Motivation:
612ab58448 did change the way how netty-all was produced by unfortunally it messed up the dependency graph for our native artifacts. This commit reverts changes done by 612ab58448 and also clean up the profiles
Modifications:
netty-all is useable again
Result:
Fixes https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/11272
Motivation:
We shouldn't include netty-examples as dependency for netty-all as this will try to pull in all sorts of dependencies which are optional.
Modifications:
Remove dependency on netty-examples
Result:
Related to https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/11272
Motivation:
netty-all already depends on the other netty-* packages so there's no need to also bundle them.
The duplicated classes cause classpath issues, particularly with Java > 8, which reports errors like this:
The package io.netty.buffer is accessible from more than one module: io.netty.all, io.netty.buffer
Modifications:
- Removed bundling tasks from netty-all's maven pom.xml
Result:
- netty-all no longer bundles all classes. Instead, classes are provided by expressed dependencies.
Fixes#4671
Motivation:
We did have the architecture hardcoded in the dependency which is not correct as this will let the build fail on Applie Silicion (m1). Also we did miss some dependencies on other BSDs
Modifications:
- Fix classifier
- Add missing dependencies
Result:
Be able to build on Apple Silicon (m1)
Motivation:
This reverts commit 7fb62a93b8 as it broke native loading in some cases due maven dependencies.
Modification:
Revert the commit.
Result:
Native loading works again
Motivation:
We need to ensure we only register native methods once as otherwise we may end up in an "invalid" state. The problem here was that before it was basically the responsibility the user of transport-native-unix-common to register the methods. This is error prone as there may be multiple users of these on the classpath at the same time.
Modifications:
- Provide a way to init native lib without register the native methods of the provided classes. This is needed to be able to re-use functionality which is exposed to our internal native code
- Use flatten plugin to correctly resolve classifier and so have the correct dependency
- Call Unix.* method to ensure we register the methods correctly once
- Include native lib as well in the native jars of unix-common
Result:
Be able to have multiple artifacts of the classpath that depends on the unix-common. Related to https://github.com/netty/netty-incubator-transport-io_uring/issues/15
Motivation:
We should use aarch_64 in our classifier / jni libname on aarch64 as os.detected.arch uses the name. Being non consistent (especially across our different projects) already gave us a lot of trouble in the past.
Let's fix this once for all.
Modifications:
Use aarch_64
Result:
More consistent classifier usage on aarch64
Motivation:
https in xmlns URIs does not work and will let the maven release plugin fail:
```
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD FAILURE
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 1.779 s
[INFO] Finished at: 2020-11-10T07:45:21Z
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[ERROR] Failed to execute goal org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-release-plugin:2.5.3:prepare (default-cli) on project netty-parent: Execution default-cli of goal org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-release-plugin:2.5.3:prepare failed: The namespace xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" could not be added as a namespace to "project": The namespace prefix "xsi" collides with an additional namespace declared by the element -> [Help 1]
[ERROR]
```
See also https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-24014.
Modifications:
Use http for xmlns
Result:
Be able to use maven release plugin
Motivation:
HTTP is a plaintext protocol which means that someone may be able
to eavesdrop the data. To prevent this, HTTPS should be used whenever
possible. However, maintaining using https:// in all URLs may be
difficult. The nohttp tool can help here. The tool scans all the files
in a repository and reports where http:// is used.
Modifications:
- Added nohttp (via checkstyle) into the build process.
- Suppressed findings for the websites
that don't support HTTPS or that are not reachable
Result:
- Prevent using HTTP in the future.
- Encourage users to use HTTPS when they follow the links they found in
the code.