What are the differences between Maven's mvn install
and mvn verify
commands?
How does the keyword clean
modify these commands?
mvn verify
- as said before - performs any integration tests that maven finds in the project.
mvn install
implicitly runs mvn verify
and then copies the resulting artifact into your local maven repository which you usually can find under C:\Users\username\.m2\repository
if you are using windows.
If you run maven multiple times without the clean
command and without changing any source code, you may notice that it says Nothing to compile - all classes are up to date
during the compile phase. If you add the clean
command before any other command, maven will simply delete the entire target
directory resulting in all classes being recompiled.
From https://maven.apache.org/guides/introduction/introduction-to-the-lifecycle.html:
mvn install
- install the package into the local repository, for use as a dependency in other projects locally
mvn verify
- run any checks on results of integration tests to ensure quality criteria are met
clean
is a lifecycle that handles project cleaning. Commands involving clean
before it will clear the entire directory, meaning that all the classes have to be recompiled.
I would like to add more points to elaborate on the accepted answer.
Maven has 3 build life cycles default, clean and site
The default lifecycle handles your project deployment, the clean lifecycle handles project cleaning, while the site lifecycle handles the creation of your project's website.
Each of these life cycles consists of phases. default has 23 phases, clean has 3 phases and site consists of 4 phases.
(For a complete list of phases please refer to this Lifecycle Reference)
mvn install
it will execute
all the preceding phases as well.(Which includes verify phase)Each of the said phases consists of goals. Goals are provided by the plugins.
A Build Phase is Made Up of Plugin Goals
However, even though a build phase is responsible for a specific step in the build lifecycle, the manner in which it carries out those responsibilities may vary. And this is done by declaring the plugin goals bound to those build phases.
So, The outcome of these two commands may differ with the plugins you are using and the phases they are bound to in your project.
When we execute phases or goals the order of execution is derived from the order we invoke them.
(ref: Execution Order)
For example, consider the command below. The clean and package arguments are build phases, while the dependency:copy-dependencies is a goal (of a plugin).
mvn clean dependency:copy-dependencies package
Don't get confused by the mention of clean as a phase here. clean lifecycle has a phase called clean as well.
If this were to be executed, the clean phase will be executed first (meaning it will run all preceding phases of the clean lifecycle, plus the clean phase itself), and then the dependency:copy-dependencies goal, before finally executing the package phase (and all its preceding build phases of the default lifecycle).
In answer to your questions,
In most cases the effect is the same as package. However, in case there are integration-tests, these will be executed as well. And during the verify phase some additional checks can be done, e.g. if your code written according to the predefined checkstyle rules. ( ref: Usual Command Line Calls, FailSafe plugin, Checkstyle Plugin)
install the package into the local repository, for use as a dependency in other projects locally.
As mentioned before clean is a phase of the clean lifecycle. It will run both the pre-clean and clean phases in the clean lifecycle. It will invoke prior to the install and verify phases in each case.