In order to support older RPM based distributions like CentOS5,
we should have one RPM available, which is not signed.
This commit creates an unsigned RPM first, then moves it over to
target/releases during the build, then builds a signed RPM.
The unsigned one is uploaded via S3, where as the signed one is
used for the repositories.
In addition, you can now build an RPM without having to specify
any gpg credentials due to offloading this into a maven profile
that is only activated when specifying `rpm.sign` property.
Closes#11587
Since elasticsearch doesn't shade artifacts anymore (see #11522), the dependencies list for RPM/DEB must be updated. Now we package all maven libs by default except the generated -shaded/-tests/-test-cours JARs and slf4j-api (marked as optionnal).
The change makes rest-spec-api a project in the same way as we build dev-tools. it packages the tests and api in a bundle using the maven-remote-resources-plugin and uses the same plugin in the plugins and core pom to unpack the rest-api-spec into the target directory and references the rest tests there in the test resources.
The main stimulus for this change is that for those using Eclipse the current build does not work. After running `mvn eclipse:eclipse` the Eclipse IDE errors because the rest-api-spec is outside of the project scope, meaning that every time the command is run (required whenever any dependencies change), the class path of all the projects has to be manually fixed.
In Maven parent project, in dependency management, we should only declare which versions of 3rd party jars we want to use but not force any scope.
It makes then more obvious in modules what is exactly the scope of any dependency.
For example, one could imagine importing `jimfs` as a `compile` dependency in another module/plugin with:
```xml
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.jimfs</groupId>
<artifactId>jimfs</artifactId>
</dependency>
```
But it won't work as expected as the default maven `scope` should be `compile` but here it's `test` as defined in the parent project.
So, if you want to use this lib for tests, you should simply define:
```xml
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.jimfs</groupId>
<artifactId>jimfs</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
```
We also remove `maven-s3-wagon` from gce plugin as it's not used.
This commit adds an additioal jar that is shaded and keeps all the
artifacts that are used by default on the server-side unshaded. Users
that need a shaded jar can now use the `shaded` classifyer to pull
the shaded minimized jar in instead. Including the shaded jar in a
downstream project looks like this:
```XML
<dependency>
<groupId>org.elasticsearch</groupId>
<artifactId>elasticsearch</artifactId>
<classifier>shaded</classifier>
</dependency>
```