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Here is the scenario:

Two Maven 3 project builds.

Build 1 has snapshot jars that get deployed to Nexus.

Build 2 has dependencies on the snapshots, referenced like 1.0.0-SNAPSHOT, that gets packaged up and zipped up using the mvn clean package assembly:single command.

The issue that we run into: Occasionally when the assembly is being created, the MANIFEST file for the jar will sometimes say some.jar.1.0.0-SNAPSHOT and sometimes it will say some.jar.1.0.0-datetime stamp, thus causing class not defined errors.

Is there a way to prevent this naming issue in the manifest file?

--edit--

Further research has discovered the following:

"If the snapshot was resolved from a repo then it will be timestamped, if it came from the reactor or local repo, then it will be -SNAPSHOT. The plugin calls into the maven resolution logic so this is core maven behavior. "

This is the exact issue that is being run into. The 2nd build manifest file always has an entry of ./lib/Framework-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar where as the actual jar file name changes between ./lib/Framework-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar and ./lib/Framework-1.0.0-timestamp.jar based on the quote above.

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This might help, it describes setting outputfilenamemapping to make file names consistent in snapshots. – prunge May 10 '12 at 4:46
1  
How is the manifest of the SNAPSHOT generated and how is it configured to produce this information? Furthermore why is mvn clean package assembly:single called and not simply mvn clean package cause package will call the configured assembly-plugin. – khmarbaise May 10 '12 at 8:25
There is no manifest for the SNAPSHOT itself. The manifest with the issue is in the 2nd build. And with some help from a co-worker, we found this If the snapshot was resolved from a repo then it will be timestamped, if it came from the reactor or local repo, then it will be -SNAPSHOT. The plugin calls into the maven resolution logic so this is core maven behavior. This is the exact issue I am having, I just need to get around this. As to why package assembly:single is being called, well that's because we are new to maven as a whole. – Thaldin May 10 '12 at 16:16

1 Answer

In <dependencySet> you need to set <outputFileNameMapping>${artifact.artifactId}-${artifact.baseVersion}.${artifact.extension}</outputFileNameMapping>

for example:

<assembly xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-assembly-plugin/assembly/1.1.2"
    xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-assembly-plugin/assembly/1.1.2 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/assembly-1.1.2.xsd">
  <id>appserverB</id>
  <formats>
    <format>zip</format>
  </formats>
  <dependencySets>
    <dependencySet>
      <outputDirectory>/lib</outputDirectory>
      <outputFileNameMapping>${artifact.artifactId}-${artifact.baseVersion}.${artifact.extension}</outputFileNameMapping>
      <includes>
        <include>application:logging</include>
        <include>application:core</include>
        <include>application:utils</include>
        <include>application:appserverB</include>
      </includes>
    </dependencySet>
  </dependencySets>
</assembly>

If you are using one of the built-in assembly descriptors you will need to replicate it for your self and add in the outputFileNameMapping entry yourself

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