As far as I see it:
* infinispan-embedded should never be a dependency in a Maven project.
* No uber jars should really be used as Maven dependencies because all the exclusion that
fine grained dependencies allow you to do goes out of the window when all classes are
inside a jar. This is not just theory, I've personally had such issues.
* Uber jars are designed for Ant or other build tool users that don't have a
dependency resolution engine in place.
Cheers,
p.s. I thought we had already discussed this before?
--
Galder Zamarreño
Infinispan, Red Hat
On 7 Jun 2017, at 11:50, Sebastian Laskawiec
<slaskawi(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hey,
The change was introduced by this commit [1] and relates to this JIRAs [2][3]. The root
cause is in [3].
Imagine a scenario where you add JCache module to your together infinispan-embedded. If
your classpath was constructed in such a way that infinispan-embedded was before
infinispan-core (classpath is scanned from left to right in standalone apps), we could get
a relocated (uber jars move some classes into other packages) logger. That caused class
mismatch errors. It is worth to mention that it will happen to all relocated classes,
logger was just an example. And we need to relocate them, since a user might want to use
his own, newer version of DMR or any other library. So there's no perfect solution
here.
Now a lot of time passed since then and we changed quite a few things. So this topic
probably needs to be revisited.
So the first question that we should ask, shall we allow putting jcache and
infinispan-embedded together on the classpath. If the answer is yes, I believe it should
stay as it is (since the user always have a choice whether he wants to use jcache with or
without uber jar). The same question needs to be asked for Spring modules as well as all
cache stores. The behavior needs to be consistent across all those modules.
If the answer is no (which is also valid because jcache is already present in embedded
uber jar), we should migrate all JBoss Logging references to Infinispan Common Logging (as
Tristan did here [4]) and we can make infinispan-core as a compile time dependency to
jcache. Even though migrating to Infinispan logger is not necessary, this way we won't
break users app which used infinispan-embedded + jcache approach. Of course the same
applies to Spring and Cache stores modules.
I think the latter approach deserves some exploration. I would vote for moving that way.
Thanks,
Sebastian
[1]
https://github.com/infinispan/infinispan/commit/720f158cce38d86b292e1ce77...
[2]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-6295
[3]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-6132
[4]
https://github.com/infinispan/infinispan/pull/4140/files
On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 11:19 AM Galder Zamarreño <galder(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hi all,
Re:
https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-boot/pull/9417#discussion_r1203...
Stéphane makes a good point there, why did we make core provided dependency? It does feel
a bit of a pain that anyone that depends on jcache embedded also needs to depend on core.
Any more details behind this decision?
Cheers,
--
Galder Zamarreño
Infinispan, Red Hat
--
SEBASTIAN ŁASKAWIEC
INFINISPAN DEVELOPER
Red Hat EMEA