Instead of relying on the CI server to apply and configure this plugin,
this commit does it directly in the Spring Framework build.
This allows us to take full control over which projects are published
and how.
See gh-23282
Prior to this commit, the build would use a custom task to create a BOM
and manually include/exclude/customize dependencies. It would also use
the "maven" plugin to customize the POM before publication.
This commit now uses a Gradle Java Platform for publishing the Spring
Framework BOM. We're also now using the "maven-publish" plugin to
prepare and customize publications.
This commit also tells the artifactory plugin (which is currently
applied only on the CI) not to publish internal modules.
See gh-23282
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework build would mix proper
framework modules (spring-* modules published to maven central) and
internal modules such as:
* "spring-framework-bom" (which publishes the Framework BOM with all
modules)
* "spring-core-coroutines" which is an internal modules for Kotlin
compilation only
This commit renames these modules so that they don't start with
"spring-*"; we're also moving the "kotlin-coroutines" module under
"spring-core", since it's merged in the resulting JAR.
See gh-23282
This commit reorganizes tasks and scripts in the build to only apply
them where they're needed. We're considering here 3 "types" of projects
in our build:
* the root project, handling documentation, publishing, etc
* framework modules (a project that's published as a spring artifact)
* internal modules, such as the BOM, our coroutines support and our
integration-tests
With this change, we're strealining the project configuration for all
spring modules and only applying plugins when needed (typically our
kotlin support).
See gh-23282
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework build would be using the
propdeps Gradle plugin to introduce two new configurations to the build:
"optional" and "provided". This would also configure related conventions
for IDEs, adding those configurations to published POMs.
This commit removes the need for this plugin and creates instead a
custom plugin for an "optional" configuration. While the Eclipse IDE
support is still supported, there is no need for specific conventions
for IntelliJ IDEA anymore.
This new plugin does not introduce the "provided" scope, as
"compileOnly" and "testCompileOnly" are here for that.
Also as of this commit, optional/provided dependencies are not published
with the Spring Framework modules POMs annymore.
Generally, these dependencies do not provide actionable information to
the developers reading / tools consuming the published POMs.
Optional/Provided dependencies are **not**:
* dependencies you can add to enable some supported feature
* dependencies versions that you can use to figure out CVEs or bugs
* dependencies that might be missing in existing Spring applications
In the context of Spring Framework, optional dependencies are just
libraries are Spring is compiling against for various technical reasons.
With that in mind, we are not publishing that information anymore.
See gh-23282
This commit upgrades Coroutines support to kotlinx.coroutines
1.3.0-RC, leverages the new Coroutines BOM and refine Coroutines
detection to avoid false positives.
Only Coroutines to Mono context interoperability is supported
for now.
CLoses gh-23326
This commit configures the Kotlin plugin for Eclipse in the
spring-core-coroutines Gradle project so that users no longer have to
manually "Configure Kotlin / Add Kotlin Nature" within the Eclipse IDE
after importing projects.
This change is currently limited to the spring-core-coroutines project
since it is the only project in which Java code depends on compiled
Kotlin code; however, this change may later be applied to additional
projects if desirable.
This commit introduces the spring-core-coroutines module
in order to avoid referencing Kotlin code from Java one,
which is currently not supported by Eclipse.
During the build, spring-core-coroutines is merged into
spring-core, so this change is expected to have no impact
for end users.
This module contains functions accessible from Java via
the CoroutinesUtils class to adapt Coroutines and Deferred
instances to and from Mono.
See gh-19975