4
votes

I'm busily getting my feet wet with ivy. I have an existing nexus repository running on my local PC, and an existing ant build script.
Both work fine.

Part of the build scripts have some files to retrieve our 3rdparty jar files (log4j, xmlbeans, junit, pdf, etc..) from a network share - which is klunky at best.

I want to use ivy's dependency mechanisms to retrieve these files from a nexus repository and use that in the build. Each 3rdparty lib has a name and an arbitrary set of files (jar, dll, license.dat, xml, etc).

Since we have a large number of these 3rdparty libs and each lib has multiple files - manual uploading to nexus is not an option -- i need something i can use to take a set of files, give them a lib name, a version number and upload the result to nexus. then I need to be able to retrieve this from ivy.

I managed to get the upload part to work, but the retreival process does not work. Using our xmlbeans lib as a starting point I created the following ivy.xml file

<ivy-module version="1.0">  
<info organisation="thirdparty_tools" module="xmlbeans" status="integration">  
<publications>  
  <artifact name="jsr173_api" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="saxon-dom" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="saxon-xpath" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="saxon" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="xbean" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="xbean_xpath" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
  <artifact name="xmlpublic" type="jar" ext="jar"/>  
</publications>  
</ivy-module>  

and then some ant script to publish it to nexus:

 <ivy:resolve/>  
    <ivy:publish <ivy:publish resolver="thirdparty" forcedeliver="true" update="true" revision="${version}" overwrite="true">  
      <artifacts pattern="[artifact].[ext]"/>  
    <ivy:publish/>  

And this all works fine. It publishes all the jar files to nexus in the expected directory.

The trouble comes when I try to use it in my build. I created the following ivy.xml file for my build:

<ivy-module version="1.0">  
    <info organisation="myCompany" module="GLB_Data"/>  
    <dependencies>  
        <dependency org="thirdparty_tools" name="xmlbeans" rev="2.2.0"/>  
    </dependencies>  
</ivy-module> 

Then when I run my build - it fails to find anything:

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::  
::          UNRESOLVED DEPENDENCIES         ::  
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::  
:: thirdparty_tools#jsr173_api;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#saxon-dom;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#saxon-xpath;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#saxon;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#xbean;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#xbean_xpath;2.2.0: not found  
:: thirdparty_tools#xmlpublic;2.2.0: not found  
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 

The problem seems to be with this pattern:

WARN: ==== public: tried  
WARN:   http //localhost:8081/nexus/content/groups/public/thirdparty_tools/jsr173_api/2.2.0/jsr173_api-2.2.0.pom  
WARN:   -- artifact thirdparty_tools#jsr173_api;2.2.0!jsr173_api.jar:  
WARN:   http //localhost:8081/nexus/content/groups/public/thirdparty_tools/jsr173_api/2.2.0/jsr173_api-2.2.0.jar  

ivy seems to be looking for the jsr173_api artifact under its own name, rather than under the xmlbeans folder where it was published to:  
[ivy:publish]   published jsr173_api to http //localhost:8081/nexus/content/repositories/thirdparty/thirdparty_tools/xmlbeans/2.2.0/jsr173_api-2.2.0.jar  

(urls obfuscated to prevent accidents).

so somehow I need to publish differently, or retrieve differently. Ideas and suggestions are much appreciated.

1

1 Answers

14
votes

Nexus is primarily a Maven repository, this means one must adapt to the way Maven structures artifacts.

Since you're focused on bulk loading Nexus I suggest looking at the answer to the following question:

Upload artifacts to Nexus, without Maven

If you wish to stick with ivy read on.....

Background

Need a Maven POM

Your first issue is that your Maven module(s) will need a POM file. This file describes the maven module and can be easily generated from the contents of your ivy.xml file (See solution below).

Secondly, Maven assumes that there is one primary artifact being built. For example:

<project>
  <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
  <groupId>com.myspotontheweb</groupId>
  <artifactId>donaldduck</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.1</version>
  <packaging>txt</packaging>
</project>

A Maven client would translate this information into the following URL:

http://<host>/<repo>/com/myspotontheweb/donaldduck/1.0.1/donaldduck-1.0.1.txt

This demonstrates how Nexus can store any type of binary dependency. The packaging parameter defaults to "jar".

