Publish dependencies of an artifact with Gradle - gradle

I'm looking for a way with Gradle to generate a maven repository with all dependencies and transitive dependencies.
For example, my project can depend on hibernate. I'd like to create a local repository somewhere on the disk with hibernate and its own dependencies.
I tryed several ways but no success:
uploadArtifact: it seems not possible to upload dependencies of the artifact
Sync task: I don't have maven metadata and I loose transitive dependencies
The context:
My product has an engine and a webapp and could deployed as a War archive, an EAR archive or without the webapp, with or without some components in them. I need to provide users a way to configure what they need and a script to generate it. Gradle seems a good candidate but I don't see how to create a local repository with all dependencies that may be needed.
Does anyone see a solution ?
Thank you

There isn't currently an easy way to achieve this with Gradle; you'll have to script your own solution. In particular, you'll have to find a way to recreate the original POM when publishing the archive.

I found a solution which may be used by others.
The idea: use maven to generate the repository and package the project as a zip using the assembly plugin.
I fake maven with :
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>my-internal-site</id>
<url>file://${user.home}/.m2/repository</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
and call it like it :
mvn install -Dmaven.repo.local=./src/lib/
The pom will contain main dependencies and src dir everything else to include in the "bundle"

Related

Why doesn't the dependency contain a jar in the maven public repository https://mvnrepository.com?

I a maven rookie and am wondering how to get a binary jar file if it is not already in the repo. Specifically i'm in need of: jackson-dataformats-text-2.13.0.jar. Do I need to build it myself? I'm used to creating a project and marking a library as a dependency and seeing the jar downloaded into my .m2 cache but all i see in my cache is:
jchan#jchan-Z170N:~/.m2/repository/com/fasterxml/jackson/dataformat/jackson-dataformats-text/2.13.0$ ls
jackson-dataformats-text-2.13.0.jar.lastUpdated jackson-dataformats-text-2.13.0.pom.sha1
jackson-dataformats-text-2.13.0.pom _remote.repositories
Can someone advise how I am to get a built version of the jar from maven central?
We are still maintaining our ant build and I need the jar file for this. (i know i know, ancient stuff but team is not ready to port just yet).
parent pom don't contain jar file
This is the reason why no bundle link is present on the official public maven repository https://mvnrepository.com
The maven dependency is not a jar, is a parent. So the extension is: .pom which is just a plain pom.xml
Parent dependencies don't contain compiled class like .jar.
In your specific case, there are another dependencies who contains jars:
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/fasterxml/jackson/dataformat/jackson-dataformat-yaml/2.13.0/
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/fasterxml/jackson/dataformat/jackson-dataformat-xml/2.13.0/
advice
Check what classes do you need on your ant project and search if exist a jar (with the classes you need) on https://mvnrepository.com
Another option is to get all the dependencies from pom :
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/fasterxml/jackson/dataformat/jackson-dataformats-text/2.9.0/jackson-dataformats-text-2.9.0.pom and download them into your ant project. In theory is the same of add the parent pom in a maven project

How does Maven use external dependencies in your own project?

I had a quick question on how Maven configures dependencies in the pom.xml file. In my project's pom.xml file, when I add a dependency tag and provide the artifact id and group id, how/where does Maven store those dependencies to use in my project? Since Maven is a central repository, does Maven use the internet to pull the dependencies or does it download the repositories in your local machine and use it from there?
Maven repository is of three types :
Local
Central
Remote
Maven first starts finding in Local Repository created by Maven in %USER_HOME% directory. To override the default location, mention another path in Maven settings.xml file available at %M2_HOME%\conf directory.
When Maven does not find any dependency in a local repository, it starts searching in the Central repository.
Sometimes, Maven does not find a mentioned dependency in the central repository as well. It then stops the build process and output error message to console. To prevent such situation, Maven provides a concept of Remote Repository, which is the developer's own custom repository containing required libraries or other project jars.
For user-defined jars, you also need to specify :
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>in-project</id>
<name>Name_of_your_project</name>
<url>file://${project.basedir}/libs</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
In standard configuration, Maven looks first in your local Maven repository (.m2/repository in your user directory) and if it does not find anything, it tries to download from the remote repositories that you specified. If you did not specify any, it will use MavenCentral.
When Maven finds something, it will be downloaded to the local Maven repository for future use. If you have -SNAPSHOT dependencies, they will be updated regularly.

Maven WAR Plugin / Jenkins repository connector: Omitting transitive dependencies?

