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I started to convert my project to maven because I needed to use a library that was distributed in binary form over maven only, but after banging my head against the wall on it for far too long I've decided to stop hurting myself and just use Ant. I'd like to just have maven download the jar and all of its transitive dependencies into a directory of my choosing so I can just check them into my SCM as I normally enjoy and be a blissful developer once again.
Any ideas how to do that easily?

4

7 Answers 7

306

The maven dependency plugin can potentially solve your problem.

If you have a pom with all your project dependencies specified, all you would need to do is run

mvn dependency:copy-dependencies

and you will find the target/dependencies folder filled with all the dependencies, including transitive.

Adding Gustavo's answer from below: To download the dependency sources, you can use

mvn dependency:copy-dependencies -Dclassifier=sources

(via Apache Maven Dependency Plugin doc).

7
  • but what if I want to copy all dependencies to my local repo? This is it supposed to be used for? Why do copy if it maybe already be in local repo. It is local anyway.
    – ses
    Aug 9, 2013 at 19:33
  • 2
    @ses A standard maven build (e.g. compile, test, package, install, etc.; not sure about validate) already copies all dependencies to your local repo by default. This is not for that. Instead it's for situations where you need your app's dependencies for whatever reason. I'm using it right now to inspect the dependent libraries for redundant API definitions (e.g. some libraries will include Javax APIs, which can conflict with other versions of the same API), but it's also good if your app needs its dependencies packaged with it for distribution, or just whatever. Aug 27, 2013 at 14:44
  • @Raghuram Technically you end up with all (resolved) artifacts in "target/dependencies". Further, there is the potential problem of name collisions as the "groupId" coordinate of a dependency is ignored. In other words, "dependency:copy-dependencies" does not preserve the layout structure.
    – wh81752
    Oct 25, 2014 at 10:29
  • @whaefelinger. You just need to set useRepositoryLayout to true
    – Raghuram
    Oct 27, 2014 at 6:13
  • @Raghuram "dependency:copy-dependencies" works for plain jars. It copied "some" transitive dependencies; could not figure out why some were left out of the equation. Further, POMs and parent POMs are copied but then without preserving layout structure; same is true for copying over source jars.
    – wh81752
    Oct 31, 2014 at 12:56
15

I finally figured out a how to use Maven. From within Eclipse, create a new Maven project.

Download Maven, extract the archive, add the /bin folder to path.

Validate install from command-line by running mvn -v (will print version and java install path)

Change to the project root folder (where pom.xml is located) and run:

mvn dependency:copy-dependencies

All jar-files are downloaded to /target/dependency.

To set another output directory:

mvn dependency:copy-dependencies -DoutputDirectory="c:\temp"

Now it's possible to re-use this Maven-project for all dependency downloads by altering the pom.xml

Add jars to java project by build path -> configure build path -> libraries -> add JARs..

1
  • 2
    Doesn't necessarily have to be an eclipse project. I opened a jar file in Java Decompiler and copied the pom.xml to an empty folder. I called mvn dependency:copy-dependencies as you described from that folder and got all the dependent jar files nicely copied to one single folder. Jun 19, 2018 at 20:41
9

Based on @Raghuram answer, I find a tutorial on Copying project dependencies, Just:

  1. Open your project pom.xml file and find this:

    <project>
      [...]
      <build>
        <plugins>
          ...
        </plugins>
      </build>
      [...]
    </project>
    
  2. Than replace the <plugins> ... </plugins> with:

    <plugins>
      <plugin>
        <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
        <artifactId>maven-dependency-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>3.0.0</version>
        <executions>
          <execution>
            <id>copy-dependencies</id>
            <phase>package</phase>
            <goals>
              <goal>copy-dependencies</goal>
            </goals>
            <configuration>
              <outputDirectory>${project.build.directory}/alternateLocation</outputDirectory>
              <overWriteReleases>false</overWriteReleases>
              <overWriteSnapshots>false</overWriteSnapshots>
              <overWriteIfNewer>true</overWriteIfNewer>
            </configuration>
          </execution>
        </executions>
      </plugin>
    </plugins>
    
  3. And call maven within the command line mvn dependency:copy-dependencies

After it finishes, it will create the folder target/dependency within all the jar's dependencies on the current directory where the pom.xml lives.

