My project depends on some 3rd-party JARs which are not available in Maven Central.
Most information I see regarding this situation, including the official Maven Guide to installing 3rd party JARs, advises installing the artifact into the local repository using mvn install:install-file ...
. This works well when developing locally, but when the build needs to be performed on many different systems in an automated fashion, requiring this manual step is undesirable and impractical.
Another solution often presented is to install the dependency into an organization-wide repository, however there are circumstances in which that isn't possible.
With neither of those options being acceptable, I can think of two options:
- Store the JAR in a lib directory within the project and declare the dependency with a
system
scope (as suggested in several answers). This would seem to work on any system since the dependency is bundled with the project, but I've seen the use ofsystem
discouraged as a bad practice (typically with no more explanation than that). - Bind the maven-install-plugin to the
initialize
lifecycle phase to install the artifact to the local repository. However, as pointed out here, this would cause unnecessary overhead as it runs for each and every build. If there were a way to execute this lazily only when the artifact is not installed, that might be ideal.
I would like a standard Maven project that can be built using the regular Maven lifecycle, without any out-of-band "run scripts/init-dependencies first" steps required.
What is the best way forward?