Good day. I am seeking help for a Maven 3 (3.3.9) problem I am unable to
resolve. I've been hacking at it for about three weeks on-and-off and I
cannot find any solution. I've gone pretty much around the block both in
trial-and-error changes and web searches to no avail.
Here are the details in a
to the aforementioned?
Cheers and God bless,
Paul
On Mon, Feb 12, 2018 at 3:06 PM, Paul Benedict <pbened...@apache.org> wrote:
> I found this message in my output when turning on Maven's debug option
> (-X). It looks like an error to me, or at least a warning, and I don't know
> what t
> directly or your mirror should provide it.
> Do you see my point?
>
> /Anders
>
> On Mon, Feb 5, 2018 at 10:06 PM, Paul Benedict <pbened...@apache.org>
> wrote:
>
> > Anders, I have a question for your clarification. I think you're saying
> > that because some
I found this message in my output when turning on Maven's debug option
(-X). It looks like an error to me, or at least a warning, and I don't know
what the consequences are. It "sounds bad" but I am not sure what it is
complaining about or what to do about it.
Output:
===
[DEBUG] The following
I have a question based on these two references:
*)
https://maven.apache.org/plugin-tools-archives/plugin-tools-3.2/maven-plugin-plugin/examples/ant-mojo.html
*) https://books.sonatype.com/mcookbook/reference/ch04s04.html
In each reference, the reader is directed to create one xxx.build.xml and
ompared to the one stored for a locally cached
> artifact, Maven tries to download it again.
>
> /Anders
>
> On Mon, Feb 5, 2018 at 5:04 PM, Paul Benedict <pbened...@apache.org>
> wrote:
>
> > I think you're right. However, I am still curious why Maven is acting
> li
rom where an artifact was downloaded.
>
> /Anders
>
> On Fri, Feb 2, 2018 at 2:05 AM, Paul Benedict <pbened...@apache.org>
> wrote:
>
> > My Maven version is 3.3.9. For my typical use case, my settings.xml has a
> > of "central" that provides a procured s
My Maven version is 3.3.9. For my typical use case, my settings.xml has a
of "central" that provides a procured subset of artifacts. It
contains nearly everything I might need to do a desktop build. However,
sometimes I need to connect to the real "central" directly to try and test
an
In addition, you can use the --pl option (requires Maven 3.2.1+) to exclude
the child module of your choice.
This example excludes child module "foo":
mvn --pl !foo
Cheers,
Paul
On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 2:54 PM, Bernd Eckenfels
wrote:
> This describes how to control
r.html
>
> Hope this helps,
> Robert
>
>
> On Wed, 13 Jul 2016 23:13:41 +0200, Paul Benedict <pbened...@apache.org>
> wrote:
>
> Is there any existing API in any of these projects [1] for scanning
>> annotations? I am writing a Mojo and want to scan either t
Is there any existing API in any of these projects [1] for scanning
annotations? I am writing a Mojo and want to scan either the project's
source files or binary files -- haven't decided. The answer will depend on
what APIs are available to me.
[1] https://maven.apache.org/ref/3.3.9/index.html
a detailed
> hint that no one could ignore.
>
> Am 20.06.16 um 21:56 schrieb Paul Benedict:
>
>> Do you mean make it a warning in 3.4 and fix behavior in 3.5?
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Paul
>>
>> On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 2:42 PM, Oliver B. Fischer <
>>
Do you mean make it a warning in 3.4 and fix behavior in 3.5?
Cheers,
Paul
On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 2:42 PM, Oliver B. Fischer wrote:
> Ok, I will fix it. But wouldn't it be an usefull option to print some
> warning about this problem before changing the current
I think this must be a logger issue. The entire message is actually this:
"[options] bootstrap class path not set in conjunction with -source 1.7"
So the logger must be cutting into the beginning of the string with
"[WARN]" plus any whitespace padding.
Cheers,
Paul
On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 12:03
I think most people, at least once in their life, try to use their local
repository cache as an offline remote repository. However, the two aren't
the same in concept though, IIRC, the last time I tried. You still need to
keep the two separate.
Now it would be interesting if a tool existed to
you are forced to use a 3G
>>>> connection for a build on an emergency basis in your job.
>>>>
>>>> Then again, it would also be nice if Santa Claus were real.
