This paves the way for publishing Gradle module metadata once the
problem caused by snapshot versions and our two-step publication
process has been addressed.
See gh-19609
This reverts commit b34a311d02 as,
having disabled the publishing of Gradle's module metadata (4f75ab5),
the changes are no longer needed.
See gh-19609
Previously, enforcedPlatform dependencies were using to pull in the
constraints defined in spring-boot-dependencies and
spring-boot-parent and applied them strictly so that the constrained
version had to be used. This worked as intended in Spring Boot's own
build but incorrectly enforced those same strict version requirements
on external consumers of Spring Boot's modules.
This commit reworks how Spring Boot defines its internal dependency
management so that platform dependencies are exposed to external
consumers while enforced platform dependencies are using internally.
See gh-19609
Previously, when RunProcess handled a SIGINT it would immediately
attempt to destroy the process that it had run. This created a race
condition between the SIGINT being handled by the child process
and RunProcess destroying the child. The exact behavior of destroy
is implementation dependent and it may result in forcible termination
of the process where shutdown hooks are not called. This is what
happens on Windows. The exit code in such a case is 1 which prevents
anything from waiting for the process to complete from detecting
that it ended as a result of a SIGINT, leaving it with no choice but
to report an error. This is what happens with mvn spring-boot:run
with a forked process on Windows and results in the build failing.
This commit updates RunProcess to allow the child process to handle
the SIGINT itself, waiting for up to five seconds for that to happen
before the process is then destroyed. Given this time, the child
process exits with 130 which RunMojo already handles correctly as
indicating that the process died due to SIGINT and the build completes
with success as a result.
Fixes gh-18936
Previously, Maven's default behaviour was relied up which resulted
in the artifact ID being appended to each URL as it was inherited.
This behaviour can only be disabled in Maven 3.6 and later, a version
that we cannot use due to an incompatibility with the Flatten Plugin.
This commit works around Maven's default behaviour by defining
properties for the SCM URL, connection, and developer connection and
then explicitly defining the settings in each pom using these
properties. The explicit definition of the properties in each pom
prevents them being inherited from the parent, thereby disabling the
unwanted appending of the artifact ID to the URL.
Fixes gh-18328
Apply checkstyle rule to ensure that private and package private
classes do not have unnecessary public methods. Test classes have
also been unified as much as possible to use default scoped
inner-classes.
Closes gh-7316
Since the move to JUnit 5, a number of tests were failing on Windows.
The majority were failing due to open file handles preventing the
clean up of the tests' temporary directory. This commit addresses
these failures by updating the tests to close JarFiles, InputStreams,
OutputStreams etc.
A change has also been made to CachingOperationInvokerTests to make
a flakey test more robust. Due to System.currentTimeMillis() being
less precise on Windows than it is on *nix platforms, the test could
fail as it would not sleep for long enough for the TTL period to have
expired.
With JDK 8 being the baseline and JDK 7 not being supported anymore we
can get rid of the workaround for a JDK 7 bug in
ProcessBuilder.inheritIO on Windows machines.
Closes gh-12337
Previously, the order of the entries in a TestJarFile was determined
by the underlying file system rather than by the order in which
they were added. This could lead to unpredicatable ordering and
failures in tests that verify archive entry ordering.
This commit updates TestJarFile to add entries to the archive in
insertion order.
See gh-11695
See gh-11696
Previously, the Repackager would write entries in the following
order:
- Libraries that require unpacking
- Existing entries
- Application classes
- WEB-INF/lib jars in a war
- Libraries that do not require unpacking
- Loader classes
Libraries that require unpacking were written before existing entries
so that, when repackaging a war, an entry in WEB-INF/lib would not
get in first and prevent a library with same location from being
unpacked. However, this had the unwanted side-effect of changing
the classpath order when an entry requires unpacking.
This commit reworks the handling of existing entries and libraries
that require unpacking so that existing entries can be written first
while also marking any that match a library that requires unpacking
as requiring unpacking.
Additionally, loader classes are now written first. They are the
first classes in the jar that will be used so it seems to make sense
for them to appear first. This aligns Maven-based repackaging
with the Gradle plugin's behaviour and with the structure documented
in the reference documentation's "The Executable Jar Format" appendix.
The net result of the changes described above is that entries are
now written in the following order:
- Loader classes
- Existing entries
- Application classes
- WEB-INF/lib jars in a war marked for unpacking if needed
- Libraries
Closes gh-11695
Closes gh-11696
Move projects to better reflect the way that Spring Boot is released.
The following projects are under `spring-boot-project`:
- `spring-boot`
- `spring-boot-autoconfigure`
- `spring-boot-tools`
- `spring-boot-starters`
- `spring-boot-actuator`
- `spring-boot-actuator-autoconfigure`
- `spring-boot-test`
- `spring-boot-test-autoconfigure`
- `spring-boot-devtools`
- `spring-boot-cli`
- `spring-boot-docs`
See gh-9316