| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
| |
| <!-- |
| Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one |
| or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file |
| distributed with this work for additional information |
| regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file |
| to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the |
| "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance |
| with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at |
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| http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| |
| Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, |
| software distributed under the License is distributed on an |
| "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY |
| KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the |
| specific language governing permissions and limitations |
| under the License. |
| --> |
| |
| |
| <!-- Special settings file for the maven installation on AT&T central Jenkins --> |
| |
| |
| <!-- |
| | This is the configuration file for Maven. It can be specified at two levels: |
| | |
| | 1. User Level. This settings.xml file provides configuration for a single user, |
| | and is normally provided in ${user.home}/.m2/settings.xml. |
| | |
| | NOTE: This location can be overridden with the CLI option: |
| | |
| | -s /path/to/user/settings.xml |
| | |
| | 2. Global Level. This settings.xml file provides configuration for all Maven |
| | users on a machine (assuming they're all using the same Maven |
| | installation). It's normally provided in |
| | ${maven.home}/conf/settings.xml. |
| | |
| | NOTE: This location can be overridden with the CLI option: |
| | |
| | -gs /path/to/global/settings.xml |
| | |
| | The sections in this sample file are intended to give you a running start at |
| | getting the most out of your Maven installation. Where appropriate, the default |
| | values (values used when the setting is not specified) are provided. |
| | |
| |--> |
| <settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0" |
| xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" |
| xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd"> |
| <!-- localRepository |
| | The path to the local repository maven will use to store artifacts. |
| | |
| | Default: ${user.home}/.m2/repository |
| <localRepository>/path/to/local/repo</localRepository> |
| --> |
| <localRepository>${user.home}/.m2/repository</localRepository> |
| <!-- interactiveMode |
| | This will determine whether maven prompts you when it needs input. If set to false, |
| | maven will use a sensible default value, perhaps based on some other setting, for |
| | the parameter in question. |
| | |
| | Default: true |
| <interactiveMode>true</interactiveMode> |
| --> |
| |
| <!-- offline |
| | Determines whether maven should attempt to connect to the network when executing a build. |
| | This will have an effect on artifact downloads, artifact deployment, and others. |
| | |
| | Default: false |
| <offline>false</offline> |
| --> |
| |
| <!-- pluginGroups |
| | This is a list of additional group identifiers that will be searched when resolving plugins by their prefix, i.e. |
| | when invoking a command line like "mvn prefix:goal". Maven will automatically add the group identifiers |
| | "org.apache.maven.plugins" and "org.codehaus.mojo" if these are not already contained in the list. |
| |--> |
| <pluginGroups> |
| <!-- pluginGroup |
| | Specifies a further group identifier to use for plugin lookup. |
| <pluginGroup>com.your.plugins</pluginGroup> |
| --> |
| </pluginGroups> |
| |
| <!-- proxies |
| | This is a list of proxies which can be used on this machine to connect to the network. |
| | Unless otherwise specified (by system property or command-line switch), the first proxy |
| | specification in this list marked as active will be used. |
| |--> |
| <proxies> |
| <!-- proxy |
| | Specification for one proxy, to be used in connecting to the network. |
| | |
| <proxy> |
| <id>optional</id> |
| <active>true</active> |
| <protocol>http</protocol> |
| <username>proxyuser</username> |
| <password>proxypass</password> |
| <host>proxy.host.net</host> |
| <port>80</port> |
| <nonProxyHosts>local.net|some.host.com</nonProxyHosts> |
| </proxy> |
| --> |
| </proxies> |
| |
| <!-- servers |
| | This is a list of authentication profiles, keyed by the server-id used within the system. |
| | Authentication profiles can be used whenever maven must make a connection to a remote server. |
| |--> |
| <servers> |
| <!-- server |
| | Specifies the authentication information to use when connecting to a particular server, identified by |
| | a unique name within the system (referred to by the 'id' attribute below). |
| | |
| | NOTE: You should either specify username/password OR privateKey/passphrase, since these pairings are |
| | used together. |
| | |
| <server> |
| <id>deploymentRepo</id> |
| <username>repouser</username> |
| <password>repopwd</password> |
| </server> |
| --> |
| |
| <!-- Another sample, using keys to authenticate. |
