Capsule Maven Plugin
A maven plugin to build a capsule out of your app.
See more at capsule and the demo using the plugin.
A pro? Skip to the plugin reference.
Requires java version 1.7+ and maven 3.1.x+
Supports Capsule v1.0.3 & CapsuleMaven v1.0.3 and below (It may also work with new versions of Capsule, but use at your own risk).
- Building From Source
- Quick Start
- Building Automatically
- Capsule Contents
- Runtime Resolution
- Really Executable Capsules
- Providing Your App System Properties
- Additional Manifest Entries
- Custom File Name
- Modes
- FileSets
- DependencySets
- Custom Capsule Version
- Caplets
- Maven Exec Plugin Integration
- Reference
Building From source
Clone the project and run a maven install:
git clone https://github.com/chrisdchristo/capsule-maven-plugin.git
cd capsule-maven-plugin
mvn install
Alternatively you can let maven pick up the latest version from maven central.
Quick Start
In the simplest form, you can add the following snippet in your pom.xml
:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<type>fat</type>
</configuration>
</plugin>
And then run:
mvn package capsule:build
Please note that the package
command must have been executed before the capsule:build
command can be run.
The only requirement is to have the <appClass>
attribute in the configuration. This is the class of your app that contains the main method which will be fired on startup. You must include the package path along with the class name (hello
is the package and HelloWorld
is the class name above).
It is recommended to have specified the capsule.version
property in your pom so that the capsule plugin knows which version of capsule to use. If none is specified, the default version of Capsule will be used as specified at the top of the readme (which may not be the latest).
You can also set the capsule.maven.version
property to tell the plugin which version of CapsuleMaven to use.
Building Automatically
It is recommended to have an execution setup to build the capsules, thus eliminating you to run an additional maven command to build them.
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>build</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<type>fat</type>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
By default the build
goal runs during the package phase.
So now if you were to run simply mvn package
then the build goal will execute which will build the capsules into your build directory.
Or alternatively you could use the maven-exec-plugin
to run your app (as you develop), and then only build the capsule(s) when you want to deploy to a server. This plugin integrates nicely with the maven-exec-plugin
, see here.
Capsule Contents
Essentially Capsule can be packaged with as much or as little as you want.
Two things you need to think about to make up a capsule are, the app jar and the dependency jars. And these, as you will see, can be optionally included!
The source of dependencies is taken from two places. Firstly, from the <dependencies>
tag defined under the root <project>
tag, namely the app dependencies. Secondly the dependencies defined under the <dependencies>
tag within the <plugin>
tag for this plugin, also known as the plugin dependencies.
You have the option to include all, none or some of the dependencies.
This can be done with various flags as you will see later, based on their source, scope, their optional
flag and if they are direct (root) or indirect (transitive) dependencies.
The Simple Types
Generally, the most common types of capsules are the following three:
fat
: This capsule jar will contain your app's jar as well as all its dependencies. When the fat-jar is run, then Capsule will simply setup the app and run it.thin
: This capsule jar will contain your app's classes but no dependencies. Capsule will resolve these dependencies at runtime (in the cache).empty
: This capsule will not even include your app, or any of its dependencies. It will only contain the name of your app declared in the jar's manifest, along with capsule's classes. Capsule will read the manifest entryApplication
and resolve the app and its dependencies in Capsule's own cache (default~/.capsule
).
These are just the popular types that fit neatly into a box, and thus the plugin provides a simple flag to build these. Namely the <type>
field can be set to fat
, thin
or empty
.
To build a fat
capsule simply include the following:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<type>fat</type>
</configuration>
</plugin>
And similarly for thin
and empty
:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<type>thin</type>
</configuration>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<type>empty</type>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Note that the three simple types apply to only the compile
and runtime
scoped dependencies (but cover the transitive dependencies). More on this later.
If none of these quite fit, then the plugin can accommodate a wide range of different setups, it is encouraged you build the capsule with your own specific requirements without being bogged down on the three specific types listed above.
Custom Builds
(Note, to make a custom build, the <type>
tag must not be set!)
If the types defined in the <type>
don't quite fit your needs and you need something a little different, then you can easily customise the jar to a vast array of options.
Essentially it comes down to the following scenarios; whether or not to include the app or resolve it at runtime; what dependencies to include based on their source, scope etc and which to resolve at runtime; and same question for the transitive dependencies.