3
  • Where do I type the "mvn" command? Right click maven-project-> Maven -> .. ?? Jan 17, 2018 at 13:53
  • In a terminal command line on the folder where the pom.xml file is on.
    – user
    Jan 17, 2018 at 14:48
  • 1
    Didn't work. I think Maven is installed as a plugin only. I had to manually download Maven as well. Then mvn dependency:copy-dependencies worked! Jan 17, 2018 at 15:03
7

I found the next command

mvn dependency:copy-dependencies -Dclassifier=sources

here maven.apache.org

3

Please check if you have some config files in ${MAVEN_HOME}/conf directory like settings.xml. Those files overrides settings from .m2 folder and because of that, repository folder from .m2 might not be visible or discarded.

2

My simple script based on user based on Raghuram.

getmvndep.sh

#!/bin/bash
groupId=$1
artifactId=$2
version=$3
echo "<project>"                                                      > pom.xml
echo "  <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>"                          >> pom.xml
echo "  <groupId>com.temp.temp</groupId>"                            >> pom.xml
echo "  <artifactId>temp</artifactId>"                               >> pom.xml
echo "  <packaging>jar</packaging>"                                  >> pom.xml
echo "  <version>0.0.0</version>"                                    >> pom.xml
echo "  <dependencies>"                                              >> pom.xml
echo "    <dependency>"                                              >> pom.xml
echo  "     <groupId>${groupId}</groupId>"                           >> pom.xml
echo  "     <artifactId>${artifactId}</artifactId>"                  >> pom.xml
echo  "     <version>${version}</version>"                           >> pom.xml
echo "    </dependency>"                                             >> pom.xml
echo "  </dependencies>"                                             >> pom.xml
echo "  <build>"                                                     >> pom.xml
echo "    <plugins>"                                                 >> pom.xml
echo "    </plugins>"                                                >> pom.xml
echo "  </build>"                                                    >> pom.xml
echo "</project>"                                                    >> pom.xml
mvn dependency:copy-dependencies -DoutputDirectory="./libs/${version}"
rm pom.xml
0
0

Based on Patrik Polak's answer, based on user, based on Raghuram here's the same script for windows users.

CD /D %~dp0

IF "%1" EQU "" goto:EOF
IF "%2" EQU "" goto:EOF
IF "%3" EQU "" goto:EOF

SET groupId=%1
SET artifactId=%2
SET version=%3

echo ^<project^>                                      > pom.xml
echo   ^<modelVersion^>4.0.0^</modelVersion^>         >> pom.xml
echo   ^<groupId^>com.temp.temp^</groupId^>           >> pom.xml
echo   ^<artifactId^>temp^</artifactId^>              >> pom.xml
echo   ^<packaging^>jar^</packaging^>                 >> pom.xml
echo   ^<version^>0.0.0^</version^>                   >> pom.xml
echo   ^<dependencies^>                               >> pom.xml
echo     ^<dependency^>                               >> pom.xml
echo       ^<groupId^>%groupId%^</groupId^>           >> pom.xml
echo       ^<artifactId^>%artifactId%^</artifactId^>  >> pom.xml
echo       ^<version^>%version%^</version^>           >> pom.xml
echo     ^</dependency^>                              >> pom.xml
echo   ^</dependencies^>                              >> pom.xml
echo   ^<build^>                                      >> pom.xml
echo     ^<plugins^>                                  >> pom.xml
echo     ^</plugins^>                                 >> pom.xml
echo   ^</build^>                                     >> pom.xml
echo ^</project^>                                     >> pom.xml


mkdir .\%groupId%-%artifactId%-%version%-jars

call  mvn dependency:copy-dependencies -DoutputDirectory=.\%groupId%-%artifactId%-%version%-jars

del pom.xml

pause

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