| <server> |
| <id>siteServer</id> |
| <privateKey>/path/to/private/key</privateKey> |
| <passphrase>optional; leave empty if not used.</passphrase> |
| </server> |
| --> |
| </servers> |
| |
| <!-- mirrors |
| | This is a list of mirrors to be used in downloading artifacts from remote repositories. |
| | |
| | It works like this: a POM may declare a repository to use in resolving certain artifacts. |
| | However, this repository may have problems with heavy traffic at times, so people have mirrored |
| | it to several places. |
| | |
| | That repository definition will have a unique id, so we can create a mirror reference for that |
| | repository, to be used as an alternate download site. The mirror site will be the preferred |
| | server for that repository. |
| |--> |
| <mirrors> |
| <!-- mirror |
| | Specifies a repository mirror site to use instead of a given repository. The repository that |
| | this mirror serves has an ID that matches the mirrorOf element of this mirror. IDs are used |
| | for inheritance and direct lookup purposes, and must be unique across the set of mirrors. |
| | |
| --> |
| |
| </mirrors> |
| |
| <!-- profiles |
| | This is a list of profiles which can be activated in a variety of ways, and which can modify |
| | the build process. Profiles provided in the settings.xml are intended to provide local machine- |
| | specific paths and repository locations which allow the build to work in the local environment. |
| | |
| | For example, if you have an integration testing plugin - like cactus - that needs to know where |
| | your Tomcat instance is installed, you can provide a variable here such that the variable is |
| | dereferenced during the build process to configure the cactus plugin. |
| | |
| | As noted above, profiles can be activated in a variety of ways. One way - the activeProfiles |
| | section of this document (settings.xml) - will be discussed later. Another way essentially |
| | relies on the detection of a system property, either matching a particular value for the property, |
| | or merely testing its existence. Profiles can also be activated by JDK version prefix, where a |
| | value of '1.4' might activate a profile when the build is executed on a JDK version of '1.4.2_07'. |
| | Finally, the list of active profiles can be specified directly from the command line. |
| | |
| | NOTE: For profiles defined in the settings.xml, you are restricted to specifying only artifact |
| | repositories, plugin repositories, and free-form properties to be used as configuration |
| | variables for plugins in the POM. |
| | |
| |--> |
| <profiles> |
| <!-- profile |
| | Specifies a set of introductions to the build process, to be activated using one or more of the |
| | mechanisms described above. For inheritance purposes, and to activate profiles via <activatedProfiles/> |
| | or the command line, profiles have to have an ID that is unique. |
| | |
| | An encouraged best practice for profile identification is to use a consistent naming convention |
| | for profiles, such as 'env-dev', 'env-test', 'env-production', 'user-jdcasey', 'user-brett', etc. |
| | This will make it more intuitive to understand what the set of introduced profiles is attempting |
| | to accomplish, particularly when you only have a list of profile id's for debug. |
| | |
| | This profile example uses the JDK version to trigger activation, and provides a JDK-specific repo. |
| <profile> |
| <id>jdk-1.4</id> |
| |
| <activation> |
| <jdk>1.4</jdk> |
| </activation> |
| |
| <repositories> |
| <repository> |
| <id>jdk14</id> |
| <name>Repository for JDK 1.4 builds</name> |
| <url>http://www.myhost.com/maven/jdk14</url> |
| <layout>default</layout> |
| <snapshotPolicy>always</snapshotPolicy> |
| </repository> |
| </repositories> |
| </profile> |
| --> |
| |
| <!-- |
| | Here is another profile, activated by the system property 'target-env' with a value of 'dev', |
| | which provides a specific path to the Tomcat instance. To use this, your plugin configuration |
| | might hypothetically look like: |
| | |
| | ... |
| | <plugin> |
| | <groupId>org.myco.myplugins</groupId> |
| | <artifactId>myplugin</artifactId> |
| | |
| | <configuration> |
| | <tomcatLocation>${tomcatPath}</tomcatLocation> |
| | </configuration> |
| | </plugin> |
| | ... |
| | |
| | NOTE: If you just wanted to inject this configuration whenever someone set 'target-env' to |
| | anything, you could just leave off the <value/> inside the activation-property. |
| | |
| <profile> |
| <id>env-dev</id> |
| |
| <activation> |
| <property> |
| <name>target-env</name> |
| <value>dev</value> |
| </property> |
| </activation> |
| |
| <properties> |
| <tomcatPath>/path/to/tomcat/instance</tomcatPath> |
| </properties> |
| </profile> |
| --> |
| </profiles> |
| |
| <!-- activeProfiles |
| | List of profiles that are active for all builds. |
| | |
| <activeProfiles> |
| <activeProfile>alwaysActiveProfile</activeProfile> |
| <activeProfile>anotherAlwaysActiveProfile</activeProfile> |
| </activeProfiles> |
| --> |
| </settings> |