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Managing Maven Settings

{inrmonly}

Introduction

When you move an organization to a repository manager such as {nxrm}, one of the constant challenges is keeping everyone’s Maven settings synchronized to ensure the repository manager server is used and any further configuration in the settings file is consistent. In addition, different users or use cases require different settings files. You can find out more about the Maven settings file in [config]. {pro} allows you to define templates for Maven settings stored on the server and provide them to users via the user interface or automated download.

If an administrator makes a change that requires every developer to modify his or her ~/.m2/settings.xml file, this feature can be used to manage the distribution of Maven settings changes to the entire organization. Once you have defined a Maven settings template in {pro}, developers can then use the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin to retrieve the new Maven settings file directly from {pro}.

Manage Maven Settings Templates

To manage Maven settings templates, click on 'Maven Settings' in the 'Enterprise' section of the main menu on the left side of the user interface. This will load the panel shown in The Maven Settings Panel.

maven settings template
Figure 1. The Maven Settings Panel

The Maven Settings panel allows you to add, delete, and edit Maven Settings templates. The default template has an ID of default and can not be changed. It contains the recommended settings for a standard repository manager installation. To create a new Maven settings template, click on the 'Add…​' button and select 'Settings Template'. Once the new template is created, assign a name to the template in the 'Template ID' text input and click the 'Save' button.

To edit a template, click on a template that has a 'User Managed' value of true in the list and edit the template in the tab below the list. Once you are finished editing the template, click 'Save' to save the template. When editing the template you can insert some property references that will be replaced on the server with their values at request time:

baseurl

The base URL of the repository manager installation.

userId

The user id of the user that is generating a Maven Settings file from this template.

Server side interpolation takes effect even when the download of the settings template is done with tools like curl. These properties can be referenced in the settings file using the syntax $\{property\}:

<settings>
  <mirrors>
    <mirror>
      <id>nexus</id>
      <mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
      <url>${baseurl}/content/groups/public</url>
    </mirror>
...

To preview a Maven settings template, click on the 'Template URL' in the list. Clicking on this URL loads a dialog window that contains the Maven Settings file generated from this template. This rendered view of the Maven Settings template has all variable references replaced using the current context of the user. This is the result of running the property replacement on the repository manager.

The Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin supports the more powerful and feature-rich, client-side replacement of properties using a $[property] syntax.

Client-side properties supported by the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin are

baseurl

The base URL of the repository manager installation.

userId or username

The username of the user that is requesting a Maven Settings file from this template.

password

The password of the user.

userToken

The formatted user token composed of name code, ':' and pass code.

userToken.nameCode

The name code part of the user token.

userToken.passCode

The pass code part of the user token.

userToken.passCode.encrypted

The encrypted pass code part of the user token.

Client side interpolation allows you to fully populate a <server> section with the required properties either with the plain text username and password:

<server>
  <id>nexus</id>
  <username>$[username]</username>
  <password>$[password]</password>
</server>

You can also use the usertoken equivalent:

<server>
  <id>nexus</id>
  <!-- User-token: $[userToken] -->
  <username>$[userToken.nameCode]</username>
  <password>$[userToken.passCode]</password>
</server>

Alternatively you can use Maven master-password encryption with the master keyword in settings-security.xml:

<server>
  <id>nexus-client-side-interp-encrypted</id>
  <!-- Maven master password encrypted user token password -->
  <username>$[userToken.nameCode]</username>
  <password>$[userToken.passCode.encrypted]</password>
</server>

The usage of the .encrypted key results in values similar to the following snippet:

<server>
  <id>nexus-client-side-interp-encrypted</id>
  <!-- master password encrypted user token password -->
  <username>KOYC8Q76</username>
  <password>{fsx2f...}</password>
</server>
Warning
userToken.* properties are only expanded to values if the User Token feature as documented in [usertoken] is enabled and configured.

Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin

Once you have defined a set of Maven templates, you can use the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin to distribute changes to the settings file to the entire organization.

Running the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin

To invoke a goal of the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin, you will initially have to use a fully qualified groupId and artifactId in addition to the goal. An example invocation of the download goal is:

mvn org.sonatype.plugins:nexus-m2settings-maven-plugin:download

In order to be able to use an invocation with the simple plugin prefix like this

mvn nexus-m2settings:download

you have to have the appropriate plugin group org.sonatype.plugins configured in your Maven Settings file:

<settings>
  ...
  <pluginGroups>
    <pluginGroup>org.sonatype.plugins</pluginGroup>
  </pluginGroups>
  ...

An initial invocation of the download goal will update your settings file with a template from {pro}. The default template in {pro} adds the org.sonatype.plugins group to the pluginGroups, so you will not have to do this manually. It is essential that you make sure that any new, custom templates also include this plugin group definition. Otherwise, there is a chance that a developer could update his or her Maven settings and lose the ability to use the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin with the short identifier.

Tip
This practice of adding pluginGroups to the settings file is useful for your own Maven plugins or other plugins that do not use the default values of org.apache.maven.plugins or org.codehaus.mojo as well, since it allows the short prefix of a plugin to be used for an invocation outside a Maven project using the plugin.

The download goal of the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin downloads a Maven Settings file from {pro} and stores it locally. The default file name for the settings file is the Maven default for the current user of ~/.m2/settings.xml file. If you are replacing a Maven Settings file, this goal can be configured to make a backup of an existing Maven Settings file.

Note
The download with the Nexus Maven Plugin is deprecated and has been replaced with the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin.

