Re: Download an artifact and its dependencies without a pom.xml
I have a similar tool that can be used to provision from and to a repository. https://github.com/simpligility/maven-repository-tools/tree/master/maven-repository-provisioner hth Manfred Curtis Rueden wrote on 2017-03-02 14:29: > Hi everyone, > >> My use case is that I want to run a class from a Maven artifact. > > I turned my "synthesize a dummy POM" approach into a full-blown shell > script called jrun [1]. > > You can use it to conveniently run Java code from any remote Maven > repository. For example, to spin up the Jython REPL: > >$ jrun org.python:jython-standalone > > If you add the ImageJ Maven repository to your ~/.jrunrc: > >[repositories] >imagej.public = https://maven.imagej.net/content/groups/public > > Then you can launch ImageJ (https://imagej.net/): > >$ jrun net.imagej:imagej > > Or even the entire Fiji distribution of ImageJ (https://fiji.sc/), which as > of this writing consists of 346 components! > >$ jrun sc.fiji:fiji:LATEST > > All without explicitly downloading or installing anything apart from Maven > and this one shell script [2]. > > If anyone knows a better / standard / best-practices way of doing this, > please let me know! But I am pretty pumped about how convenient this is. I > hope that jrun is useful to other developers too. > > Regards, > Curtis > > P.S. If the Mojohaus devs are interested, perhaps we could fold in > something like this as a new goal of the exec-maven-plugin. > > [1] https://github.com/ctrueden/jrun > > [2] Windows users need POSIX-compliant shell, though. I did not test it yet. > > -- > Curtis Rueden > LOCI software architect - https://loci.wisc.edu/software > ImageJ2 lead, Fiji maintainer - https://imagej.net/User:Rueden > > > On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 9:50 AM, Curtis Rueden wrote: > >> Hi everyone, >> >> Is there an easy way to download an artifact and its dependencies to a >> folder locally? >> >> * dependency:get will download a single artifact without needing a pom.xml. >> * dependency:copy-dependencies will copy the dependencies of the current >> project to a target location. >> >> But can these two functionalities be combined? >> >> My use case is that I want to run a class from a Maven artifact. >> >> The best I have come up with so far is to synthesize a dummy POM: >> >> g=org.scijava; a=scijava-common; v=RELEASE; m=org.scijava.script.ScriptREPL; >> echo "4.0.0x> pId>x0< >> dependencies>$g$a< >> version>$v" > pom.xml; >> mvn -DoutputDirectory=. dependency:copy-dependencies; rm pom.xml; java -cp >> '*' "$m" >> >> Can this be done more elegantly? >> >> Thanks, >> Curtis >> >> -- >> Curtis Rueden >> LOCI software architect - https://loci.wisc.edu/software >> ImageJ2 lead, Fiji maintainer - https://imagej.net/User:Rueden >> >> > - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org
Re: Download an artifact and its dependencies without a pom.xml
Hi everyone, > My use case is that I want to run a class from a Maven artifact. I turned my "synthesize a dummy POM" approach into a full-blown shell script called jrun [1]. You can use it to conveniently run Java code from any remote Maven repository. For example, to spin up the Jython REPL: $ jrun org.python:jython-standalone If you add the ImageJ Maven repository to your ~/.jrunrc: [repositories] imagej.public = https://maven.imagej.net/content/groups/public Then you can launch ImageJ (https://imagej.net/): $ jrun net.imagej:imagej Or even the entire Fiji distribution of ImageJ (https://fiji.sc/), which as of this writing consists of 346 components! $ jrun sc.fiji:fiji:LATEST All without explicitly downloading or installing anything apart from Maven and this one shell script [2]. If anyone knows a better / standard / best-practices way of doing this, please let me know! But I am pretty pumped about how convenient this is. I hope that jrun is useful to other developers too. Regards, Curtis P.S. If the Mojohaus devs are interested, perhaps we could fold in something like this as a new goal of the exec-maven-plugin. [1] https://github.com/ctrueden/jrun [2] Windows users need POSIX-compliant shell, though. I did not test it yet. -- Curtis Rueden LOCI software architect - https://loci.wisc.edu/software ImageJ2 lead, Fiji maintainer - https://imagej.net/User:Rueden On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 9:50 AM, Curtis Rueden wrote: > Hi everyone, > > Is there an easy way to download an artifact and its dependencies to a > folder locally? > > * dependency:get will download a single artifact without needing a pom.xml. > * dependency:copy-dependencies will copy the dependencies of the current > project to a target location. > > But can these two functionalities be combined? > > My use case is that I want to run a class from a Maven artifact. > > The best I have come up with so far is to synthesize a dummy POM: > > g=org.scijava; a=scijava-common; v=RELEASE; m=org.scijava.script.ScriptREPL; > echo "4.0.0x pId>x0< > dependencies>$g$a< > version>$v" > pom.xml; > mvn -DoutputDirectory=. dependency:copy-dependencies; rm pom.xml; java -cp > '*' "$m" > > Can this be done more elegantly? > > Thanks, > Curtis > > -- > Curtis Rueden > LOCI software architect - https://loci.wisc.edu/software > ImageJ2 lead, Fiji maintainer - https://imagej.net/User:Rueden > >
Download an artifact and its dependencies without a pom.xml
Hi everyone, Is there an easy way to download an artifact and its dependencies to a folder locally? * dependency:get will download a single artifact without needing a pom.xml. * dependency:copy-dependencies will copy the dependencies of the current project to a target location. But can these two functionalities be combined? My use case is that I want to run a class from a Maven artifact. The best I have come up with so far is to synthesize a dummy POM: g=org.scijava; a=scijava-common; v=RELEASE; m=org.scijava.script.ScriptREPL; echo "4.0.0xx0$g$a$v" > pom.xml; mvn -DoutputDirectory=. dependency:copy-dependencies; rm pom.xml; java -cp '*' "$m" Can this be done more elegantly? Thanks, Curtis -- Curtis Rueden LOCI software architect - https://loci.wisc.edu/software ImageJ2 lead, Fiji maintainer - https://imagej.net/User:Rueden