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I have a dependency in my POM that needs to be set to "provided" so it is not included at compilation, but it can still be referenced within my project. I would like the same dependency to have a scope of "test" when I go to run tests so I do not have to manually add the jar to my classpath. Is there a way to do this or achieve similar results?

Reasoning behind this is that I have some common jars that are provided in my JBOSS lib directory, so I want to use these and keep the "provided" scope of them for the war that is built. However, when I run JUnits from the command line, I want to use the jar from the repository without manually adding it to my classpath.

Thanks in Advance

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are you using the surefire plugin for running unit tests? – John Vint May 10 '11 at 14:45
Please clarify whether you refer to phases or different builds with "compilation" and "go to run tests" (see my answer and comments below). – Jan May 12 '11 at 7:44

4 Answers

From maven documentation:

provided This is much like compile, but indicates you expect the JDK or a container to provide the dependency at runtime. For example, when building a web application for the Java Enterprise Edition, you would set the dependency on the Servlet API and related Java EE APIs to scope provided because the web container provides those classes. This scope is only available on the compilation and test classpath, and is not transitive.

I checked this works for me in maven 3.0.3. Had the same issue that i needed to have a servlet dependency while compilation and test but not compiled in because it ships with the application server distribution.

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This is the correct answer, at least for my use case. @Steve, you should mark it as accepted :) – Adrian Petrescu Nov 16 '12 at 21:10

You could use a profile that either declares those dependencies as test or as provided - depending on what is more convenient for you:

<profiles>
    <profile>
        <id>whatever</id>
        <activation>
            <property>
                <name>env</name>
                <value>whatever</value> 
            </property>
        </activation>
        <dependencies>
            <dependency>
              <groupId>yours</groupId>
              <artifactId>yours</artifactId>
                <scope>provided</scope>
            </dependency>
        </dependencies>
    </profile>
    <profile>
        <id>test</id>
        <activation>
            <property>
                <name>env</name>
                <value>test</value> 
            </property>
        </activation>
        <dependencies>
            <dependency>
              <groupId>yours</groupId>
              <artifactId>yours</artifactId>
                <scope>test</scope>
            </dependency>
        </dependencies>
    </profile>
</profiles>

Those profiles get activated by setting the property env but there are other ways, f.e. default activation - have a look here for that.

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I think OP wants to have provided and test scope in the same build. – Andrew Spencer May 11 '11 at 8:19
@Andrew Spencer: I think the just has different use cases, save he's referring to a test in the same build. Which would be a different thing, of course... – Jan May 12 '11 at 7:42

Try declaring the dependency twice, once with each scope. Works in Maven 2.2.1.

Confusing things happen with dependency resolution, when the same artifact is in the dependency tree twice with different scopes, but I don't think it should be a problem in your case.

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Use the maven-surefire-plugin to run your junit tests. The scope of provided will also make it available on the test classpath.

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