So to cover all these ideas, you have the following flags:
<includeApp>false</includeApp>
<includeAppDep>false</includeAppDep>
<includePluginDep>false</includePluginDep>
<includeTransitiveDep>false</includeTransitiveDep>
<includeCompileDep>false</includeCompileDep>
<includeRuntimeDep>false</includeRuntimeDep>
<includeProvidedDep>false</includeProvidedDep>
<includeSystemDep>false</includeSystemDep>
<includeTestDep>false</includeTestDep>
<includeOptionalDep>false</includeOptionalDep>
<resolveApp>false</resolveApp>
<resolveAppDep>false</resolveAppDep>
<resolvePluginDep>false</resolvePluginDep>
<resolveTransitiveDep>false</resolveTransitiveDep>
<resolveCompileDep>false</resolveCompileDep>
<resolveRuntimeDep>false</resolveRuntimeDep>
<resolveProvidedDep>false</resolveProvidedDep>
<resolveSystemDep>false</resolveSystemDep>
<resolveTestDep>false</resolveTestDep>
<resolveOptionalDep>false</resolveOptionalDep>
All of the above settings are false
by default.
These includeXYZ
flags essentially tell the plugin what to include/embed in the jar. Of course if there are any of these that you exclude from the capsule jar, and in turn they are needed for the launch, then runtime resolution will be needed by marking some resolveXYZ
to true
.
A fat
capsule essentially is equivalent to having only the following set to true
:
<includeApp>true</includeApp>
<includeAppDep>true</includeAppDep>
<includePluginDep>true</includePluginDep>
<includeCompileDep>true</includeCompileDep>
<includeRuntimeDep>true</includeRuntimeDep>
<includeTransitiveDep>true</includeTransitiveDep>
So as you can see, we include the app, and all its compile and runtime dependencies (including the transitive dependencies).
So if a thin
capsule is desired, it can be done like so:
<includeApp>true</includeApp>
<resolveAppDep>true</resolveAppDep>
<resolvePluginDep>true</resolvePluginDep>
<resolveCompileDep>true</resolveCompileDep>
<resolveRuntimeDep>true</resolveRuntimeDep>
<resolveTransitiveDep>true</resolveTransitiveDep>
And similarly an empty
capsule is done with the following:
<resolveApp>true</resolveApp>
<resolveAppDep>true</resolveAppDep>
<resolvePluginDep>true</resolvePluginDep>
<resolveCompileDep>true</resolveCompileDep>
<resolveRuntimeDep>true</resolveRuntimeDep>
<resolveTransitiveDep>true</resolveTransitiveDep>
Including Dependencies based on source
The source of dependencies is taken from two places. Firstly, from the <dependencies>
tag defined under the root <project>
tag, namely the app dependencies. Secondly the dependencies defined under the <dependencies>
tag within the <plugin>
tag for this plugin, also known as the plugin dependencies.
You can choose to include a source by using <includeAppDep>true</includeAppDep>
or <includePluginDep>true</includeAppDep>
.
Including Dependencies based on scope
You can include certain dependencies by setting the scope of the dependency to something that you will be including in the built capsule.
All possible options for scope are compile
, runtime
, provided
, system
or test
.
Note that the plugin dependencies can only have scope compile
, runtime
or system
.
So you could set your dependency to scope runtime
like so:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<version>17.0</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
And then mark the necessary flags:
<configuration>
<includeRuntimeDep>true</includeRuntimeDep>
</configuration>
or if you want to resolve them instead:
<configuration>
<resolveRuntimeDep>true</resolveRuntimeDep>
</configuration>
So the above will not include the dependencies marked with runtime
scope, however it will resolve them at launch.
Just make sure you have a source also set to true for example, <includeAppDep>true<includeAppDep>
or <resolveAppDep>true<resolveAppDep>
.
Include Optional Dependencies
Dependencies can be marked with the <optional>
tag, for example:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<optional>true</optional>
</dependency>
To include optional dependencies in the capsule, you simply need to turn on a flag:
<configuration>
<includeOptionalDep>true</includeOptionalDep>
</configuration>
or if you want to resolve them instead:
<configuration>
<resolveOptionalDep>true</resolveOptionalDep>
</configuration>
Just make sure you have a source also set to true for example, <includeAppDep>true<includeAppDep>
or <resolveAppDep>true<resolveAppDep>
.
Include Transitive Dependencies
Transitive dependencies are essentially the deep dependencies or in other wors the dependencies of your dependencies.
