCollection>
with all my current bugs, using FindBugs plugin for IntelliJ. However, supplying this to the maven plugin does nothing.
It seems the maven plugin requires a filter file in this format:
<Match>
<Class name="com.foobar.MyClass" />
</Match>
My question is then: How do I generate this filter file?
It seems that the findbugs:gui is not a great option, as it only allows me to filter on bug type and class. Meaning new bugs of the same type in the same class but a different method would be ignored.
Alternatively: How do I make findbugs for maven ignore existing bugs and only fail on new ones?
Thank you :)
You should use the excludeBugsFile configuration, something like below. The findbugs-baseline.xml is the file exported with the FindBugs-IDEA plugin in Intellij
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>findbugs-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<excludeBugsFile>${project.basedir}/findbugs-baseline.xml</excludeBugsFile>
</configuration>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>check</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
I am exploring using coffeescript-maven-plugin by iron9light. Following the guide is pretty easy, and I can definitely use maven to compile my coffeescripts to normal Javascript.
Being new though to Maven, I have one small problem: My code is composed of two subprojects, one for the core (where Java classes are stored) and another for my UI (for JSPs, as well as my Coffeescript and Javascript files). It only makes sense to use this plugin in the UI project, of course, but I used this snippet of the plugin in the parent POM, such that it ends up trying to look for Coffeescript files in both subprojects.
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.iron9light</groupId>
<artifactId>coffeescript-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.1.2</version>
<configuration>
<srcDir>${basedir}/ui/src/main/scripts/coffee</srcDir>
<outputDir>${basedir}/ui/src/main/scripts/coffee-build</outputDir>
<modifiedOnly>false</modifiedOnly>
</configuration>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>coffeescript</id>
<phase>generate-resources</phase>
<goals>
<goal>compile</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Because of this, when trying to run mvn coffeescript:compile, I get an error, i.e.,:
[ERROR] Failed to execute goal com.github.iron9light:coffeescript-maven-plugin:1.1.2:compile (default-cli) on project test-core: Source directory not fount: C:\test\core\ui\src\main\scripts\coffee -> [Help 1]
If you will notice, it tries to look for a \core\ui\src... directory even when that directory does not exist.
Any tips/best practices how to resolve this? I just want it to compile Coffeescript files in the ui subproject, nothing more.
I'm trying to exclude a bunch of packages from a javadoc site.
Unfortunately this plugin seems to live its own life and when it was configured as a report plugin it failed with access denied when moving files, so it was changed to be a normal plugin and then configured to run with the site goal (aggregated). By doing that we have the javadoc generated and it's published under the site as it should be.
But it seems that the configuration parameters for the plugin doesn't take effect at all. I've tried to move the <excludePackageNames> element around - both being a general config and to be a specific config for the aggregate goal - and I even added an exclusion for our entire code base and all files was still generated.
What I'm trying to do is to simply remove a couple of packages that shouldn't be in the javadoc. Anyone who got this plugin and the config to play nicely, to exclude packages?
This is the config I use right now, the javadoc is created but all packages, including the excluded, is generated.
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-javadoc-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.8</version>
<configuration>
<excludePackageNames>my.company.packages.*</excludePackageNames>
</configuration>
<executions>
<!-- Hook up the Javadoc generation on the site phase -->
<execution>
<id>aggregate</id>
<goals>
<goal>aggregate</goal>
</goals>
<phase>site</phase>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Any ideas, pretty please?
I solved identical problem by adding the sourcepath parameter to the configuration:
<configuration>
<sourcepath>${project.basedir}/src/main/java</sourcepath>
<excludePackageNames>my.company.packages.*</excludePackageNames>
</configuration>
The configuration above will exclude all packages below my.company.packages but not my.company.packages itself. To exclude also my.company.packages use <excludePackageNames>my.company.packages</excludePackageNames> instead.
I use Apache Thrift to generate code in target/generated-sources.
The Thrift compiler produces a directory named gen-java which contains all the Java code. When I execute mvn compile, the code is generated correctly in target/generated-source/gen-java, but in compilation phase, it complains can't find the classes which defined in gen-java.
In my understanding, Maven 2 automatically adds generated sources, is that right?
And what if my testing code also depends on the generated-sources, do I have to manually specified the compiler includes?
In my understanding, maven 2 automatically add generated sources, is that right?
Nothing automatic, plugins generating source code typically handle that by adding their output directory (something like target/generated-sources/<tool> by convention) as source directory to the POM so that it will be included later during the compile phase.
Some less well implemented plugins don't do that for you and you have to add the directory yourself, for example using the Build Helper Maven Plugin.
And since you didn't provide any POM snippet, any link, I can't say anything more.
And what if my testing code also depends on the generated-sources, do I have to manually specified the compiler includes?
As I said, generated sources are usually added as source directory and compiled and are thus available on the test classpath without you having to do anything.
Generated sources are not compiled or packaged automatically. Some IDEs (i.e. IntelliJ) will however show them as source folders.
To make generated sources visible to maven add a add-source-step to the build/plugins node of your pom.xml:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.0.0</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<phase>generate-sources</phase>
<goals>
<goal>add-source</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<sources>
<source>${project.build.directory}/generated-sources/gen-java</source><!-- adjust folder name to your needs -->
</sources>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>