When a Java 8 JVM is launched with -XX:MaxPermSize a warning message
is output indicating that the option will be ignored. This causes the
CLI tests that assert that no error output has been produced to fail.
This commit updates the CLI's integration test harness to remove
JAVA_OPTS from the environment of the CLI process. This prevents any
unwanted max perm size configuration from leaking into that
environment and breaking the build.
When a Java 8 JMV is launched with -XX:MaxPermSize a warning message
is output indicating that the option will be ignored. This causes the
CLI tests that assert that no error output has been produced to fail.
This commit updates the CLI's integration test harness to remove
JAVA_OPTS from the environment of the CLI process. This prevents any
unwanted max perm size configuration from leaking into that
environment and breaking the build.
This commit adds a new command to the CLI that allows to initialize a new
project from the command line. It uses the Spring initializr service to
actually generate the project.
The command offers two main operations:
1. Listing the capabilities of the service (--list or -l). This basically
dumps the defaults of a given service and the list of dependencies and
project types it supports
2. Generating a project. By default, http://start.spring.io is used and
its configured defaults are applied. Running spring init would therefore
have the same effect as clicking the 'generate project' on the UI without
entering any extra information. No file is overwritten by default.
The generation can be customized with the following options:
* --boot-version (-bv) Spring Boot version the project should use
* --dependencies (-d) comma separated list of dependencies to add to the
generated project
* --java-version (-jv) Java version to use
* --packaging (-p) the packaging for the project (jar, war)
* --target the url of the service to use
The actual type of the project can be defined in several ways:
1. Using the --type (-t) option that identifies a type that is supported
by the service
2. A combination of --build and/or --format that can be used to uniquely
identify matching these tags. Build represents the build system to use
(e.g. maven or gradle) while --format defines the format of the generated
project.
The project is saved on disk with the name provided by the server through
the Content-Disposition header, if any. It is possible to force it with
the --output option. It is possible to overwrite existing files by adding
the --force (-f) flag.
The --extract (-x) option allows to extract the project instead of saving
the zip archive. By default, the project is extracted in the current
working directory but it is possible to specify an alternate directory
using the --output option.
Fixes gh-1751
Since all dependencies are local in a jar there is no need for
a GrabResolver (and it breaks the app because the default ivy
GrapeEngine is used instead of the smart, pretty Boot one).
Fixes gh-1179
The lists are comma separated. In addition, user can add prefixes
"+" or "-", to signal that those values should be removed from the
default list, not added to a fresh one. E.g.
$ spring jar app.jar --include lib/*.jar,-static/** --exclude -**/*.jar
to include a jar file specifically, and make sure it is not excluded,
and additionally not include the static/** resources that would otherwise
be included in the defaults. As soon as "+" or "-" prefixes are detected
the default entries are all added (except the ones exlcuded with "-").
Fixes gh-1090
Boot promotes the use of a templates directory for housing view
templates. Include this directory by default when building a jar file
from a CLI app.
Fixes#455
It turns out that loader.path=. was pathological and before this
change ended up making the classpath empty (loader.path=.,lib/
would have fixed it). With this change the old behaviour is still
supported, but if the only user-supplied path entry is "." (or
empty) then it is now kept, and translates into the root of the
current archive if running as "java -jar ...".
Fixes gh-270
A new command, jar, has been added to the CLI. The command can be
used to create a self-contained executable JAR file from a CLI app.
Basic usage is:
spring jar <jar-name> <source-files>
For example:
spring jar my-app.jar *.groovy
The resulting jar will contain the classes generated by compiling the
source files, all of the application's dependencies, and entries
on the application's classpath.
By default a CLI application has the current working directory on
its classpath. This can be overridden using the --classpath option.
Any file that is referenced directly by the classpath is always
included in the jar. Any file that is found a result of being
contained within a directory that is on the classpath is subject to
filtering to determine whether or not it should be included. The
default includes are public/**, static/**, resources/**,
META-INF/**, *. The default excludes are .*, repository/**, build/**,
target/**. To be included in the jar, a file must match one of the
includes and none of the excludes. The filters can be overridden using
the --include and --exclude options.
Closes#241
Use `maven-failsafe-plugin` to run CLI integration tests as part of
the `spring-boot-cli` project, removing the need for
`spring-boot-cli-integration-tests`.