You can include transitive dependencies by setting the configuration property includeTransitiveDep
to true:
<configuration>
<includeTransitiveDep>true</includeTransitiveDep>
</configuration>
or if you want to resolve them instead:
<configuration>
<resolveTransitiveDep>true</resolveTransitiveDep>
</configuration>
Just make sure you have a source also set to true for example, <includeAppDep>true<includeAppDep>
or <resolveAppDep>true<resolveAppDep>
.
Understanding Dependency Scope
In maven, you can essentially define the following five scopes for your dependencies; compile
, runtime
, provided
, system
and test
.
You set the scope on each of the project's direct dependencies. Although transitive dependencies will have defined scope also, this only applies specifically to their own project.
The scope of transitive dependencies in relation to the main project will be directly affected by the scope of its parent dependency. We call this the 'direct-scope'.
Also note, that transitive dependencies with scope other than compile
or runtime
are not applicable to the main project and thus are excluded always.
So for each direct dependency with scope:
compile
compile
transitive dependencies havecompile
direct-scope.runtime
transitive dependencies haveruntime
direct-scope.
runtime
compile
transitive dependencies havecompile
direct-scope.runtime
transitive dependencies haveruntime
direct-scope.
provided
compile
&runtime
transitive dependencies haveprovided
direct-scope.
system
compile
&runtime
transitive dependencies havesystem
direct-scope.
test
compile
&runtime
transitive dependencies havetest
direct-scope.
So, all the includeXYZ
and resolveXYZ
follow the above rules.
Runtime Resolution
To perform the resolution at runtime (such as needed by the thin
and empty
types), the capsule will include the necessary code to do this (namely the MavenCaplet
). This adds slightly to the overall file size of the generated capsule jar. This additional code is obviously mandatory if any dependencies (or the app itself) needs to be resolved at runtime.
To build the capsule without this additional code, make sure none of the resolveXYZ
flags are set to true (by default all set to false or the <type>
is set to fat
).
If making a custom build and resolution is needed at runtime, then add the desired resolveXYZ
tags in the <configuration>
tag like so:
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<resolveApp>true<resolveApp>
<resolveCompileDep>true<resolveCompileDep>
</configuration>
Really Executable Capsules (Mac/Linux only)
It is possible to chmod+x
a jar so it can be run without needing to prefix the command with java -jar
. You can see more info about this concept here and here.
The plugin can build really executable jars for you automatically!
Add the <chmod>true</chmod>
to your configuration (default is false).
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<chmod>true</chmod>
</configuration>
The plugin will then output the really executables with the extension .x
.
target/my-app-1.0-cap.jar
target/my-app-1.0-cap.x
So normally you would run the capsule like so:
java -jar target/my-app-1.0-cap.jar
However with the really executable builds, you can alternatively run the capsule nice and cleanly:
./target/my-app-1.0-cap.x
or
sh target/my-app-1.0-cap.x
Trampoline
When a capsule is launched, two processes are involved: first, a JVM process runs the capsule launcher, which then starts up a second, child process that runs the actual application. The two processes are linked so that killing or suspending one, will do the same for the other. While this model works well enough in most scenarios, sometimes it is desirable to directly launch the process running the application, rather than indirectly. This is supported by "capsule trampoline". See more here at capsule.
Essentially the concept defines that that when you execute the built Capsule jar, it will simply just output (in text) the full command needed to run the app (this will be a long command with all jvm and classpath args defined). The idea is then to just copy/paste the command and execute it raw.
If you would like to build 'trampoline' executable capsules you can add the <trampoline>true</trampoline>
flag to the plugin's configuration:
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<trampoline>true</trampoline>
</configuration>
This will build .tx
files like so:
target/my-app-1.0-cap.jar
target/my-app-1.0-cap.tx
Which you can run:
./target/my-app-1.0-cap.tx
This will output the command which you then have to copy and paste and run it yourself manually, thus ensuring you have only one process for your app.
Providing your app System Properties
Capsule also supports providing your app with system properties. This can be done at runtime but its also convenient to define some properties at build time too.
Simply add the <properties>
tag in the plugin's configuration and declare any properties.
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<properties>
<property>
<key>boo</key>
<value>ya</value>
</property>
</properties>
</configuration>
Then, anywhere in your app's code you call upon this system property:
package hello;
public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println(System.getProperty("boo")); // outputs 'ya'
}
}
Additional Manifest Entries
Capsule supports a number of manifest entries to configure your app to your heart's content. See the full reference here.
