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4.3. Locating Maven Artifacts at Run Time
Abstract
At run time, the process of locating Maven artifacts is implemented by the Eclipse Aether library, which is bundled with the Karaf container (so that it is not necessary for Apache Maven to be installed on the container host). It is possible to customize the Karaf container's Maven configuration by editing the
etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file. For example, you can customize the list of remote Maven repositories and you can configure a HTTP proxy, if required.
4.3.1. Maven URL Handler Architecture
Overview
You can specify the location of an OSGi bundle using a Maven URL—for example, as the argument to the
osgi:install
command. When resolution of a Maven URL is triggered, JBoss Fuse uses a combination of the Pax URL Aether component and the Eclipse Aether component to implement artifact resolution. The basic strategy is to search the system/
directory, then search the local Maven repository, and then search the configured remote Maven repositories.
Maven URL protocol
The Maven URL protocol specifies the location of a Maven artifact, which can be retrieved either from local or remote Maven repositories. For example, an artifact with the Maven coordinates,
GroupId:ArtifactId:Version
, can be referenced by the following Maven URL:
mvn:GroupId/ArtifactId/Version
In a standalone (non-Fabric) container, a Maven URL lookup can be triggered by either of the following events:
- When
osgi:install
is invoked on a Maven URL to install an OSGi bundle; - When
features:install
is invoked to install a Karaf feature (a Karaf feature typically includes one or more Maven URL references).
Pax URL Aether layer
In Apache Karaf, the framework for resolving Maven URLs is the URL protocol handler mechanism, which is a standard feature of the Java language and JVM. To handle URLs prefixed by the
mvn:
scheme, Karaf registers the OPS4J Pax URL Aether protocol handler. The Pax URL Aether layer is thus responsible for resolving all mvn
URLs in the JVM. This layer can be configured through one or both of the following configuration files:
InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
- Stores the OSGi Config Admin properties used to configure the Pax URL Aether layer. In particular, it is possible to specify the locations of local and remote Maven repositories through the settings in this file. For details of the available settings, see Section 4.3.5, “Pax URL Aether Reference”.
UserHome/.m2/settings.xml
- (Optional) You can optionally configure the Pax URL Aether layer to read its configuration from a standard Maven
settings.xml
file (by configuring the relevant settings inorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
).
The main purpose of the Pax URL Aether layer is to facilitate configuration. The Pax URL Aether layer does not actually implement resolution of Maven artifacts. That responsibility is delegated to the Eclipse Aether layer instead.
Note
In some old
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
configuration files, you might see the setting disableAether=false
. This setting is obsolete, however, and has no effect on the pax-url-aether
component. The current implementation of Pax URL Aether (previously called Pax URL Maven) is completely dependent on Eclipse Aether.
Eclipse Aether layer
The Eclipse Aether layer is fundamental to Maven artifact resolution in Apache Karaf. Ultimately, resolution of Maven artifacts for the Karaf container is always performed by the Aether layer. Note that the Aether layer itself is stateless: the parameters required to perform resolution of a Maven artifact are passed to the Aether layer with every invocation.
Locating artifacts at run time
Figure 4.2, “How the Container Locates Artifacts at Run Time” shows the mechanism for handling a Maven URL and resolving a Maven artifact at run time.
Figure 4.2. How the Container Locates Artifacts at Run Time
The steps followed to locate the required Maven artifacts are:
- Resolution of a Maven artifact is triggered when a user invokes the
osgi:install
command on a Maven URL (or if a user invokes thefeatures:install
command on a feature that references some Maven URLs). - To resolve the Maven URL, the JVM calls back on the protocol handler registered against the
mvn
scheme, which happens to be the Pax URL Aether component. - The Pax URL Aether component reads its configuration from the
InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file (and possibly also from a Mavensettings.xml
file, if so configured). The Pax URL Aether layer parses the requested Maven URL and combines this information with the specified configuration in order to invoke the Eclipse Aether library. - When the Aether library is invoked, the first step is to look up any local Maven repositories to try and find the Maven artifact. The following local repositories are configured by default:
InstallDir/system
- The JBoss Fuse system directory, which contains all of the Maven artifacts that are bundled with the JBoss Fuse distribution.
UserHome/.m2/repository
- The user's own local Maven repository in the user's home directory,
UserHome
.
