No, I think we should single-source. Checking in Pom.xml files will cause 
confusion whether we are a maven or gradle project. 

Julian

> On Feb 16, 2020, at 10:03 AM, Vladimir Sitnikov <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> GitHub has a dependency graph feature (see [1]) which can show dependency
> information right at the GitHub page.
> However, the only way they support Java dependencies is via pom.xml files
> (see "Supported package ecosystems" in [1]).
> 
> Sample output: https://github.com/javacc/javacc/network/dependencies
> 
> It looks like they discover pom.xml by their names only, so the files do
> not have to be linked via <modules> or whatever.
> Just a bunch of pom.xml would do.
> 
> Do you think it is worth committing pom.xml files to the repository?
> That is there might be a Gradle task to update pom.xml files which we run
> from time to time to update xml files.
> I guess it would be fine to have release versions always.
> 
> I've committed a couple of pom.xml for fun purposes here:
> https://github.com/vlsi/calcite/network/dependencies
> 
> 
> [1]:
> https://help.github.com/en/github/visualizing-repository-data-with-graphs/listing-the-packages-that-a-repository-depends-on
> 
> Vladimir

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