So for e.g if you would like to set the JVM-Args
:
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<manifest>
<entry>
<key>JVM-Args</key>
<value>-Xmx512m</value>
</entry>
</manifest>
</configuration>
Note you do not need Main-Class
, Application-Class
, Application
, Dependencies
and System-Properties
as these are generated automatically by the plugin.
Custom File Name
The output capsule jar's name is as per the <finalName>
tag with the appending of the -capsule
, by default.
Essentially this is <finalName>-capsule.jar
so for example your app might be app-capsule.jar
.
If you wish to have custom text, then you can optionally set either of parameters fileName
and fileDesc
which make up the format:
<fileName><fileDesc>.jar
So for example if you'd like to have your output capsule jar like 'my-amazing-app-cap.jar' then you would do the following:
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<fileName>my-amazing-app</fileName>
<fileDesc>-cap</fileDesc>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
Modes
Capsule supports the concept of modes, which essentially means defining your app jar into different ways depending on certain characteristics. You define different modes for your app by setting specific manifest and/or system properties for each mode. So for e.g you could have a test mode which will define a test database connection, and likewise a production mode which will define a production database connection. You can then easily run your capsule in a specific mode by adding the -Dcapsule.mode=MODE
argument at the command line. See more at capsule modes.
The maven plugin supports a convenient way to define modes for your capsule (include the below in the <configuration>
tag).
<modes>
<mode>
<name>production</name>
<properties>
<property>
<key>dbConnectionServer</key>
<value>aws.amazon.example</value>
</property>
</properties>
<manifest>
<entry>
<key>JVM-Args</key>
<value>-Xmx1024m</value>
</entry>
</manifest>
</mode>
</modes>
A mode must have the <name>
tag, and you may define two things for each mode, namely, <properties>
and <manifest>
(in exactly the same syntax as above).
If the mode is activated at runtime (-Dcapsule.mode=production
) then the properties listed in the mode will completely override the properties set in the main configuration. Thus, only the properties listed in the mode section will be available to the app.
However, the mode's manifest entries will be appended to the existing set of entries defined in the main section (unless any match up, then the mode's entry will override).
Of course, you can define multiple modes.
FileSets
If you'd like to copy over specific files from some local folder then you can use the assembly style <fileSets>
in the <configuration>
tag.
<fileSets>
<fileSet>
<directory>config/</directory>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
<includes>
<include>myconfig.yml</include>
</includes>
</fileSet>
</fileSets>
So from above we copy over the myconfig.yml file that we have in our config folder and place it within the config directory in the capsule jar (the plugin will create this folder in the capsule jar).
You specify a number of <fileSet>
which must contain the <directory>
(the location of the folder to copy), the <outputDirectory>
(the destination directory within the capsule jar) and finally a set of <include>
to specify which files from the <directory>
to copy over.
The <include>
tag supports a single wildcard *
. So for example <include>*.yml</include>
, <include>myconfig*</include>
or <include>my*.yml</include>
can work.
DependencySets
If you'd like to copy over specific files from files embedded in some dependency then you can use the assembly style <dependencySets>
in the <configuration>
tag.
<dependencySets>
<dependencySet>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
<includes>
<include>META-INF/MANIFEST.MF</include>
</includes>
</dependencySet>
</dependencySets>
So from the above we pull the manifest file from within Google Guava's jar and place it within the config directory in the capsule jar (the plugin will create this folder in the capsule jar).
You specify a number of <dependencySet>
which must contain the coords (<groupdId>
, <artifactId>
, <classifier>
, <version>
) of a project dependency (the classifier and version are optional), the <outputDirectory>
(the destination directory within the capsule jar) and finally a set of <include>
to specify which files from the dependency to copy over.
The <include>
tag supports a single wildcard *
. So for example <include>META-INF/*</include>
, <include>*MANIFEST.MF</include>
or <include>META-INF/*.MF</include>
can work.
You could also copy over the whole dependency directly if you leave out the includes
tag:
<dependencySets>
<dependencySet>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
</dependencySet>
</dependencySets>
You could also copy over the whole dependency in an unpacked form if you mark the <unpack>true</unpack>
flag.
<dependencySets>
<dependencySet>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
<unpack>true</unpack>
</dependencySet>
</dependencySets>
Custom Capsule Version
Ths plugin can support older or newer versions of capsule (at your own risk). You can specify a maven property for the capsule version (this will be the version of capsule to package within the build of the capsules).
<properties>
<capsule.version>0.6.0</capsule.version>
</properties>
Otherwise, the default version of capsule will be used automatically. This is recommended.