If you like, you can customize the list of local repositories to add your own custom Maven repository.If the Maven artifact is found locally, skip straight to step 7. - If the Maven artifact cannot be found in one of the local repositories, Aether tries to look up the specified remote repositories (using the list of remote repositories specified in the Pax URL Aether configuration). Because the remote repositories are typically located on the Internet (accessed through the HTTP protocol), it is necessary to have Internet access for this step to succeed.NoteIf your local network requires you to use a HTTP proxy to access the Internet, it is possible to configure Pax URL Aether to use a HTTP proxy. For example, see the section called “Configuring a HTTP proxy for Maven URLs” for details.
- If the Maven artifact is found in a remote repository, Aether automatically installs the artifact into the user's local Maven repository, so that another remote lookup will not be required.
- Finally, assuming that the Maven artifact has been successfully resolved, Karaf installs the artifact in the Karaf bundle cache,
InstallDir/data/cache
, and loads the artifact (usually, an OSGi bundle) into the container runtime. At this point, the artifact is effectively installed in the container.
4.3.2. Redeploying Maven Artifacts in a Development Environment
Overview
An important aspect of the Karaf container architecture is that deployed Maven artifacts are stored in the container cache, which is separate from the local Maven repository. Bundles and features get copied from the local Maven repository into the cache at the time they are first deployed. After that, any changes to the artifact in the local Maven repository are ignored.
Immutable artifacts
Usually, it makes sense to ignore changes in the local Maven repository, because Maven requires each specific version of an artifact to be immutable: that is, once you make a particular version of a Maven artifact available in a Maven repository, it must never change. Hence, it should never be necessary to go back and check the Maven repository for changes to the artifact.
SNAPSHOT artifacts
On the other hand, there is a partial exception to this convention: in a development environment, the same artifacts are constantly being rebuilt and retested, which requires them to be redeployed into the Karaf container. The correct way to deal with this is to attach the suffix
-SNAPSHOT
to the Maven version specifier. Maven treats these artifacts differently: for example, by periodically checking remote Maven repositories for updates and downloading the changed artifacts to the local repository.
Explicitly redeploying
When working with SNAPSHOT artifacts, you will also need to redeploy the changed artifacts to the Karaf container. One approach is explicit redeployment.
For example, say you have already deployed the
org.example/myfoobundle/1.0.0-SNAPSHOT
Maven artifact into the Karaf container and this bundle has the bundle ID, 751
. If you now rebuild this bundle (for example, by executing mvn install
in the bundle's Maven project), you can redeploy the changed bundle with the following console commands:
osgi:uninstall 751 osgi:install mvn:org.example/myfoobundle/1.0.0-SNAPSHOT
dev:watch command
Typically, a more convenient approach to redeploying SNAPSHOT artifacts is to enable automatic redeployment, using the
dev:watch
command. For example, given a particular bundle—with bundle ID, 751
—you can enable automatic redeployment by entering the command:
dev:watch 751
Now, whenever you rebuild and install the Maven artifact into your local Maven repository (for example, by executing
mvn install
in your Maven project), the Karaf container automatically re-installs the changed Maven artifact. For more details, see section "dev:watch, watch" in "Console Reference".
Important
Using the
dev:watch
command is intended for a development environment only. It is not recommended for use in a production environment.
4.3.3. Configuring Pax URL Aether Directly
Overview
The default approach to configuring the Pax URL Aether component is to edit the property settings in the
InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file directly. This approach is particularly convenient for a production environment, because the Maven configuration is colocated with the rest of the container configuration.
Note
In order to use the direct configuration approach, you must at least set the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property. If this property is not set, Pax URL Aether falls back to reading configuration from the Maven settings.xml
file.
Adding a remote Maven repository
To add a remote Maven repository to the Pax URL Aether configuration, open the
InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
configuration file in a text editor and edit the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property setting. The default is as follows:
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories= \ http://repo1.maven.org/maven2@id=maven.central.repo, \ http://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/repositories/public@id=jboss.public.repo, \ https://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/repositories/releases@id=fusesource.release.repo, \ https://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/groups/ea@id=fusesource.ea.repo, \ http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/servicemix/m2-repo@id=servicemix.repo, \ http://repository.springsource.com/maven/bundles/release@id=springsource.release.repo, \ http://repository.springsource.com/maven/bundles/external@id=springsource.external.repo
Where the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property is defined as a comma-separated list of Maven repository URLs. The backslash character, \
, functions as a (UNIX style) line continuation character and must be followed immediately by the newline character. The Pax URL Aether component supports special repository URL options, defined using the @Option=Value
syntax—see the section called “Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax”.