>>>>
>>>> When will Apache have their open source Santa project? ;)
>&g
Agreed. There's no point in using Struts-EL anymore. There was a time, as
David said, when EL was a tag-only solution. But since JSP 2.0, the servlet
container understands EL natively so every tag can use EL.
Cheers,
Paul
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 4:20 PM, David Karr davidmichaelk...@gmail.com
It sounds like both your projects are snapshots. So when you build
B-SNAPSHOT you have no idea what's inside of A-SNAPSHOT. If this is
bothersome to you, you can think about releasing milestone versions of A so
that B-SNAPSHOT always has a known/reliable codebase to work with. Perhaps
you want
The pun also works in regards to Eclipse 4.5 which is also named Mars.
Cheers,
Paul
On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 8:15 PM, Martin Gainty mgai...@hotmail.com wrote:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/maven/main/
was wondering why it took so long to get a response ..(know I know why)
Maven is the
I configured the WAR plugin to overlay a zip file. Nothing fancy. Here's
the config:
plugin
groupIdorg.apache.maven.plugins/groupId
artifactIdmaven-war-plugin/artifactId
version2.5/version
configuration
overlays
groupIdorg.company/groupId
artifactIdui/artifactId
wrote:
On Monday, 8 December 2014 at 16:24, Paul Benedict wrote:
I configured the WAR plugin to overlay a zip file. Nothing fancy. Here's
the config:
plugin
groupIdorg.apache.maven.plugins/groupId
artifactIdmaven-war-plugin/artifactId
version2.5/version
configuration
overlays
I really don't think we need to name the owl, do we? Are we just naming it
for fun or is there a reason we want to?
Cheers,
Paul
On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 1:23 PM, Stephen Connolly
stephen.alan.conno...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tuesday, November 25, 2014, Jeroen Hoek jer...@lable.org wrote:
I
I think you will find it easier to add a temporary Spring bean (during
development) that scans your beans/annotations to report what you want:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/259140/scanning-java-annotations-at-runtime
Cheers,
Paul
On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 9:01 PM, Niranjan Rao
Get your XML and XSLT files out of src/main/java -- and you're filtering
that directory too. Put them in src/main/resources
Cheers,
Paul
On Sat, Nov 22, 2014 at 11:47 AM, Aitor Iturriondobeitia
laudio.i...@gmail.com wrote:
hello
i have one problem and i am working two days an o dont solve
I found the shotgun owl to be pretty funny and unique. Part of choosing a
trademark is uniqueness and that is more valuable than something standard.
I think the white belly should return for that return.
Cheers,
Paul
On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 8:41 AM, Stephen Connolly
Your pom.xml should declare all dependency versions explicitly. And to
prevent any changes, do not use any snapshots. Furthermore, use
dependency:analyze on your project to make sure all libraries in use are
explicitly declared. After you lock them all down, tell your developers not
to update the
://maven.apache.org/shared/maven-reporting-exec/
Regards,
Hervé
Le vendredi 3 octobre 2014 12:46:21 Paul Benedict a écrit :
pluginManagement only affects plugins -- it does not affect
reporting:
https://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-3385
Cheers,
Paul
On Thu, Oct 2, 2014 at 9:06 PM
...@kathrynhuxtable.org
wrote:
I’ve always used properties, but would it work to use
buildDependencies? -K
On Oct 2, 2014, at 7:02 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I use the maven-javadoc-plugin in both build and reporting. I don't
want to fall back to properties to share
I use the maven-javadoc-plugin in both build and reporting. I don't
want to fall back to properties to share the plugin version. Is there a
better way than using properties?
Cheers,
Paul
There is a Maven Changes Plugin which projects can use to list out changes
to their project.
http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-changes-plugin/
Regarding CVE, Redhat has a Maven plugin to find victim dependencies:
Yup. I've used HashTab for years.
http://www.implbits.com/hashtab.aspx
Cheers,
Paul
On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 11:16 AM, Justin Georgeson jgeorge...@lgc.com
wrote:
All the checksum validation tools I've found only seem to support files
with format produced by the md5sum tool, ie -
checksum1
The apache mailing list is ran by Apache for legal reasons (e.g., proof of
release votes). Regardless, no one on this mailing list has the authority
to change the infrastructure. I am surprised this discussion keeps going.
Cheers,
Paul
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 3:29 PM, Preston, Dale
I agree with the guy who said bikeshed -- this is a bikeshed discussion.
