You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to issues@maven.apache.org by "Chris Lance (JIRA)" <ji...@codehaus.org> on 2007/08/02 19:45:13 UTC
[jira] Updated: (MWAR-111) Transitive dependencies of optional
dependencies are included in WEB-INF/lib
[ http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MWAR-111?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Chris Lance updated MWAR-111:
-----------------------------
Attachment: AbstractWarMojo.java
This is a quick patch I put together against the trunk for this issue. Forgive my ignorance if there was an easier way to code it :-)
> Transitive dependencies of optional dependencies are included in WEB-INF/lib
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: MWAR-111
> URL: http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MWAR-111
> Project: Maven 2.x War Plugin
> Issue Type: Bug
> Affects Versions: 2.0.2
> Environment: Maven 2.0.7, JDK 1.6.0_01-b06, JavaEE 5
> Reporter: Chris Lance
> Attachments: AbstractWarMojo.java, TestProject.zip
>
>
> I have an EAR project (TestEAR) which contains two modules:
> 1. A JAR module (TestJAR) which has one dependency: commons-lang 2.3
> 2. A WAR module (TestWAR) which uses [these instructions|http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-war-plugin/examples/war-manifest-guide.html] to declare a dependency on TestJAR so that TestJAR is included in TestWAR's manifest classpath, but not copied into WEB-INF/lib (i.e. declares the dependency optional).
> This works fine for TestJAR itself, but its transitive dependency (commons-lang 2.3) is still copied into WEB-INF/lib. I don't believe this is the correct behavior since all dependencies of a JAR packaged in the EAR must also be packaged in the EAR. So, all a WAR should have to do is put the transitive dependencies in its manifest classpath to inherit them. Basically: in a WAR, transitive dependencies of "optional" dependencies should inherit the "optional" flag.
> I have included a simple test project as an example. Unzip, cd TestProject, and mvn install. Look in TestEAR's target dir and you will see that commons-lang is included in the EAR. Then look in TestWAR's target dir and you will see that commons-lang is also included in both the manifest classpath and the WEB-INF/lib dir.
--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
-
If you think it was sent incorrectly contact one of the administrators: http://jira.codehaus.org/secure/Administrators.jspa
-
For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira