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I am trying to use the Maven assembly plugin to build a jar-with-dependencies, except those that have provided scope.

I have copied the jar-with-dependencies into an assembly.xml file and configured its use in my pom. Here it is for reference:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<assembly>
  <id>injectable-jar</id>
  <formats>
    <format>jar</format>
  </formats>
  <includeBaseDirectory>false</includeBaseDirectory>
  <dependencySets>
    <dependencySet>
      <unpack>true</unpack>
      <scope>runtime</scope>
    </dependencySet>
  </dependencySets>
  <fileSets>
    <fileSet>
      <directory>${project.build.outputDirectory}</directory>
    </fileSet>
  </fileSets>
</assembly>

I have found out, that if I set the scope to provided, then I can build a jar that contains exactly what I don't want, but I cannot figure out how to get inverse behavior of that.

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What contains the JAR with the assembly that you shows as example? Does it contains only the runtime dependencies? – romaintaz Sep 22 at 9:27
It seems to contain everything but test-scoped dependencies. – Christian Vest Hansen Sep 22 at 9:28
No, it also has test-scoped dependencies. In what way can that possibly be a sane default, I wonder? – Christian Vest Hansen Sep 22 at 9:33

1 Answer

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This is a bit clunky, but you can use the maven-dependency-plugin to copy/unpack all the dependencies into your project, then use the assembly plugin to do the packaging.

The copy-dependencies and unpack-dependencies goals both have an optional excludeScope property you can set to omit the provided dependencies. The configuration below copies all dependencies into target/lib, your assembly plugin descriptor can be modified to use a fileSet to include those jars.

Update: Just tested this to confirm it works. Added the configuration for binding the assembly plugin to the package phase, and the relevant modifications to the assembly descriptor.

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
  <artifactId>maven-dependency-plugin</artifactId>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <id>copy-dependencies</id>
      <phase>process-resources</phase>
      <goals>
        <goal>copy-dependencies</goal>
      </goals>
      <configuration>
        <excludeScope>provided</excludeScope>
        <outputDirectory>${project.build.directory}/lib</outputDirectory>
      </configuration>
    </execution>
  </executions>
</plugin>
<plugin>
  <artifactId>maven-assembly-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>2.2-beta-4</version>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <id>jar-with-deps</id>
      <phase>package</phase>
      <goals>
        <goal>single</goal>
      </goals>
    </execution>
  </executions>
  <configuration>
    <descriptors>
      <descriptor>src/main/assembly/my-assembly.xml</descriptor>
    </descriptors>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

The fileSet section of the my-assembly descriptor would look like this:

<assembly>
  <fileSets>
    <fileSet>
      <directory>${project.build.directory}/lib</directory>
      <outputDirectory>/</outputDirectory>
      <includes>
        <include>*.*</include>
      </includes>
    </fileSet>
  </fileSets>
...

</assembly>
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I can't figure out how to get it to exclude the one test dependency I have, but apart from that it works perfectly. :) – Christian Vest Hansen Sep 22 at 12:53
this is even clunkier, but if you need to exclude the test scope, you could define multiple executions of the dependency plugin, and in each execution specify a different scope to be included (i.e. to omit test and provided, define two executions, one each for <includeScope>compile</includeScope>, and <includeScope>runtime</includeScope>) – Rich Seller Sep 22 at 13:03
1  
It turns out that one execution is enough. <includeScope>runtime</includeScope> is all I need - it implicitly excludes test, provided and system, which is perfect. – Christian Vest Hansen Sep 24 at 15:53

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