But more than that, no one in this mailing list has authority to setup new
infrastructure and move lists to different technology. It really is a moot
point and nothing will change.
Cheers,
Paul
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at
I think because Apache is a non-profit is cost should be minimal --
including cost of time by system administrators. If you want to search and
filter, you have Google and other search engines.
Cheers,
Paul
On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 10:51 AM, Preston, Dale
dale.pres...@conocophillips.com wrote:
I did a google search for the answer. This says Eclipse defers to Oracle's
javadoc.exe tool:
http://help.eclipse.org/juno/index.jsp?topic=%2Forg.eclipse.jdt.doc.user%2Freference%2Fref-export-javadoc.htm
So Eclipse must be configuring the tool in a way that doesn't trigger the
NPE. The NPE from
The NPE is in the javadoc compiler not Maven. You could submit the stack
trace to Oracle or do some research to determine if upgrading your JDK
fixes this problem.
On Jul 9, 2014 6:12 PM, Alexddupree alexddup...@gmail.com wrote:
I am trying to create an aggregate javadoc for a multi module
I, myself, have also found the lack of ordered plugin execution to be
wanting. Stephen does have a point: complex behavior is likely be better
encapsulated in a new plugin. I don't disagree, but that route can be steep
and I don't want to be detoured into always writing a new plugin. Many
times
I don't think this existed when I first tried with Maven (my example was
from many moons ago), but this is another tool in my toolbox now. Thank
you! :-)
Cheers,
Paul
On Wed, Jun 4, 2014 at 3:19 PM, Stephen Connolly
stephen.alan.conno...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, 4 June 2014, Paul
Jim, I reopened the issue for you, but, please note, this was closed
because the issue was created 6 years ago and no one ever submitted a
patch. Hopefully, someone has the incentive to work on this or it will be
closed again. If you find this feature critical to your own work, do you
have time to
dant...@gmail.com wrote:
Agree sequencing is a pain. You may be able to get this working if you
move your sql plugin delaration below exec-m-p
-D
On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 12:54 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org
wrote:
Jim, I reopened the issue for you, but, please note
I don't think you should make a project for your sql jar. My guess is when
you build+install that, you're creating an empty and useless jar file and
overwriting the good one you already placed in your local repo. The
mvn:install:install-file thing works and is what I would expect as the
answer.
I understand but you can't achieve this using a project to represent a
pre-existing jar. Your attempt won't work. The install-file command is
the correct solution; that is how you get it into your local repo without
downloading it from a remote repo.
On May 30, 2014 4:36 PM, Matt Whiteman
If worst comes to worst, modify the POM. It's your local repository. You
can do whatever you want to those files. Perhaps you should start by
removing the parent's pom parent.
Of course, this will be a routine to repeat when you get the vendor's
latest POM.
Cheers,
Paul
On Thu, May 15, 2014
SNAPSHOTS are built for this use case. As long as B is in SNAPSHOT mode, A
can continue pulling the latest.
Cheers,
Paul
On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 9:02 AM, James Green james.mk.gr...@gmail.comwrote:
I have two projects - A and B. B depends on A.
A is built with a number (call it a build
already supports Markdown so maven-site-plugin could work,
couldn't it?
-Curtis
[1] We use this to code generate sources using velocity:
https://github.com/imagej/imagej-ops/blob/imagej-ops-0.3.0/pom.xml
On May 16, 2014 3:26 AM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I am looking
You need to have the parent projects available to you in your remote or
local repository. You can't build with them missing because the parent has
configuration which you project (the child) depends upon.
On May 14, 2014 12:48 AM, Dariusz Jurojć dariusz.jur...@daprog.pl wrote:
I can't do it - as
I am looking for a plugin that can generate HTML from markdown document.
This is not about using the site goal but static pages for a site. Anyone
been using something like this?
Cheers,
Paul
I am trying to filter my jboss-web.xml but am having problems. For sure,
the file is getting processed because ${project.version} is substituted
just fine, but any of my custom properties are not. It doesn't seem that
the war plugin is paying attention to my list of filters.
build
filters
advice on how to make this work (does anyone
else here filter web resources?), I'll simply have to use the normal
resources tag and target the output at WEB-INF.
Paul
On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 1:37 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I am trying to filter my jboss-web.xml but am having
, 2014 at 2:17 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I think my problem is regarding these open issues:
http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MWAR-301
http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MWAR-305
I did a debug dump of my build and noticed that my filters are
definitely not being included
Output from Maven...
