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I have a Java project that I build using an Ant script. I am trying to convert the project to Maven.

One of the tasks generates a Java source file called Version.java that contains a static String representation of the compilation timestamp, as follows:

package com.foo.bar;
public final class Version {
 public static String VERSION="100301.1046";
}

The Ant task is very simple:

<target name="version" depends="init" description="Create Version.java">
    <echo file="src/${package.dir}/Version.java" message="package ${package.name};${line.separator}" />
    <echo file="src/${package.dir}/Version.java" append="true" message="public final class Version {${line.separator}" />
    <echo file="src/${package.dir}/Version.java"
          append="true"
          message=" public static String VERSION=&quot;${buildtime}&quot;;${line.separator}" />
    <echo file="src/${package.dir}/Version.java" append="true" message="}${line.separator}" />
    <echo message="BUILD ${buildtime}" />
</target>

Is it possible to do something similar in Maven, using generate-sources, or some other simple method?

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6 Answers

I don't think this is the good way to solve this kind of issue.

A better way is to put the version information in a properties file that will be read by your Java program:

Your properties file will contain the following line:

myapp.version=${pom.version}

Then, in your pom.xml, indicate that the file will be filtered by Maven :

<resources>
    <resource>
        <directory>the/directory/that/contains/your/properties/file</directory>
        <filtering>true</filtering>
    </resource>
</resources>

When Maven will build your application, it will replace all ${...} by their value. By default, ${pom.version} defines the version of the pom.xml (i.e. the value of the <version> tag).

Then, in your Java code, you will just need to load the properties file and retrieve the myApp.version property value.

Note that you can use the Build Number plugin to set something more "complex" than just your current version (for example if you want to put the build time in your property).

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If you declare src/main/java/com/foo/bar as resource, it's content will be copied into target/classes and break the packaging. This is not going to work IMHO. – Pascal Thivent Mar 18 '10 at 14:48
@Pascal Yes, you're totally right. I've removed this part... – romaintaz Mar 18 '10 at 14:55
+1 anyway for the properties approach :) – Pascal Thivent Mar 18 '10 at 14:59
I think that approach is great but not applicable when you have an annotation such as @PersistentUnit(value="myPU"). What do you think about this case? – Guido García May 31 '11 at 16:03

Here is another solution that will produce the same as Ralph's own answer, using pom properties filtering and a template file:

The template file (VersionJava.template placed in src/main/resources/version):

package ${ver.package.name};
public final class ${ver.class.name} {
    public static String VERSION="${ver.buildtime}";
}

The pom:

<properties>
    ...
    <ver.package.dir>com/foo/bar${project.artifactId}</ver.package.dir>
    <ver.package.name>com.foo.bar${project.artifactId}</ver.package.name>
    <ver.class.name>Version</ver.class.name>
    <ver.buildtime>${maven.build.timestamp}</ver.buildtime>
    <ver.template.dir>src/main/resources/version</ver.template.dir>
    <ver.template.file>VersionJava.template</ver.template.file>
</properties>
<build>
    <resources>
        <resource>
            <directory>src/main/resources</directory>
            <excludes>
                <exclude>version/*</exclude>
            </excludes>
        </resource>
        <resource>
            <directory>${ver.template.dir}</directory>
            <includes>
                <include>*.java</include>
            </includes>
            <filtering>true</filtering>
            <targetPath>${basedir}/src/main/java/${ver.package.dir}</targetPath>
        </resource>
    </resources>        
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <phase>generate-sources</phase>
                    <configuration>
                        <tasks>
                            <copy file="${ver.template.dir}/${ver.template.file}" tofile="${ver.template.dir}/${ver.class.name}.java" />
                        </tasks>
                    </configuration>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>run</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
                <execution>
                    <phase>compile</phase>
                    <configuration>
                        <tasks>
                            <delete file="${ver.template.dir}/${ver.class.name}.java" />
                        </tasks>
                    </configuration>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>run</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

Now this may seem excessive, but it is extremely versatile, and what I like most about it is that I have the template file in a readable format (rather than echo statements in the pom). This also allows me to modify the version class without having to change the pom