Note
The
@id
option specifies the name of the repository and is required by the Aether layer.
Note
The presence of the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property setting has an important side effect: it signals that the Pax URL Aether component takes its configuration from the etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
, not from a settings.xml
file (even if the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
property has been set).
Adding a default Maven repository
The default repositories are a list of repositories that the container always checks first. To add a default Maven repository to the Pax URL Aether configuration, open the
InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
configuration file in a text editor and edit the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.defaultRepositories
property setting. The default is as follows:
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.defaultRepositories=\ file:${runtime.home}/${karaf.default.repository}@snapshots@id=karaf.${karaf.default.repository},\ file:${runtime.home}/local-repo@snapshots@id=karaf.local-repo,\ file:${karaf.base}/${karaf.default.repository}@snapshots@id=child.karaf.${karaf.default.repository}
Where the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.defaultRepositories
property is defined as a comma-separated list of Maven repository URLs. The backslash character, \
, functions as a (UNIX style) line continuation character and must be followed immediately by the newline character. Local repositories should be defined using a URL with the file:
scheme. The Pax URL Aether component supports special repository URL options, defined using the @Option=Value
syntax—see the section called “Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax”.
Note
It is recommended that you leave the container's system repository as the first entry in the list.
Customizing the location of the local Maven repository
The local Maven repository plays a special role, because it is the primary local cache of Maven artifacts: whenever Maven downloads an artifact from a remote repository, it installs the artifact into the local repository. The usual location of the local Maven repository is
.m2/repository/
under the user's home directory. You can optionally customize the location by setting the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.localRepository
property in the InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
configuration file. For example:
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.localRepository= /home/jbloggs/path/to/local/repository
By default, this property is not set.
Configuring a HTTP proxy for Maven URLs
To configure a HTTP proxy (which will be used when connecting to remote Maven repositories), open the
InstallDir/etc/system.properties
file in a text editor and set the http.proxyHost
and http.proxyPort
system properties with the host and port of the proxy—for example:
http.proxyHost=192.0.2.0 http.proxyPort=8080
You can optionally specify a list of non-proxy hosts (hosts that can be reached without going through the proxy) using the
http.nonProxyHosts
property—for example:
http.nonProxyHosts=localhost|*.redhat.com|*.jboss.org
Note
An advantage of using the system properties approach to configuring the proxy is that these settings will be used both by the
mvn
URL protocol handler and by the http
URL protocol handler (see Section 4.1, “Locating HTTP Artifacts”).
4.3.4. Configuring Pax URL Aether through settings.xml
Overview
You can optionally configure Pax URL Aether using a standard Maven
settings.xml
file. This approach is particularly convenient in a development environment, because it makes it possible to store your build time settings and your run time settings all in one place.
Enabling the settings.xml configuration approach
To configure Pax URL Aether to read its configuration from a Maven
settings.xml
file, you must remove or comment out the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
setting in the InstallDir/etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file. For example, you can comment out the default repositories setting by inserting a hash, #
, at the start of the line, as follows:
#org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories= \ http://repo1.maven.org/maven2@id=maven.central.repo, \ http://repository.jboss.org/nexus/content/repositories/public@id=jboss.public.repo, \ https://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/repositories/releases@id=fusesource.release.repo, \ https://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/groups/ea@id=fusesource.ea.repo, \ http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/servicemix/m2-repo@id=servicemix.repo, \ http://repository.springsource.com/maven/bundles/release@id=springsource.release.repo, \ http://repository.springsource.com/maven/bundles/external@id=springsource.external.repo
When the repositories setting is absent, Pax URL Aether implicitly switches to the
settings.xml
configuration approach.
Location of the settings.xml file
By default, Pax URL Aether looks in the standard locations for the Maven
settings.xml
file (usually UserHome/.m2/settings.xml
). If you like, you can specify the location explicitly using the org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
property. For example:
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings= /home/fuse/settings.xml
For full details of the search order for
settings.xml
, see the description of org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
in the section called “Pax URL Aether configuration reference”.