How maven handles additional module artifacts

While Maven focuses on a single build artifact, it is possible to add additional supplementary artifacts by posting them into the same directory (as you've done).

These are not listed in the Maven POM. Instead a Maven uses a special "classifier" attribute. The following is a possible dependency declaration.

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.myspotontheweb</groupId>
  <artifactId>donaldduck</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.1</version>
  <classifier>metadata</classifier>
  <type>n3</type>
</dependency>

A Maven client would translate this into the following URL:

http://<host>/<repo>/com/myspotontheweb/donaldduck/1.0.1/donaldduck-1.0.1-metadata.n3

Open source projects typically release their source code in this manner.

Ivy Solution

So finally how does one publish files into Nexus using ivy?

First of all decide which artifact is the "main" build artifact and add an additional entry for your POM file:

<ivy-module version='2.0' xmlns:e="http://ant.apache.org/ivy/extra">

    <info organisation="com.myspotonontheweb" module="donaldduck" revision="1.0.1"/>

    <publications>
        <artifact name="donaldduck" type="txt"/>
        <artifact name="donaldduck" type="pom"/>
        <artifact name="donaldduck" type="n3" e:classifier="metadata"/>
        <artifact name="donaldduck" type="zip" e:classifier="disto"/>
    </publications>

</ivy-module>

The other files can also be listed but each must have a unique classifier attribute..... Here you will be faced with one of the classic problems translating an ANT project into Maven.... Each jar file you publish, will probably need to have a separate POM. They not really "supplementary" artifacts.....

Pretending that you don't need to publish multiple modules.... Use the following build targets to publish your module:

<target name="prepare" description="Generate POM">
    <!-- Optional: Intermediate file containing resolved version numbers -->
    <ivy:deliver deliverpattern="${build.dir}/ivy.xml" pubrevision="${publish.revision}" status="release"/>

    <!-- Generate the Maven POM -->
    <ivy:makepom ivyfile="${build.dir}/ivy.xml" pomfile="${build.dir}/donaldduck.pom"/>
</target>

<target name="publish" depends="init,prepare" description="Upload to Nexus">
    <ivy:publish resolver="nexus-deploy" pubrevision="${publish.revision}" overwrite="true" publishivy="false" >
        <artifacts pattern="${build.dir}/[artifact](-[classifier]).[ext]"/>
    </ivy:publish>
</target>

Nexus credentials

And for completeness here's the ivysettings.xml file containing the Nexus repository location and credentials:

<ivysettings>
    <settings defaultResolver="nexus-central"/>
    <credentials host="somehost" realm="Sonatype Nexus Repository Manager" username="????" passwd="????"/>
    <resolvers>
        <ibiblio name="nexus-central" root="http://somehost/nexus/content/repositories/central/" m2compatible="true"/>
        <ibiblio name="nexus-deploy" root="http://somehost/nexus/content/repositories/repo" m2compatible="true"/>
    </resolvers>
</ivysettings>

Update

Downloading artifacts

To retrieve all the published artifacts (not just the main one), you need to list them as follows:

<dependency org="com.myspotontheweb" name="donaldduck" rev="1.0.1">
    <artifact name="donaldduck" type="txt"/>
    <artifact name="donaldduck" type="n3" e:classifier="metadata"/>
    <artifact name="donaldduck" type="zip" e:classifier="distro"/>
</dependency>

Functionally the same as the following Maven fragment:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.myspotontheweb</groupId>
  <artifactId>donaldduck</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.1</version>
  <type>txt</type>
</dependency>

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.myspotontheweb</groupId>
  <artifactId>donaldduck</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.1</version>
  <classifier>metadata</classifier>
  <type>n3</type>
</dependency>

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.myspotontheweb</groupId>
  <artifactId>donaldduck</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.1</version>
  <classifier>distro</classifier>
  <type>zip</type>
</dependency>