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This is aweseome! I would put the target file in /target/source/${ver.package.dir} and then (assuming Eclipse) add /target/source/${ver.package.dir} as a source folder. That way you exclude it from source control – John Oxley Feb 25 '12 at 6:42
@john-oxley I agree. The generated file should have been in the target folder rather than src. More over, I think if it was put in 'target/generated-sources/pom/${ver.package.dir}' then (assuming NetBeans) it would be included as a source automagically. I haven't tried this yet but I will, and if it works as expected I should edit my answer :) – Superole Feb 27 '12 at 12:50
up vote 4 down vote accepted

After more Googling, I came up with this (in the pom.xml):

<plugins>
  ...
  <plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>1.3</version>
    <executions>
      <execution>
        <goals>
          <goal>run</goal>
        </goals>
        <phase>generate-sources</phase>
        <configuration>
          <tasks>
            <property name="src.dir" value="${project.build.sourceDirectory}" />
            <property name="package.dir" value="com/foo/bar" />
            <property name="package.name" value="com.foo.bar" />
            <property name="buildtime" value="${maven.build.timestamp}" />

            <echo file="${src.dir}/${package.dir}/Version.java" message="package ${package.name};${line.separator}" />
            <echo file="${src.dir}/${package.dir}/Version.java" append="true" message="public final class Version {${line.separator}" />
            <echo file="${src.dir}/${package.dir}/Version.java" append="true"
              message=" public static String VERSION=&quot;${buildtime}&quot;;${line.separator}" />
            <echo file="${src.dir}/${package.dir}/Version.java" append="true" message="}${line.separator}" />
            <echo message="BUILD ${buildtime}" />
          </tasks>
        </configuration>
      </execution>
    </executions>
  </plugin>
  ...
</plugins>

It seems to work well and produces this Java file:

package com.foo.bar;
public final class Version {
 public static String VERSION="100318.1211";
}
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4  
This is a really bad solution. Better use the solution given by romaintaz. Generating sourcecode for this kind of stuff leads to unnecessary compiles as the java file is recreated each time and this triggers a cascade of compilations. Please do yourself and your coworkers a favor and don't do this! – Patrick Cornelissen Jul 24 '12 at 14:28
I was looking for a solution to create a text file version.txt inside webapp root, and I guess this is the best one. – Kerb Jan 31 at 8:07

You can also use maven-replacer-plugin if you feel ant is a bit ugly: The pom might be:

<project>
  ...
  <properties>
    <version.template.file>src/main/java/com/stackoverflowVersion.java.template</version.template.file>
<version.file>src/main/java/com/stackoverflow/Version.java</version.file>
  </properties>
  ...
  <build>
    <plugins>
      <plugin>
        <groupId>com.google.code.maven-replacer-plugin</groupId>
            <artifactId>maven-replacer-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>1.4.0</version>
            <executions>                
                <execution>
                    <phase>process-sources</phase>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>replace</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
            <configuration>
                <file>${version.template.file}</file>
                <outputFile>${version.file}</outputFile>
                <replacements>
                    <replacement>
                        <token>@buildnumber@</token>
                        <value>${svn.revision}</value>
                    </replacement>
                    <replacement>
                        <token>@buildtime@</token>
                        <value>${maven.build.timestamp}</value>
                    </replacement>
                    <replacement>
                        <token>@pomversion@</token>
                        <value>${project.version}</value>
                    </replacement>
                </replacements>                        
            </configuration>
      <plugin>
    </plugins>
  </build>
  ...
</project>

The Version.java.template might be:

package com.stackoverflow;

public final class Version {

    public static final String build_number="@buildnumber@";

    public static final String build_time="@buildtime@";

    public static final String pomversion="@pomversion@";

}
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As suggested by @Romain, you could read the version from a property file (either /META-INF/maven/groupId/artifactId/pom.properties if you can wait until the packaging or roll your own filtered file if you can't or if it doesn't provide everything you need).

And is you want to stick with your actual Version class, then have a look at this thread on the maven users list which is precisely proposing a solution for this (based on the antrun plugin that you'll bind on the generated-sources phase).

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