Le mardi 05 mai 2009 00:12:55, Brian Fox a écrit :
Why would you have a symlink in your target folder to someplace important?
Here is a quick example that came to my mind : Imagine you package a tarball
containing such a symlink and that during the build you have to extract it to
change
Symlinks are needed by some frameworks we use and that need some shared
directories between several webapp.
/home was just a sample, in our case we have symlink to a share /DATA
repository.
When you run mvn clean and that you loose all your /DATA (many gigabytes of
data), I can say you that you
Fair enough. I personally don't have the bandwidth to look into this
again now (i'm already looking at some release, assembly, and gpg issues
that are blockers). The last time I checked I wasn't able to reproduce
it. If someone wants to supply a patch with tests, then I can apply it.
Bouiaw
Why would you have a symlink in your target folder to someplace important?
On Mon, May 4, 2009 at 5:25 PM, Bouiaw bou...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Sorry to write again about clean plugin, but there is currently 2 VERY big
bugs in Maven clean with no workaround.
BTW, we're happy to accept patches! If you have code that fixes this,
please let me know. I'll review and apply where appropriate.
Bouiaw wrote:
Hi,
Sorry to write again about clean plugin, but there is currently 2 VERY big
bugs in Maven clean with no workaround.