Configuring Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin

The download goal of the Nexus M2Settings Maven plugin prompts the user for all required parameters, which include the server URL, the username and password, and the template identifier.

Note
For security reasons, the settings download requires an HTTPS connection to your repository manager instance. If you are running the repository manager via plain HTTP you will have to set the secure parameter to false.

The required configuration parameters can either be supplied as invocation parameters or when prompted by the plugin and are:

nexusUrl

Points to the repository manager installation’s base URL. If you have installed the repository manager on your local machine, this would be http://localhost:8081/nexus/. Access via HTTP only works with the secure configuration parameter set to false.

username

The username to use for authenticating to the repository manager. Default value is the Java System property user.name.

password

The password to use for authenticating to the repository manager.

templateId

The Template ID for the settings template as defined in the user interface.

Additional general configuration parameters are related to the security of the transfer and the output file:

secure

By default set to true, this parameter forces a URL access with HTTPS. Overriding this parameter and setting it to false allows you to download a settings file via HTTP. When using this override it is important to keep in mind that the username and password transfered via HTTP can be intercepted.

outputFile

Defines the filename and location of the downloaded file and defaults to the standard ~/.m2/settings.xml.

backup

If true and there is a pre-existing settings.xml file in the way of this download, back up the file to a date-stamped filename, where the specific format of the datestamp is given by the backupTimestampFormat parameter. Default value is true.

backup.timestampFormat

When backing up an existing settings.xml file, use this date format in conjunction with SimpleDateFormat to construct a new filename of the form: settings.xml-$(format). Date stamps are used for backup copies of the settings.xml to avoid overwriting previously backed up settings files. This protects against the case where the download goal is used multiple times with incorrect settings, where using a single static backup file name would destroy the original, preexisting settings. Default value is: yyyyMMddHHmmss.

encoding

Use this optional parameter to define a non-default encoding for the settings file.

As a Maven plugin, the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin relies on Apache Maven execution and on the fact that the Central Repository can be contacted for downloading the required plugins and dependencies. If this access is only available via a proxy server you can configure the proxy related parameters proxy, proxy.protocol, proxy.host, proxy.port, proxy.username and proxy.password.

Downloading Maven Settings

You can download the Maven Settings from {pro} with a simple invocation, and rely on the plugin to prompt you for the required parameters:

$ mvn org.sonatype.plugins:nexus-m2settings-maven-plugin:download
[INFO] Scanning for projects...
[INFO]
[INFO] -----------------------------------------
[INFO] Building Maven Stub Project (No POM) 1
[INFO] -----------------------------------------
[INFO]
[INFO] --- nexus-m2settings-maven-plugin:1.6.2:download (default-cli) @ standalone-pom ---
Nexus URL: https://localhost:8081/nexus
Username [manfred]: admin
Password: ********
[INFO] Connecting to: https://localhost:8081/nexus (as admin)
[WARNING] Insecure protocol: https://localhost:8081/nexus/
[INFO] Connected: {pro} {version-exact}
Available Templates:
   0) default
   1) example
Select Template: 0
[INFO] Fetching content for templateId: default
[INFO] Backing up: /Users/manfred/.m2/settings.xml to: /Users/manfred/.m2/settings.xml-20130404120146
[INFO] Saving content to: /Users/manfred/.m2/settings.xml
[INFO] -----------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
[INFO] -----------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 29.169s
[INFO] Finished at: Thu Apr 04 12:01:46 PDT 2013
[INFO] Final Memory: 12M/153M
[INFO] -----------------------------------------

If your repository manager is hosted internally and does not use HTTPS you can download a settings file with

$ mvn org.sonatype.plugins:nexus-m2settings-maven-plugin:download -Dsecure=false

As displayed, the plugin will query for all parameters and display a list of the available templates. Alternatively, you can specify the username, password, URL, and template identifier on the command line.

$ mvn org.sonatype.plugins:nexus-m2settings-maven-plugin:download \
-DnexusUrl=https://localhost:8443/nexus \
-Dusername=admin \
-Dpassword=admin123 \
-DtemplateId=default

Enabling proxy access with -Dproxy=true will trigger the plugin to query the necessary configuration:

[INFO] Connecting to: https://localhost:8443/nexus (as admin)
Proxy Protocol:
   0) http
   1) https
Choose: 1
Proxy Host: myproxy.example.com
Proxy Port: 9000
Proxy Authentication:
   0) yes
   1) no
Choose: 0
Proxy Username [manfred]: proxy
Proxy Password: ******
[INFO] Proxy enabled: proxy@https:myproxy.example.com:9000

In some scenarios you have to get an initial settings file installed on a computer that does not have internet access and, therefore, cannot use the Maven plugin. For this first initial configuration that connects the computer to the repository manager for following Maven invocations, a simple HTTP GET command to retrieve an unmodified settings file can be used:

curl -u admin:admin123 -X GET "http://localhost:8081/nexus/service/local/templates/settings/default/content" > ~/.m2/settings.xml

Modify the commandline above by changing the username:password supplied after -u and adapting the URL to the URL visible in the user interface. This invocation will however not replace parameters on the client side, so you will have to manually change any username or password configuration, if applicable.

Summary

Overall the Maven Settings integration in {pro} allows you to maintain multiple settings template files on the central repository manager. You can configure settings files for different use cases like e.g.,

  • referencing a repository group containing only approved components in the mirror section for your release or QA builds,

  • providing an open public group mirror reference to all of your developers for experimentation with other components.

By using the Nexus M2Settings Maven Plugin you can completely automate initial provisioning and updates of these settings files to your users.