Situation
I have a multi-module Maven project. In it, I have several JAR artefacts, it then gets assembled as a WAR file. Thus, the WAR artefact depends on all kinds of JAR artefacts (it also has a WAR overlay), most of them with scope "compile".
Build and deployment to a repository are fine. But when I try to retrieve the WAR artefact, I have issues. previously, I used a simple wget to retrieve it from the Nexus API, but I wanted to try the Jenkins Repository Connector - not the least reason being that it actually shows a list of available versions.
I configure a repository in
Manage Jenkins -> Configure System -> Artifact Resolver
with the URL for our repo:
http://$NEXUS/nexus/content/repositories/releases/
then in the job, i add a parameter:
Maven Repository Artifact
and use the repository configured above, then i add
Artifact Resolver
as a build step and set it up.
Problem
I am not even sure on which side this should be solved: When I run the job to try to get the WAR file from the nexus, it also starts trying to retrieve all kinds of transitive dependencies (some of which are unaccessible to this user) and fails. What I need is just the WAR file. No transitive dependencies (since they're already packaged in the WAR).
The Repository Connector plugin doesn't seem to have a switch for this, and the Maven side it's probably perfectly OK to include those dependencies in the output POM.
Question
What can I do to either stop the repository connector from retrieving transitive dependencies or retrieve the WAR artefact in a different way? Also interesting for me (but a bit broad as a question) would be general ideas about doing this kind of workflow. E.g., does anyone use other ways of deploying the WAR into their Nexus?
i submitted a patch to the repository connector plugin.
my fork:
https://github.com/rmalchow/repository-connector-plugin
working on getting it to be merged:
https://github.com/jenkinsci/repository-connector-plugin/pull/10

Unconventional dependency name in maven

I have a few dependencies like this. For example : jdic
In my pom.xml, I defined a dependency
<dependency>
<artifactId>jdic</artifactId>
<groupId>jdic</groupId>
<version>0.8.6</version>
</dependency>
And I have a remote repository (internal server): eg http://repo/thirdparty/
And jdic can be found in http://repo/thirdparty/jdic/jar/jdic.jar
As you notice, the naming is not conventional groupId:artifactId:version, instead its just jdic.jar
so when I run maven compile
mvn clean compile
maven tells me that it cannot resolve dependencies.
I'm aware that we can just download those jars to the local repository .m2/repository and run
mvn compile (ie without clean)
and it the jar will not be a problem. But is there any other way that I can make it retrieve from the remote despite its unconventional name and lack of metadata/pom info for those dependencies?
I already have a mirror to this internal repository that overrides the central
You could install the jdic in your internal/mirror repository with the version (jdic-0.8.6.jar).
If you are using a repository manager and you uploaded the jar to it, it would automagically create a pom for it as well as ensure the dependency was created with version, as per maven convention.
A remote Maven repository is NOT any web server putting files in any way you want. There are lots of convention to follow. One of them is the way to represent the version (which is one essential element of an artifact). With your "remote repository" it is clear that there is no way Maven can find the artifact.
Setup a real Maven remote repository to host such files. You can have a look in Nexus and Artifactory.

How do I add an artifact to a local maven repository so that it will properly reference its own set of dependencies?

I am developing an application that depends on a number of legacy JAR files and I want the project to build straight out of version control without other users having to install these JARs in their local repository. I cannot add them to the corporate repository so I have created a repository that is local to this project and I have added these JARs to that repository using maven-install-plugin:install-file and setup the repository entry in the POM file so it knows to search the local repository.
This works exactly the way I want...up to a point. The problem is that most of these legacy JAR files have their own set of dependencies. I would like for them to work just like other artifacts that have their own set of dependencies so that maven can resolve everything and include all the necessary files but I can't find a way to do this with any maven-install-plugin:install-file options (or any other maven commands/plugins). I am pretty new at maven so I am probably just ignorant on this point.
As a work around, I attempted to go into the local repository directory and manually edit the POM file for the artifact to include the dependencies. This didn't cause any errors but it is also not pulling in those dependencies.
Can someone out there give me a clue?
The maven-install-plugin:install-file goal has a pomFile attribute. You can use this to specify a POM file for your legacy jar. You would create a POM file that points to all of the dependencies by artifactId in the <dependencies> section. If you have a remote nexus repository you can use the admin screen for the repository to deploy a jar.
Once you edit POM files in your project specific repository, host it as maven repo using Maven Repository Managers (like sonatype nexus). Add your project nexus repo as one of the maven repo in project pom.xml as below
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>my-project-mvn-repo</id>
<name>my-project-mvn-repo</name>
<url>http://<your project maven repo URL here></url>
</repository>
<repositories>
Now all developers should be able to make build. The legacy jar files POM contains dependency. Maven should take care of automatically pulling dependent jars on developer's workspace.

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