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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG-7852?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17748677#comment-17748677
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Vladimir Sitnikov commented on MNG-7852:
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[~sjaranowski] , thanks for mentioning dependencyConvergence, however, I do not 
think it is a generally recommended solution unless you make the said enforcer 
rule enabled by default in all Maven installations.

enforcer does not help users "resolve the conflicts properly". I agree enforcer 
might make the dependency resolution issue easier to spot, however, it does not 
treat the root cause. The idea behind the current issue is to tune Maven's 
behaviour so it resolves proper versions in the first place rather than perform 
silent downgrades.
{quote}You need resolve conflicts in your project
{quote}
Could you please clarify what you mean by "resolve conflicts"? Correct me if I 
am wrong, but it means "re-declaring all (conflicting?) transitive 
dependencies" which is a bad idea because re-declared dependencies might get 
out of date (e.g. they might become stale, bad versions, and so on).

 

> Use all the versions for dependency resolution rather than "nearest first" or 
> "declared first"
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: MNG-7852
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG-7852
>             Project: Maven
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: Dependencies
>            Reporter: Vladimir Sitnikov
>            Priority: Major
>
> Currently, Maven uses "nearest first", "declared first" rules for conflict 
> resolution: 
> https://maven.apache.org/guides/introduction/introduction-to-dependency-mechanism.html
> I suggest those rules are removed since they produce hard to reason 
> resolutions for transitive dependencies.
> Below I list reasons why both "nearest wins" and "declared first" yield 
> hard-to-predict behaviours, and they are likely to produce dependency 
> downgrades and the associated runtime errors.
> Here are some examples:
> 1) "Nearest first". Even though the rule sounds easy, it is not something the 
> users can control. For instance, if the project does not use Guava library, 
> some of the transitive dependencies could add a dependency on Guava. The user 
> has no control which dependency would be "the nearest" to declare Guava, so 
> user has literally no way to tell which Guava version will be used.
> The only workaround I see for the users is to declare Guava dependency 
> explicitly even though the project does not need it directly. It sounds like 
> Maven requires users to re-declare all the possible dependencies, including 
> the runtime-only ones.
> 2) "declared first". Of course, dependency order matters for classpath order, 
> however, it is not predictable in practice, and it might result in 
> downgrading dependencies. Imagine the project does not use Guice. However, 
> transitive dependencies might use Guice. At the same time, they might start 
> using Guice and stop using Guice, so the user can never tell which will be 
> the first project that uses Guice. Unfortunately, in Maven, the first project 
> that declares dependency wins, so  it might easily be the case that the first 
> mention of Guice will reference outdated version that would be incompatible 
> with the newer one required in another dependency.
> 3) Here's a real-life case: Maven downgrades protobuf-java dependency causing 
> something like NoSuchMethodError at the runtime. The step to reproduce is to 
> add dependency on dev.sigstore:sigstore-java:0.4.0. See [~hboutemy] analysis 
> in https://github.com/hboutemy/sigstore-maven-plugin/blob/import/analysis.md
> Long story short, sigstore-java does not depend on protobuf-java directly, 
> however, sigstore-java depends on several third-party libraries that 
> eventually depend on protobuf-java. Maven's "the first wins" behaviour 
> results in incoherent set of protobuf dependencies on the classpath.
> 4) see "unexpected" in MNG-5988
> To my best understanding, when it comes to transitive dependencies, both 
> "nearest first" and "declared first" are random variables which user can't 
> control unless they re-declare all the dependencies in their local pom. I 
> suggest Maven should not use random variables like "dependency depth" or 
> "dependency order" to drive conflict resolution.



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