Downloading:
http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/jboss/spec/javax/ejb/jboss-ejb-api_3.2_spec/1.0.0.Final/jboss-ejb-api_3.2_spec-1.0.0.Final.pom
...and then this error:
connect: Address is invalid on local machine, or port is not valid on
remote machine
I don't understand the
Especially if you use Spring XML configuration, it's impossible for the
Dependency Plugin to figure out you need this-or-that Spring jar. The best
you can do, actually, is use the new Spring Java Config so that your
configuration is code and thus able to be statically analyzed.
On Thu, Feb 13,
IIRC, there should be an option in Emma/Cobertura that allows you to
exclude coverage on certain classes. So if you can exclude your log4j
classes (you don't really want to test your logging, do you?), then you
should be able to raise your percentage.
On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 2:30 PM, Benoît
I am so happy someone brought this up. I actually hit this issue several
times but never got around to mentioning it. Please submit a JIRA issue!
On Tue, Feb 11, 2014 at 3:41 PM, Barrie Treloar baerr...@gmail.com wrote:
On 12 February 2014 07:41, laredotornado-3 laredotorn...@gmail.com
wrote:
Love this logo. Very awesome.
On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 9:51 AM, Mark H. Wood mw...@iupui.edu wrote:
On Tue, Jan 14, 2014 at 12:08:09PM +, Stephen Connolly wrote:
Putting maven-20 in context, you get:
http://people.apache.org/~stephenc/maven-logo-contest/maven-20-in-context.png
Great logo, but yes, an orange hat too similar to red hat. If we're using
an Apache feather, maybe we can use a Cowboy hat to complete the theme?
On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 5:22 PM, Adam Retter adam.ret...@googlemail.comwrote:
My personal fear of the hat, is that it is too similar to Redhat IMHO.
Good choice. I was hoping someone would find a picture that played off the
expertise definition of the word Maven.
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 10:07 AM, Stephen Connolly
stephen.alan.conno...@gmail.com wrote:
The Owl is usually a symbol of wisdom, e.g. the wise owl.
Maven embodies the collective
Your problem is that, I think, you attached the execution to the compile
phase. However, the process-resources phase already happened so you're
not getting the right behavior. Attach to the correct phase.
On Wed, Jan 8, 2014 at 4:05 PM, Kuo, Joncheng (HP Storage - MSDU)
joncheng@hp.com
My suggestion is for someone in the PMC to pay $29 to
http://www.48hourslogo.com/ and have an extraordinary number of artists
show you their logo ideas. Buy the one you like and then donate it to
Apache.
Paul
the pom's available
even when working with closed (or non-open) source products.
On 19 November 2013 02:16, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
My personal opinion for closed-source products is not to include the
generated POM. If someone somehow stole your proprietary jar, the POM
My personal opinion for closed-source products is not to include the
generated POM. If someone somehow stole your proprietary jar, the POM might
help to find out where to steal the rest -- URL locations and custom
properties, in particular.
On Mon, Nov 18, 2013 at 7:46 PM, Tang Kin Chuen
I looked up the ticket that introduced the feature:
http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MENFORCER-147
It doesn't look like it enforces dependency versions; it enforces that
Maven plugin versions in build match reporting.
Paul
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Markward Schubert
You are likely not see src/main/java in POMs because that is the default
path. Unless you want to change the source directory, you can omit it
altogether.
On Thu, Oct 24, 2013 at 3:04 PM, Robert Dailey rcdailey.li...@gmail.comwrote:
Hey everyone,
I'm trying to understand something basic, I
I never encountered this problem, but I think is a special token on the
Windows command line. Put a caret in front of it to see if it escapes it
properly: ^
On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:17 AM, djeanprost
dominique.jean-pr...@sofaxis.com wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to use maven password
Can you try a double ampersand and let me know if that works?
On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:23 AM, djeanprost
dominique.jean-pr...@sofaxis.com wrote:
Doesn't seem to be better :
C:\outillivraison\outillivraison-1.0-beta2mvn --encrypt-password
toto^titi
'titi' n'est pas reconnu en tant que
That's interesting. When I use a double ampersand, Maven looks for my
security-settings.xml correctly so it's finding the program. Without the
double ampersand, it doesn't work.