Adding a remote Maven repository
To add a new remote Maven repository to your
settings.xml
file, open the settings.xml
file in a text editor and add a new repository
XML element. For example, to create an entry for the JBoss Fuse public Maven repository, add a repository
element as shown:
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd"> ... <profiles> <profile> <id>my-fuse-profile</id> <activation> <activeByDefault>true</activeByDefault> </activation> <repositories> <!-- | Add new remote Maven repositories here --> <repository> <id>jboss-fuse-public-repository</id> <url>https://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/groups/public/</url> <releases> <enabled>true</enabled> </releases> <snapshots> <enabled>false</enabled> </snapshots> </repository> ... </repositories> </profiles> ... </settings>
The preceding example additionally specifies that release artifacts can be downloaded, but snapshot artifacts cannot be downloaded from the repository.
Customizing the location of the local Maven repository
To customize the location of your local Maven repository, open the
settings.xml
file in a text editor and add (or modify) the localRepository
XML element. For example, to select the directory, /home/fuse/.m2/repository
, as your local Maven repository:
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd"> ... <!-- localRepository | The path to the local repository Maven will use to store artifacts. | | Default: ~/.m2/repository --> <localRepository>/home/fuse/.m2/repository</localRepository> ... </settings>
For a detailed explanation of the search order for the local Maven repository, see the section called “Local Maven repository search order”.
Configuring a HTTP proxy for Maven URLs
To configure a HTTP proxy (which will be used when connecting to remote Maven repositories), open the
settings.xml
file in a text editor and add a new proxy
XML element as a child of the proxies
XML element. The definition of the proxy follows the standard Maven syntax. For example, to create a proxy for the HTTP (insecure) protocol with host, 192.0.2.0
, and port, 8080
, add a proxy
element as follows:
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd"> ... <proxies> <proxy> <id>fuse-proxy-1</id> <active>true</active> <protocol>http</protocol> <host>192.0.2.0</host> <port>8080</port> </proxy> </proxies> ... </settings>
You can also add a proxy for secure HTTPS connections by adding a
proxy
element configured with the https
protocol.
Reference
For a detailed description of the syntax of the Maven
settings.xml
file, see the Maven Settings Reference. But please note that not all of the features documented there are necessarily supported by the Pax URL Aether component.
4.3.5. Pax URL Aether Reference
Overview
This section provides a configuration reference for the Pax URL Aether component, which is used to configure the runtime behaviour of Maven in the Karaf container.
Note
The prefix appearing in the property names,
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.*
, reflects the old name of this component, which was previously called Pax URL Mvn.
Local Maven repository search order
Pax URL Aether resolves the location of the local repository in the following order:
- The location specified by the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.localRepository
property in theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file. - Otherwise, the location specified by the
localRepository
element in thesettings.xml
file specified by theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
property in theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
file. - Otherwise, the location specified by the
localRepository
element in the.m2/settings.xml
file located under the user's home directory. - Otherwise, the location specified by the
localRepository
element in theM2_HOME/conf/settings.xml
file. - Otherwise, the default location is
.m2/repository/
under the user's home directory.
Pax URL Aether Maven URL syntax
The protocol handler registered by Pax URL Aether supports the following Maven URL syntax:
mvn:[RepositoryUrl!]GroupId/ArtifactId[/Version[/Type]]
Where
RepositoryUrl
has the syntax specified by the section called “Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax”; and GroupId
, ArtifactId
, Version
, Type
are the standard Maven location coordinates.
Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax
You specify a repository location using a URL with a
file:
, http:
, or https:
scheme, optionally appending one or more of the following suffixes:
@snapshots
- Allow snapshot versions to be read from the repository.
@noreleases
- Do not allow release versions to be read from the repository.
@id=RepoName
- (Required) Specifies the repository name. This setting is required by the Aether handler.
@multi
- Marks the path as a parent directory of multiple repository directories. At run time the parent directory is scanned for subdirectories and each subdirectory is used as a remote repository.
