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
Previously, the ordering of the entries in an archive produced by
BootJar was different to the ordering of the entries in an archive
produced by BootWar. The latter placed application classes before
any nested jars, whereas the former was the other way around.
This commit updates BootJar to use the same ordering as BootWar and
adds tests to verify that the ordering is the following:
1. Loader classes
2. Application classes (BOOT-INF/classes or WEB-INF/classes)
3. Nested jars (BOOT-INF/lib or WEB-INF/lib)
4. Provided nested jars in a war (WEB-INF/lib-provided)
The tests also verify that the position of a library is not affected
by it requiring unpacking.
See gh-11695
See gh-11696
Stop running apply-plugin tests as part of the build since during a
release the version number will change and the jar will not be
available.
Fixes gh-11857
Update a couple of the `spring-boot-gradle-plugin` sample gradle flies
so that they include the running classpath. The additional lines are
contained within a tag which is ultimately filtered from the final
documentation.
Fixes gh-11857
While Spring Mobile support has been removed from Spring Boot, the
auto-configuration has been relocated to a separate module that uses
the same keys.
Flagging those keys as deprecated means that the IDE will be confused
when the extra jar is present on the classpath as it advertizes, as
it should, support fo them.
Closes gh-11844