Maven workarounds. The definitive guide. :-)
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<body>
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<h1>Building Acegi Security System</h1>
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<h2>Building from CVS </h2>
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<p>This project uses <a href="http://maven.apache.org">Maven</a> as project manager and build tool. You only need to</p>
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<h2>Checking Out from CVS </h2>
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<p>This project uses <a href="http://maven.apache.org">Maven</a> as project manager
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and build tool. We recommend you to install Maven 1.0.2 or greater before trying
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the following. <b>Note there are workarounds at the bottom of this page.</b></p>
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<p>To checkout Acegi Security from CVS, execute the following command on a
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single line:</p>
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<ol>
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<li>Install maven (at least 1.0).</li>
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<li>Run the following instruction on a single line to get latest sources from cvs HEAD </li>
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<pre>maven scm:checkout-project
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-Dmaven.scm.method=cvs
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-Dmaven.scm.cvs.module=acegisecurity
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-Dmaven.scm.cvs.root=:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/acegisecurity
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-Dmaven.scm.checkout.dir=acegisecurity</pre>
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<li>Run maven in any module directory, or <kbd>maven multiproject:artifact</kbd> in the root folder if you want to build all modules.</li>
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</ol>
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<h2>Building the site</h2>
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<p>Run <kbd>maven clean multiproject:clean multiproject:site -Dmaven.test.failure.ignore=true</kbd> to build a clean copy of the site.</p>
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<h2>Quick Build</h2>
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<p>Often people reading this document just want to see if Acegi Security will work
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for their projects. They want to deploy a sample application, and that's about it
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(after all, all the reference documentation can be read online at
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<a href="http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net">http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net</a>).
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In this case, execute:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/core</pre>
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<pre>maven jar:install</pre>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/samples/contacts</pre>
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<pre>maven war</pre>
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<pre>copy $ACEGI_SECURITY/samples/contacts/target/acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter.war $YOUR_CONTAINER/webapps</pre>
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</ol>
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<p>Then load up your web container and visit
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<a href="http://localhost:8080/acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter/">http://localhost:8080/acegi-security-sample-contacts-filter/</a>
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(or whatever location is appropriate for your web container).</p>
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<h2>Building All JARs</h2>
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<p>Sometimes people are already using Acegi Security, and they just want to build the
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latest code from CVS. To build all artifacts (JARs) and install them into
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your local Maven repository, simple execute:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/</pre>
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<pre>maven multiproject:install</pre>
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</ol>
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<p>You can then check your <code>$HOME/.maven/repository/acegisecurity</code>
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directory and it should contain all of the latest Acegi Security JARs.</p>
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<h2>Building The Site</h2>
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<p>By "site" we mean the web site you can browse at
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<a href="http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net">http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net</a>,
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which includes the reference documentation and all of the Maven reports.
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If you'd like a local copy, simply execute:
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<ol>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/doc</pre>
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<pre>maven multiproject:clean multiproject:site
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-Dmaven.jar.override=on
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-Dmaven.jar.clover-ant=1.3.3_01
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-Dmaven.scm.cvs.root=:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/acegisecurity
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</pre>
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</ol>
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<p>If you're an Acegi Security developer, you can omit the
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<code>maven.scm.cvs.root</code> property, as your SourceForge login will be used
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along with CVS-over-SSH (see workaround discussion below if you have problems).</p>
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<h2>Memory and Clover Workarounds</h2>
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<p>If you get an <code>OutOfMemoryError</code>, simply execute the following before
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calling Maven:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>set MAVEN_OPTS=-Xmx512m</pre>
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</ol>
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<p>If you get an <code>[ERROR] Invalid license: Invalid license file [E1202]</code>,
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this is because the <code>maven-clover-plugin</code> is using an old version of
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<code>clover-ant-xxx.jar</code>. Whilst Acegi Security's <code>project.properties</code>
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specifies a newer version, subprojects have an inheritence problem and don't pick
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this up (as of the time of writing). To workaround this issue, you need to
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specify those override properties on the command line. For example, to execute the
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Clover reports for the core subproject, you would do the following:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/core</pre>
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<pre>maven clover:html-report -Dmaven.jar.override=on -Dmaven.jar.clover-ant=1.3.3_01</pre>
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</ol>
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<h2>CVS-over-SSH Workarounds</h2>
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<p>Another possible problem is related to CVS-over-SSH ("ext" in CVSROOT) appearing to freeze.
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The following instructions assume you're an Acegi Security developer who has CVS access
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to the project, as if you're not then you shouldn't be trying to use CVS-over-SSH
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(the instructions above detail how to execute the "site" and "checkout" commands
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anonymously via "pserver").</p>
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<p>First check your
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<code>$ACEGI_SECURITY/build.properties</code> contains a
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<code>maven.username</code> equal to your SourceForge username. If your Maven CVS
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commands still don't work, test you have automatic CVS-over-SSH access operational
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by executing the following command:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>cvs -d :ext:YOUR_SOURCEFORGE_USERNAME@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/acegisecurity</pre>
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</ol>
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<p>If this CVS command doesn't work (without requiring any interaction such as password
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entry), you probably need to review your CVS setup.
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This will vary depending on your CVS client.</p>
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<p>One Windows-based command line CVS-over-SSH-with-auto-login combination that
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works very well is to install
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<a href="http://www.cvsnt.com/">CVSNT</a> (which has a CVS client console utility)
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and
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<a href="http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/">PuTTY</a> (download
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<code>putty.zip</code>) together, and use
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PuTTY's Pageant to automatically authenticate. A resource that describes in detail
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how to configure WinCVS (which internally uses CVSNT's command line client) with PuTTY
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(including automatic SSH authentication) is
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<a href="http://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=766&group_id=1">SourceForge's instructions</a>.
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One issue with the SourceForge instructions is they forget to mention how to
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tell the CVS command-line client to use <code>plink.exe</code>, which is PuTTY's SSH command-line
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version. The solution is to execute
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<code>set CVS_RSH=C:\Program Files\putty\plinkk.exe</code>
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(or whatever path is appropriate to plink) before running the CVS command line.
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In fairness, the SourceForge instructions target the Windows front-end to CVS, whilst
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we need the command-line version to work.</p>
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<p>If your CVS is working, try the <code>maven-changelog-plugin</code> on its
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own by executing the following command:</p>
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<ol>
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<pre>cd $ACEGI_SECURITY/</pre>
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<pre>maven maven-changelog-plugin:report</pre>
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</ol>
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</body>
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</html>
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