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https://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-2205?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=346373#comment-346373
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Tibor Digana commented on MNG-2205:
-----------------------------------

@Paul
We shouldn't introduce a new XML element like <transitive/>.
The worst and still possible we can do is to introduce new scope.

> "provided" scope dependencies must be transitive
> ------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: MNG-2205
>                 URL: https://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-2205
>             Project: Maven 2 & 3
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Dependencies
>            Reporter: David Boden
>            Priority: Critical
>             Fix For: 3.x / Backlog
>
>         Attachments: transitivetest.zip
>
>
> A provided scope dependency can also be thought of as "compile-only".
> Project A requires Sybase JConnect on the runtime classpath. Project A 
> declares a "provided" dependency on Sybase JConnect.
> Project B depends upon Project A. Project B declares a "compile" dependency 
> on Project A.
> Project C depends upon Project B. Project C declares a "compile" dependency 
> on Project B.
> {noformat}
> C
> | - compile dependency
> B
> | - compile dependency
> A
> | - provided dependency
> Sybase JConnect
> {noformat}
> So, does Project C transitively depend on Sybase JConnect. Yes, of course! 
> The "provided" dependency needs to be transitive.
> Ultimately, when Project C gets deployed, Sybase JConnect needs to be 
> somewhere on the runtime classpath in order for the application to function. 
> It's valid for Project C to assume that Sybase JConnect is available and use 
> JDBC all over the Project C code. Project C is safe to do this because it can 
> happily deduce that Sybase JConnect will be there in the runtime environment 
> because Project A NEEDS IT.
> I've got Use Cases all over my aggregated build which make it absolutely 
> critical and common sense that provided scope dependencies are transitive. 
> For the (very rare) odd case where you don't want to inherit provided 
> dependencies, you can <exclude/> them.



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