On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:32 AM, djeanprost
dominique.jean-pr...@sofaxis.com wrote:
with double ampersand,
You ask a really good question but one that eludes answer.
It seems several experts believe Maven is good at compile dependencies but
not runtime dependencies. If you care to see some of those discussions in
another mailing list, here you go:
I believe this behavior is correct. IIRC, XML does not allow double-dashes
inside a comment.
On Wed, Sep 18, 2013 at 9:06 AM, Andrew Pennebaker apenneba...@42six.comwrote:
I'm using Thrift in my Maven project, compiling my .thrift code to .java as
part of the generate-sources step. To do
I am fond of the Release plugin's ability to check out my code, tag, update
the POM, and check it back in. I just don't need any site generation or
publishing to a remote repository.
Is it possible to skip the latter? If not, can I publish to my local
repository without messing up its metadata?
Furthermore, I'd like to see explicit procedural rules on Maven Core and
forking. For example, if there's a critical component needing development
for Core, and a PMC expresses that such development will be done outside of
Apache and then used as a dependency, shouldn't there be a vote on that?
, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
Furthermore, I'd like to see explicit procedural rules on Maven Core and
forking. For example, if there's a critical component needing development
for Core, and a PMC expresses that such development will be done outside
of
Apache and then used
and procedures to follow?
On 2 August 2013 16:51, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I don't understand the iron hand analogy. I was expressing the use of a
vote to allow or disallow critical development outside of Apache. The
vote
would lead to a consensus, no?
On Fri, Aug 2
mentioned coloured loggers)
-Stephen
On Thursday, 25 July 2013, Paul Benedict wrote:
I don't think it is possible to force volunteer efforts and/or limit
development elsewhere. The idea of supporting a project is a vague
notion.
I have my opinions too but this language is clearly
/25/13 4:17 PM, Paul Benedict wrote:
Stephen, those are great questions. Yet, I think these questions are
riding
an assumption that PMC members are solely volunteering at Apache, because
the emphasis (as I interpret your words) is to place the Apache project
first/above other external
Welcome
On Sun, Jan 30, 2011 at 1:51 PM, Olivier Lamy ol...@apache.org wrote:
Hello,
We just voted him as a committer.
So Welcome Evgeny !
Thanks,
--
Apache Maven Team
-
To unsubscribe, e-mail:
Congrats Wayne!
On Sat, Jan 15, 2011 at 7:14 AM, Mark Struberg strub...@yahoo.de wrote:
Congratulations Wayne!
Keep up the good work ;)
LieGrue,
strub
--- On Sat, 1/15/11, Olivier Lamy ol...@apache.org wrote:
From: Olivier Lamy ol...@apache.org
Subject: Re: Welcome Wayne Fay to the
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 4:03 PM, Leon Rosenberg
rosenberg.l...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I have following requirement. I have a project, in which I have one
source folder which contains a code generator (run with apt), another
source folder
which contains code, which is processed by the generator
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 11:09 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
I don't believe that's supposed to happen.
I realized how vague my answer was. Sorry! I mean the replacement is
NOT supposed to happen. It's a substitution variable. You won't get
the real value in there because it's
Which is a problem because there's lots of other ways for that variable
to be set that aren't going to be available after the pom is deployed.
I wouldn't deploy a POM with variables that are not set. Won't the
properties tag be included either in the POM or the parent POM?
Paul
: paulus.benedic...@gmail.com [mailto:paulus.benedic...@gmail.com]
On
Behalf Of Paul Benedict
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 11:22 AM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Re: avoiding dependency version number duplication
Which is a problem because there's lots of other ways for that
variable
to be set
I've looked at pages and pages of POM files, trying to learn things. And my
conclusion is that Maven was _fundamentally flawed_ in choosing XML as its
base.
XML isn't evil. XML is a compromise between human-readable and
computer-readable data. It's neither the best nor the worst format. If
properties
spring.version2.5.6/spring.version
/properties
Then for your dependency versions, specify version${spring.version}/version
For more information:
http://docs.codehaus.org/display/MAVENUSER/MavenPropertiesGuide
Paul
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 1:45 PM, Babak Farhang farh...@gmail.com
includes my project (artifact) as a dependency.
Justin's approach using the dependencyManagement element sounds more
promising. I'll report back when I've played it with it more..
Thank you all!