@update=UpdatePolicy
- Specifies the Maven
updatePolicy
, overriding the value oforg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.globalUpdatePolicy
. @releasesUpdate=UpdatePolicy
- Specifies the Maven
updatePolicy
specifically for release artifacts (overriding the value of@update
). @snapshotsUpdate=UpdatePolicy
- Specifies the Maven
updatePolicy
specifically for snapshot artifacts (overriding the value of@update
). @checksum=ChecksumPolicy
- Specifies the Maven
checksumPolicy
, which specifies how to react if a downloaded Maven artifact has a missing or incorrect checksum. The policy value can be:ignore
,fail
, orwarn
. @releasesChecksum=ChecksumPolicy
- Specifies the Maven
checksumPolicy
specifically for release artifacts (overriding the value of@checksum
). @snapshotsChecksum=ChecksumPolicy
- Specifies the Maven
checksumPolicy
specifically for snapshot artifacts (overriding the value of@checksum
).
For example:
https://repo.example.org/maven/repository@id=example.repo
Pax URL Aether configuration reference
The Pax URL Aether component can be configured by editing the
etc/org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.cfg
configuration file (uses OSGi Config Admin service). In pax-url-aether
version 2.4.2, the following configuration properties are supported:
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.certificateCheck
- If
true
, enable the SSL certificate check when connecting to a remote repository through the HTTPS protocol. Iffalse
, skip the SSL certificate check. Default isfalse
. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.defaultRepositories
- Specifies a list of default (local) Maven repositories that are checked before looking up the remote repositories. Specified as a comma-separated list of
file:
repository URLs, where each repository URL has the syntax defined in the section called “Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax”. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.globalUpdatePolicy
- Specifies the Maven
updatePolicy
, which determines how often Aether attempts to update local Maven artifacts from remote repositories. Can take the following values:always
—always resolve the latest SNAPSHOT from remote Maven repositories.never
—never check for newer remote SNAPSHOTS.daily
—check on the first run of the day (local time).interval:Mins
—check everyMins
minutes.
Default isdaily
. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.localRepository
- Specifies the location of the local Maven repository on the file system, overriding the default value (which is usually
UserHome/.m2/repository
). org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.proxies
- Can be used to specify a HTTP proxy, a HTTPS proxy, and non-proxy host lists. The value consists of a semicolon,
;
, separated list of entries. You can include the following entries (where each entry is optional):http:host=Host,port=Port[,nonProxyHosts=NonProxyHosts]
https:host=Host,port=Port[,nonProxyHosts=NonProxyHosts]
ThenonProxyHosts
setting is optional and, if included, specifies a list of hosts that can be reached without going through the proxy. The list of non-proxy hosts has its entries separated by a pipe,|
, symbol—for example,nonProxyHosts=localhost|example.org
.Here is a sampleorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.proxies
setting:org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.proxies= http:host=gateway,port=8080;https:host=sslgateway,port=8453
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.proxySupport
- If
true
, enable HTTP proxy support through property settings. When this setting is enabled, the HTTP proxy can be configured in either of the following ways:- Through the
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.proxies
property (takes precedence), or - Through the
http.proxyHost
,http.proxyPort
, andhttp.nonProxyHosts
Java system properties, set in theetc/system.properties
file.
Iffalse
, the preceding property settings are ignored. Default istrue
.NoteThis setting has no effect on proxy support when a Mavensettings.xml
file is selected to configure Pax URL Aether. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
- Specifies a list of remote Maven repositories that can be searched for Maven artifacts. Specified as a comma-separated list of
http:
orhttps:
repository URLs, where each repository URL has the syntax defined in the section called “Pax URL Aether repository URL syntax”.ImportantIf theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property is not set, Pax URL Aether reads its Maven settings from the relevant Mavensettings.xml
file instead (usually, fromUserHome/.m2/settings.xml
by default). In other words, the absence of theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property implicitly enables thesettings.xml
configuration approach. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.security
- Specifies the path to a Maven
settings-security.xml
file. This can be used to enable server password encryption. Default is${user.home}/.m2/settings-security.xml
. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
- Specifies a path on the file system to override the default location of the Maven
settings.xml
file. Pax URL Aether resolves the location of the Mavensettings.xml
file in the following order:- The location specified by
org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.settings
. ${user.home}/.m2/settings.xml
${maven.home}/conf/settings.xml
M2_HOME/conf/settings.xml
NoteAllsettings.xml
files are ignored, if theorg.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.repositories
property is set. org.ops4j.pax.url.mvn.timeout
- Specifies the timeout to use while downloading artifacts, in units of milliseconds. Default is
5000
(five seconds).