I ended up, as @khmarbaise suggested in the comments, creating a new Maven submodule. In its pom I used the copy-rename-maven-plugin
to copy over the files I actually want to check, like this:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.coderplus.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>copy-rename-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${version.copy-rename-maven-plugin}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>copy-artifacts</id>
<phase>compile</phase>
<goals>
<goal>copy</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<fileSets>
<fileSet>
<sourceFile>${project.basedir}../core/target/.flattened-pom.xml</sourceFile>
<destinationFile>${project.basedir}/src/test/resources/flattened.pom</destinationFile>
</fileSet>
<fileSet>
<sourceFile>${project.basedir}../core/target/myArtifactId-${project.version}.jar</sourceFile>
<destinationFile>${project.basedir}/src/test/resources/myArtifactId.jar</destinationFile>
</fileSet>
<!-- more fileSets here -->
</fileSets>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Then I was able to read the pom file and do assertions on it. I ended up using Java's built-in XPath API, but you can use whatever.
I was also able to read the JAR file by turning it into a NIO FileSystem:
var filename = "myArtifactId.jar"; // or "flattened.pom"
var file = getClass().getClassLoader().getResource(filename);
var uri = URI.create("jar:" + file.toURI().toString());
FileSystem fs = FileSystems.newFileSystem(uri, Map.of());
You can get a list of files:
var path = fs.getPath("/");
Set<String> filenames = StreamSupport
.stream(walk.spliterator(), false)
.map(Path::toString)
.collect(Collectors.toSet());
Or read the content of a file:
var path = fs.getPath("/META-INF/MANIFEST.MF");
var out = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
Files.copy(path, out);
String content = out.toString();
assertTrue(content.contains("Multi-Release: true"));
var path = fs.getPath("/com/example/MyClass.class");
var out = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
Files.copy(path, out);
byte[] content = out.toByteArray();
var actualVersion = content[7]; // the major version of the class file is at this location
assertEquals(52, actualVersion); // 52 = Java 8
(Note that for this answer, I didn't bother to handle exception or close resources; you'll have to do that yourself.)