Hey folks!
There is a tool accessible from your project page that provides a list
(generated from your project downloads) of the third-party libraries
that are used by your project. The scanner searches through everything
in project's directory on the download server, including archive files.
For every JAR file it finds, it attempts to identify a corresponding CQ.
Any file that cannot be mapped to a CQ is highlighted in red. Click on
an entry to show where that file is located.
e.g.
https://www.eclipse.org/projects/tools/downloads.php?id=technology.dash
The tool only considers JAR files and it does its best work with OSGi
bundles that follow the standard OSGi bundle naming pattern.
The tool is intended to *assist* with the process of ensuring that
projects are distributing only approved libraries. It is far from
perfect. The tool does report--at least for some projects--many false
negatives (especially for JAR files that do not include version
information in the file name). *Don't panic* if your project page shows
a lot of red. This is one of the reasons why we make this page
accessible only to committers and don't advertise it widely. If
something jumps out at you, please try to mitigate. I'll help with
mitigation when the time comes to do your first/next release. If
something that you know you know is approved is showing up red, let me
know.
You can access the tool from your project's "PMI" page by expanding the
"Committer Tools" section and clicking on the "Review Downloads" link
(you'll have to login). It takes you here:
https://www.eclipse.org/projects/tools/downloads.php?id=<project.name>
(where <project.name> is your project's full id, e.g. 'technology.dash')
We have started work on a new version of the tool that will do a far
better job.
Note that the approval of third-party libraries is version-specific. If
your project has approval for one version of a library but your build
pulls in a newer version, you must either fix your build to pull only
the approved version, or create a CQ for the new version.
There is more information about contribution questionnaires (CQs) in the
Eclipse Project Handbook [1] (and the PolarSys [2] and LocationTech [3]
variants).
HTH,
Wayne
[1] https://www.eclipse.org/projects/handbook/#ip-cq
[2] https://www.eclipse.org/projects/handbook/polarsys.html#ip-cq
[3] https://www.locationtech.org/documentation/handbook#ip-cq
--
Wayne Beaton
@waynebeaton
The Eclipse Foundation
EclipseCon France 2016 <http://www.eclipsecon.org/france2016>
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