Bump AspectJ libraries in 'lib' subfolders to 1.9.21.1
This reproduces regression bug #285 when running
org.aspectj.systemtest.ajc171.NewFeatures::testSharedCache.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Globally replace "http:" by "https:" in non-XML files
Maybe, the XML files and Maven wrapper files will follow. First, let us
find out if this breaks the build, maybe some tests are asserting on
"http:". But there, the replacement would also have taken place, so
probably it just works.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
In the next step, the content, which is still HTML at this point, is
going to be converted.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Remove obsolete DocBook build config in favour of Asciidoctor
Along with the Ant and Maven build configs, downloads of
- DocBook DTD,
- DocBook XSL,
- FOP,
- Batik,
- Saxon
also become obsolete.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Currently, the situation looks more like a Java 21 maintenance release
than directly a Java 22 release.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
It was referring to a no longer existent weaver under
aj-build/dist/tools/lib/aspectjweaver.jar, which now has been replaced
by the new file lib/aspectj/lib/aspectjweaver.jar.
Several tests were broken, not finding the agent. But because those
tests make no assertions, nobody ever noticed. Only when I had to change
some LTW tests from in-process to full LTW mode (see next commit) due to
them now obviously calling some code paths which need '--add-opens', I
even noticed the problem.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Detect previously failed downloads by verifying existing file checksums
There was a helpful option hiding in Download Maven plugin, which we use
to download artifacts unavailable on Maven Central, such as the Ant
installer and several source packages: 'checkSignature'. It has the
effect of verifying checksums of existing, i.e. previously downloaded
files too, not only newly downloaded ones. This helps detect interrupted
downloads from previous runs or generally invalid files, whatever the
reason. I was looking for this option before, but did not notice it
because of the name. This is about verifying checksums, not checking
signatures. Anyway, a maintainer just told me about it here:
https://github.com/maven-download-plugin/maven-download-plugin/issues/186
I requested that the option be renamed and described better.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
This is a bugfix release, reverting the essential parts of commit
f70aeb5e, because it causes AspectJ Maven integration tests using
javadoc to fail on JDK 8.
See commit discussion on
https://github.com/eclipse/org.aspectj/commit/f70aeb5e#commitcomment-51417353
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Before, we used 1.9.7.BUILD-SNAPSHOT, which according to Andy Clement
was originally an intent across a group of Spring projects he was
involved in, to ensure that SNAPSHOTS were sorted alphabetically ahead
of MILESTONEs and ahead of RCs.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>
Create javadoc for all public artifacts, fix dependencies
Sonatype OSSRH repository rules require source and javadoc JARs in
order to create staging repositories for releases to be promoted to
Maven Central. So I added build steps to unzip the source JARs and then
create Javadocs for them.
FIXME: This configuration works with JDK 16, but throws errors on other
JDK versions, e.g. 14. It looks as if the Maven Javadoc plugin does not
do a particularly good job applying the plugin settings in a way making
it work with different JDK javadoc tool versions. I am saying that,
because when using the tool directly on the console, it works with basic
settings and the correct classpath.
In order to enable creating uber JARs via Maven Shade in the future, I
also added missing dependencies. Maven Assembly descriptors just assume
that all the necessary class files and sources already exist where it
copies them from. But several of the dependency modules were not
explicitly listed as such by the uber JAR modules. I fixed that.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kriegisch <Alexander@Kriegisch.name>