Caplets
Capsule supports defining your own Capsule class by extending the Capsule.class
. If you want to specify your custom Capsule class, add a manifest entry pointing to it:
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<caplets>MyCapsule</caplets>
</configuration>
If you have more than one, just add a space in between each one for e.g <caplets>MyCapsule MyCapsule2</caplets>
.
If you want to use a caplet that's not a local class (i.e from a dependency) then you must specify the full coordinates of it like so:
<caplets>co.paralleluniverse:capsule-daemon:0.1.0</caplets>
And you can mix local and non-local caplets too:
<caplets>MyCapsule co.paralleluniverse:capsule-daemon:0.1.0</caplets>
See more info on caplets.
Maven Exec Plugin Integration
The maven exec plugin is a useful tool to run your jar all from within maven (using its classpath).
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>exec-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${maven.exec.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<mainClass>hello.HelloWorld</mainClass>
</configuration>
</plugin>
You can then run your normal jar by:
mvn package exec:java
Notice that the exec plugin provides a configuration where you can specify the <mainClass>
as well as other fields such as <systemProperties>
. The Capsule plugin provides the ability to pull this config and apply it to the built capsules, thus saving you from having to enter it twice (once at the exec plugin and second at the capsule plugin).
In the capsule plugin you can set the <execPluginConfig>
tag to do this:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<execPluginConfig>root</execPluginConfig>
</configuration>
</plugin>
The value root
will tell the capsule plugin to pull the config from the <configuration>
element at the root of the exec plugin.
If you are using executions within the exec plugin like so:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>exec-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${maven.exec.plugin.version}</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>default-cli</id>
<goals>
<goal>java</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<mainClass>hello.HelloWorld</mainClass>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Then you can specify the <execPluginConfig>
to the ID of the execution:
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<execPluginConfig>default-cli</execPluginConfig>
</configuration>
</plugin>
How the capsule plugin maps the config from the exec plugin
The capsule plugin will map values from the exec plugin:
mainClass -> appClass
systemProperties -> properties
arguments -> JVM-Args (manifest entry)
So the <mainClass>
element in the exec's <configuration>
will be the <appClass>
in the capsules's <configuration>
.
A complete solution
So essentially you can setup as follows:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>exec-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${maven.exec.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<mainClass>hello.HelloWorld</mainClass>
<systemProperties>
<property>
<key>propertyName1</key>
<value>propertyValue1</value>
</property>
</systemProperties>
</configuration>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<execPluginConfig>root</execPluginConfig>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Overriding the exec plugin config
Note that if you do specify the <appClass>
, <properties>
or JVM-Args
(in the <manifest>
) of the capsule plugin, then these will override the config of the exec plugin.
Reference
<appClass>
: The class with the main method (with package declaration) of your app that the capsule should run. This can be optional too, if you are using the maven exec plugin and have specified aexecPluginConfig
.<chmod> (Optional)
: If executable (chmod +x) versions of the capsules should be built in the form of '.x' files (Applicable for Mac/Unix style systems). See here and here for more info. Defaults to false.<trampoline> (Optional)
: This will create trampoline style executable capsules in the form of '.tx' files. See more info here.<outputDir> (Optional)
: Specifies the output directory. Defaults to the${project.build.directory}
.<execPluginConfig> (Optional)
: Specifies the ID of an execution within the exec-maven-plugin. The configuration from this execution will then be used to configure the capsules. If you specify 'root' then the<configuration>
at root will be used instead of a particular execution. The exec's<mainClass>
will map to Capsule's<appClass>
. The exec's<systemProperties>
will map to capsule's<properties>
. If you specify this tag then the<appClass>
tag does not need to present.<properties> (Optional)
: The system properties to provide the app with.<type> (Optional)
: Can be eitherempty
,thin
orfat
. Tells the plugin to build a capsule based on of these predefined builds. If present, the plugin will ignore all of the<includeXYZ>
and<resolveXYZ>
.<setManifestRepos> (Optional)
: Can either betrue
orfalse
, default isfalse
. This will append a manifest entryRepositories
with values as defined by the project'spom.xml
.<includeApp> (Optional)
