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Date:      Fri, 19 Jun 2020 23:00:59 +0100
From:      James Wright <james.wright@digital-chaos.com>
To:        Jonathan Chen <jonc@chen.org.nz>
Cc:        ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: sysutils/apache-mesos: Enable Java bindings request for review
Message-ID:  <b3fd479e-c398-423f-1848-71f7667015bb@digital-chaos.com>
In-Reply-To: <CAJuc1zNopnx46p57mnzJ8=pmFMt9PSd0AXkzRp-O4gnJtSxxnQ@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <8fd5c853-6dd6-a3f6-3ebf-da973cf6ae8e@digital-chaos.com> <CAJuc1zNopnx46p57mnzJ8=pmFMt9PSd0AXkzRp-O4gnJtSxxnQ@mail.gmail.com>

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On 19/06/2020 22:37, Jonathan Chen wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 at 07:14, James Wright
> <james.wright@digital-chaos.com> wrote:
> [..]
>>     One specific area of concern is dealing with the Maven dependencies
>> fetched mid-way through the build phase. I thought I had a solution
>> utilizing
>> the maven dependency plugin "go-offline" goal in the fetch phase and
>> providing a skeleton POM to describe the dependencies required. However,
>> there
>> is a question mark over where these dependencies should be downloaded
>> during the fetch phase;
> One possible way to do this is to provide an offline maven repository
> that has all the required dependencies pre-fetched. The pre-warmed
> repo is static, and can be retrieved and extracted during the
> fetch-phase. Your maven build can then specify
> "-Dmaven.repo.local=${WRKDIR}/local-repo".
>
> The java/eclipse port uses this strategy.
>
> Cheers.
> --
> Jonathan Chen <jonc@chen.org.nz>

I have seen that method used in some Java ports, but thought it would be 
better to
download the dependencies from the offical maven repo directly, rather 
than a
bundled tarball hosted on a personal/private repo which seems a less 
reliable source?





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