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I have a section in a POM that looks something like this:

<scm>
	<connection>scm:cvs:ext:myhostname:/cvsroot/repo:module_name</connection>
</scm>

I typically use publickey auth to authentication against this cvs server, although it should accept my password as well.

When I attempt to run mvn scm:update, mvn release:prepare, or any other Maven goal that involves connecting to this scm, I get the following failure:

[INFO] Executing: cmd.exe /X /C "cvs -z3 -f -q update -d"
[INFO] Working directory: C:\Documents and Settings\matt\workspace\projectname
org.netbeans.lib.cvsclient.connection.AuthenticationException: Cannot authenticate. Reason: Publickey authentication failed.
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.cvsjava.util.ExtConnection.open(ExtConnection.java:136)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.cvsjava.util.CvsConnection.connect(CvsConnection.java:166)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.cvsjava.util.CvsConnection.processCommand(CvsConnection.java:498)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.cvsjava.command.update.CvsJavaUpdateCommand.executeCvsCommand(CvsJavaUpdateCommand.java:53)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.command.update.AbstractCvsUpdateCommand.executeUpdateCommand(AbstractCvsUpdateCommand.java:78)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.command.update.AbstractUpdateCommand.executeCommand(AbstractUpdateCommand.java:63)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.command.AbstractCommand.execute(AbstractCommand.java:59)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.AbstractCvsScmProvider.executeCommand(AbstractCvsScmProvider.java:750)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.cvslib.AbstractCvsScmProvider.update(AbstractCvsScmProvider.java:348)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.AbstractScmProvider.update(AbstractScmProvider.java:821)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.provider.AbstractScmProvider.update(AbstractScmProvider.java:770)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.manager.AbstractScmManager.update(AbstractScmManager.java:526)
    at org.apache.maven.scm.plugin.UpdateMojo.execute(UpdateMojo.java:89)

(lots more of the stacktrace....)

And further down in the stacktrace:

Caused by: java.io.IOException: Decrypted PEM has wrong padding, did you specify the correct password?
    at ch.ethz.ssh2.crypto.PEMDecoder.removePadding(PEMDecoder.java:109)
    at ch.ethz.ssh2.crypto.PEMDecoder.decryptPEM(PEMDecoder.java:286)
    at ch.ethz.ssh2.crypto.PEMDecoder.decode(PEMDecoder.java:319)

Followed by:

[ERROR] Provider message:
[ERROR] The cvs command failed.
[ERROR] Command output:

I'm running this on a Windows machine, with no cvs executable on the PATH. I do have my public key available under $HOME/.ssh, but it doesn't seem as if cvs/maven/scm is loading it here - as I'm not asked for the keyphrase for it.

So my question is ... is there anything special I need to do with Maven or the SCM/CVS provider to get it to recognize where my public key is installed, or how to actually use it? Currently it doesn't seem as if it is even being used as I am not prompted for it's passphrase.

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2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

So after debugging this a bit more, and downloading the source code for the maven-scm-provider-cvs package, I discovered that the CVS library used by this plugin uses the empty string ("") for the passphrase value if it finds your private key. To use the correct passphrase, the library expects you to set a System property with the key name maven.scm.cvs.java.ssh.passphrase.

So, if I run my scm:status goal like so:

mvn scm:status -Dmaven.scm.cvs.java.ssh.passphrase=<my passphrase>

I'm able to connect to CVS.

Gee - I really wish this was documented!

link|flag
well, it is now – sal Jun 15 at 18:24
Even after getting past this hurdle, the plugin still seems to have problems: "scm:status" just hangs. From looking in visualvm, looks like a deadlock. Using the cvsnative implementation (on Windows, with CVSNT) seems problematic as well. UGH. – matt b Jun 15 at 18:47
Works perfectly fine on a linux host though. Thanks CVS! – matt b Jun 15 at 18:47
vote up 0 vote down

I solved this by executing the cvs+ssh login command from the console before using maven. This added the magic numbers to $home/.ssh for the automated login to work.

If this is because of a self-signed cert, check out the InstallCert code on how to add the self signed cert to the client. Or this example on how to replace the default X509 Trust code.

link|flag
meaning you ran "cvs login" ? – matt b Jun 12 at 14:45
yes, the manual login added the magic number to the correct .ssh and .cvslogin files for the automation to work. – sal Jun 12 at 15:12
Too bad my server doesn't support it - pserver is disabled :( – matt b Jun 12 at 16:12
Does the server use a self-signed cert? – sal Jun 12 at 19:34
@sal - yes I believe it does. – matt b Jun 15 at 15:49

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