-Babak
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 12:49 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
properties
it,
and it still contains the literal ${..} string where there should have
been the version number.
Babak
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 6:35 PM, Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org wrote:
Can you explain the transformed pom point? I believe Justin's
approach and my approach are identical -- all you
If you have trunks underneath subprojects, that tells me they have
independent release cycles. If you want them to be versioned
separately, your structure is okay. If you want the master project to
build and control the subprojects as modules, I would re-organize
everything under one trunk.
Paul
Eric, you can look at these:
http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-4483
http://maven.40175.n5.nabble.com/Setting-goals-for-upcoming-releases-td2801569.html
Paul
On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 11:33 AM, Haszlakiewicz, Eric
ehas...@transunion.com wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Wendy Smoak
I brought the issue up back then and it got at least pushed to 3.1
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:48 AM, Wendy Smoak wsm...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 10:13 AM, Nayan Hajratwala na...@chikli.com wrote:
Kind of a random thought -- now that Maven 3 is out, are all those M2
based names
Yes, Maven provides default versions, but those are likely to change
as Maven does future patch releases. To give you a predictable build,
lock down your plugins so you control what versions are selected.
Paul
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 10:27 AM, Patrick Aikens paik...@gmail.com wrote:
I've got
Try this:
excludes.gitignore,**/.gitignore/excludes
If you don't see the property as a ListString in the source, it must
be a comma-separated or space-separated value.
Paul
On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 10:38 AM, Dmitry Sklyut dmi...@dsklyut.com wrote:
Hi All,
I have following configuration in war
Can anyone recommend whether to SCM commit the generated MANIFEST.MF
files? Or should they just be ignored?
-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
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I would agree that having dependencies in a POM project is curious,
and cannot think of a good use case for them. Are you really looking
for dependencyManagement where you can declare what versions should
be used by inherited projects?
On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 10:11 AM, Antonio Petrelli
I get that error all too often, as well. I haven't found a solution for it.
On Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 3:35 PM, Dennis Lundberg denn...@apache.org wrote:
On 2010-09-04 00:16, Neil Chaudhuri wrote:
I am using version 2.0 of the release plugin to tag a new version of my
multi-module application,
Thomas,
There isn't one right answer. Expect to find lots of variants.
I use a naming convention. Unit tests end in plain-old vanilla Test,
and integration tests end in *ITest. I use a wildcard pattern with
Maven to exclude integration tests since they are long-running and
need less execution. I
My web project has these facets installed: Dynamic Web Module (2.4),
Java (1.5). I am also using the m2eclipse plugin and Eclipse's
built-in server integration for Tomcat 6.0.29.
I get this error on context startup:
java.lang.ClassNotFoundException:
Wow. That worked. How did you know? I mean, that solution is not
intuitive. I wouldn't even know how to recommend it as a JIRA
enhancement to Sonatype.
Paul
On Fri, Aug 27, 2010 at 2:27 PM, Antonio Petrelli
antonio.petre...@gmail.com wrote:
2010/8/27 Paul Benedict pbened...@apache.org:
My web
On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 1:00 PM, Haszlakiewicz, Eric
ehas...@transunion.comwrote:
Please read the rest of the email thread. The short summary is:
Yes, I know what *should* happen, but the world isn't perfect and release
artifacts DO sometimes change. It is not absurd to be able to detect and
On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 2:53 PM, Haszlakiewicz, Eric
ehas...@transunion.comwrote:
You're missing the point of what I'm asking. I'm not suggesting that
maven make it possible or easy to *create* the violation. I'm
suggesting that it should be able to *detect* the violation.
I'm baffled as to
Shan,
Maven has a policy how often it checks for updated snapshots. Is that what
you are looking for?
Paul
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 11:39 AM, Jason van Zyl ja...@sonatype.com wrote:
Maven won't do that, and we would never make that possible. If you require
this you have something seriously
Replacing a SNAPSHOT with a non-SNAPSHOT version is equivalent to upgrading.
Jason is right in that this should never be automatically done by Maven.
Maven cannot guess or determine when you are ready to give up SNAPSHOT
versions.
However, perhaps you need an external batch process that discovers
There is a maxim to follow when deploying: do not redeploy a version more
than once. Once you deploy version X.Y.Z, it should never be updated, and
those who download it never need to download it again. So, back to the
original problem, are you guys doing that?
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 3:57 PM,
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