: Specify whether the app itself should be embedded. Default is true. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeAppDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether normal app dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includePluginDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether the plugin dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeTransitiveDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether transitive dependencies should also be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeCompileDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether compile scope dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeRuntimeDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether runtime scope dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeProvidedDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether provided scope dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeSystemDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether system scope dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeTestDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether test scope dependencies should be embedded. Default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<includeOptionalDep> (Optional)
: Specify whether optional dependencies should also be embedded. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveApp> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the app should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveAppDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the app dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolvePluginDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the plugin dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveTransitiveDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the transitive dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveCompileDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the compile scoped dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveRuntimeDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the runtime scoped dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveProvidedDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the system scoped dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveSystemDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the system scoped dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveTestDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the test scoped dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<resolveOptionalDep> (Optional)
: Specifies whether the optional dependencies should be resolved at launch. The default is false. Also, this is ignored if<type>
is present.<manifest> (Optional)
: The set of additional manifest entries, for e.gJVM-Args
. See capsule for an exhaustive list. Note you do not needMain-Class
,Application-Class
,Application
,Dependencies
andSystem-Properties
as these are generated automatically.<modes> (Optional)
: Define a set of<mode>
with its own set of<properties>
and<manifest>
entries to categorise the capsule into different modes. The mode can be set at runtime. See more here.<fileSets> (Optional)
: Define a set of<fileSet>
to copy over files into the capsule. See more here.<dependencySets> (Optional)
: Define a set of<dependencySet>
to copy over files contained within remote dependencies into the capsule. See more here.<caplets> (Optional)
: Define a list of caplets (custom Capsule classes). See more here.<fileName> (Optional)
: The custom text for the file name part of the name of the output jar. By default this is ```````.<fileDesc> (Optional)
: The custom text for the descriptor part of the name of the output jar. This combined with the<fileName>
tag creates the output name of the jar.
<!-- BUILD CAPSULES -->
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.chrisdchristo</groupId>
<artifactId>capsule-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${capsule.maven.plugin.version}</version>
<configuration>
<appClass>hello.HelloWorld</appClass>
<outputDir>target</outputDir>
<caplets>MyCapsule MyCapsule2</caplets>
<type>fat</type>
<chmod>true</chmod>
<trampoline>true</trampoline>
<setManifestRepos>true</setManifestRepos>
<includeApp>true</includeApp>
<includeAppDep>false</includeAppDep>
<includePluginDep>false</includePluginDep>
<includeTransitiveDep>false</includeTransitiveDep>
<includeCompileDep>false</includeCompileDep>
<includeRuntimeDep>false</includeRuntimeDep>
<includeProvidedDep>false</includeProvidedDep>
<includeSystemDep>false</includeSystemDep>
<includeTestDep>false</includeTestDep>
<includeOptionalDep>false</includeOptionalDep>
<resolveApp>false</resolveApp>
<resolveAppDep>false</resolveAppDep>
<resolvePluginDep>false</resolvePluginDep>
<resolveTransitiveDep>false</resolveTransitiveDep>
<resolveCompileDep>false</resolveCompileDep>
<resolveRuntimeDep>false</resolveRuntimeDep>
<resolveProvidedDep>false</resolveProvidedDep>
<resolveSystemDep>false</resolveSystemDep>
<resolveTestDep>false</resolveTestDep>
<resolveOptionalDep>false</resolveOptionalDep>
<execPluginConfig>root</execPluginConfig>
<fileName>my-amazing-app</fileName>
<fileDesc>-cap</fileDesc>
<properties>
<property>
<key>propertyName1</key>
<value>propertyValue1</value>
</property>
</properties>
<manifest>
<entry>
<key>JVM-Args</key>
<value>-Xmx512m</value>
</entry>
<entry>
<key>Min-Java-Version</key>
<value>1.8.0</value>
</entry>
</manifest>
<modes>
<mode>
<name>production</name>
<properties>
<property>
<key>dbConnectionServer</key>
<value>aws.amazon.example</value>
</property>
</properties>
<manifest>
<entry>
<key>JVM-Args</key>
<value>-Xmx1024m</value>
</entry>
</manifest>
</mode>
</modes>
<fileSets>
<fileSet>
<directory>config/</directory>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
<includes>
<include>myconfig.yml</include>
</includes>
</fileSet>
</fileSets>
<dependencySets>
<dependencySet>
<groupId>com.google.guava</groupId>
<artifactId>guava</artifactId>
<version>optional</version>
<outputDirectory>config/</outputDirectory>
<!--<unpack>true</unpack>-->
<includes>
<include>META-INF/MANIFEST.MF</include>
</includes>
</dependencySet>
</dependencySets>
</configuration>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>build</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
License
This project is released under the MIT license.