This commit uses standard files for libraries managed by the repackage
goal of the Maven plugin. Previously, only the name of the file was used
which could lead to duplicate libraries if the name of the target file
deviates from the default. This typically happens when the
`build.finalName` property is specified on a dependent module.
Note that the `maven-war-plugin` has an additional mechanism to customize
the file name structure of dependencies. This feature isn't supported by
the repackage goal so an explicit mention has been added in the
documentation.
Closes gh-7389
Allow support for custom Lyout implementations with both the Maven
and Gradle plugin. Implementations of `LayoutFactory` can now be
specified to allow customization of the layout. In addition a
layout may now implement `CustomLoaderLayout` if it wishes to
write custom loader classes.
See gh-7263
This commit makes sure that the `skip` command-line property can be used
for all goals of the maven plugin.
A dedicated sample for integration tests has also been added as this
change may confuse users, especially those who wish to skip a certain
goal and not the plugin execution altogether.
Closes gh-7313
This commit improves the run goal to automatically fork the process when
devtools is present and log a warning when fork has been disabled via
configuration since devtools will not work on a non-forked process.
We don't want devtools to kick in for integration tests so the logic has
been placed in `RunMojo` requiring a couple of protected methods to
override.
Closes gh-5137
So far, one has to set the "fork" value to both the start and stop
goals. Since they have the same name, sharing them in a global
configuration element does the trick. However, the plugin also supports
auto-detection of the fork value according to other parameters:
typically if an agent or jvm arguments are set, forking will be
automatically enabled. This is a problem since the stop goal is not aware
of that.
This commit transmits the value in a property attached to the
`MavenProject`. That way, the stop goal can retrieve that value and
apply the same defaults. This has the side effect that specifying the
fork value isn't necessary anymore.
Closes gh-6747
Previously, configuring the build-info goal in a pom would result in
Eclipse reporting an error for the pom as it didn’t know if/when to
execute the build-info goal.
This commit adds lifecycle mapping metadata so that the goal is executed
on incremental builds. This ensures that the contents of the generated
file are kept up-to-date, reflecting the latest build time, etc.
Closes gh-6723
Previously, if mvn spring-boot:run with a forked JVM was killed with
CTRL+C, the run would be considered unsuccessful. This commits updates
the run mojo to consider a forked JVM that exists with 130 (the exit
code produced when exiting due to SIGINT which is what CTRL+C sends) to
be successful.
Closes gh-6498
The unpack location is (largely) an implementation detail and the
Repackage Mojo was the only place where it was explicity documented.
Rather than updating the outdated location, this commit removes it
entirely to avoid encouraging people to rely on the location.
Closes gh-6624
Where possible, code that previously synchronized on this (or on the
class in the case of static methods) has been updated to use an
internal monitor object instead. This allows the locking model that's
employed to be an implementation detail rather than part of the
class's API.
Classes that override a synchronized method continue to declare
the overriding method as synchronized. This ensures that locking
is consistent across the superclass and its subclass.
Closes gh-6262
In Maven land, provided and system-scope dependencies are very similar,
the latter being an special kind that allows you to specify the path to
the artifact rather than using the repository to locate it.
Prior to this commit, the repackage goal of the maven plugin was
inconsistent as it would repackage provided-scope dependencies but would
ignore the system-scoped ones.
This commit adds an extra boolean flag, `includeSystemScope` to control
this behaviour. For backward compatibility reasons, its default value is
`false`.
Closes gh-2224
This commit improves the `InfoContributor` infrastructure as follows:
* `InfoEndpoint` no longer breaks its public API and returns a Map as
before
* `Info` is now immutable
* All properties of the build are now displayed. Since we control the
generation of that file, there is no longer a mode to restrict what's
shown
* Build info is now generated in `META-INF/build-info.properties` by
default
Closes gh-5734
Previously, a JVM that was forked by spring-boot:run could be orphaned
when the parent process (the Maven build) was terminated in an IDE. Note
that this doesn’t happen when spring-boot:run is invoked from a shell.
This commits add a shutdown hook that registered when RunMojo forks the
JVM. The shutdown hook attempts to kill the forked JVM’s RunProcess
rather than relying on the death of the parent process being sufficient
to also kill the child.
Closes gh-5815
The commit adds a new BuildInfo task that can be used to generate
a build.properties file, intended for inclusion in the Actuator's
info endpoint.
A default instance of the task can be configure using the plugin's
DSL:
springBoot {
buildInfo()
}
Additional properties can also be configured using the DSL:
springBoot {
buildInfo {
additionalProperties = [
'foo': 'bar'
]
}
}
When configured via the DSL, the Java plugin's classes task is
configured to depend on the build info task. Alternatively, if more
control is required, the task can be declared and configured manually:
task buildInfo(type: org.springframework.boot.gradle.buildinfo.BuildInfo) {
additionalProperties = [
'foo': 'bar'
]
}
classes {
dependsOn buildInfo
}
See gh-2559
This commit updates the Maven plugin to generate a
`META-INF/boot/build.properties` file with various build-specific
settings (group, artifact, name, version and build time). Additionally,
the plugin can be configured to write an arbitrary number of additional
properties.
A new `BuildProperties` bean is automatically exposed when such a file is
present. If that bean is present, an `InfoContributor` is automatically
created to expose that information under the `build` key.
As for the git contributor, it is possible to only display the core
settings or everything using the `management.info.build.mode` property.
See gh-2559
This commit allows to generate the packaged artifact only locally by
adding a new `attach` property. If `attach` is set to `false` explicitly,
only the main artifact is installed/deployed.
Closes gh-5258
When an application is run as an executable archive with nested jars,
the application's own classes need to be able to load classes from
within the nested jars. This means that the application's classes need
to be loaded by the same class loader as is used for the nested jars.
When an application is launched with java -jar the contents of the
jar are on the class path of the app class loader, which is the
parent of the LaunchedURLClassLoader that is used to load classes
from within the nested jars. If the root of the jar includes the
application's classes, they would be loaded by the app class loader
and, therefore, would not be able to load classes from within the
nested jars.
Previously, this problem was resolved by LaunchedURLClassLoader being
created with a copy of all of the app class laoder's URLs and by
using an unconventional delegation model that caused it to skip its
parent (the app class loader) and jump straight to its root class
loader. This ensured that the LaunchedURLClassLoader would load both
the application's own classes and those from within any nested jars.
Unfortunately, this unusual delegation model has proved to be
problematic. We have seen and worked around some problems with Java
Agents (see gh-4911 and gh-863), but there are others (see gh-4868)
that cannot be made to work with the current delegation model.
This commit reworks LaunchedURLClassLoader to use a conventional
delegate model with the app class loader as its parent. With this
change in place, the application's own classes need to be hidden
from the app class loader via some other means. This is now achieved
by packaging application classes in BOOT-INF/classes (and, for
symmetry, nested jars are now packaged in BOOT-INF/lib). Both the
JarLauncher and the PropertiesLauncher (which supports the executable
jar layout) have been updated to look for classes and nested jars in
these new locations.
Closes gh-4897
Fixes gh-4868
Generalize the `skip` property to start and stop goals so that one
can control if the Spring Boot app is starting via a configuration
property.
Note that this only controls the Spring Boot Maven plugin and the
failsafe maven plugin should be updated accordingly.
Closes gh-4922
Ensure that Collections.isEmpty() is used to check if there are no
elements in a collections. This is more explicit and can be faster than
calling .size().
Closes gh-4783