I took a quick look at the README of Tomas's project and the main difference seems to be the opt-in approach, as opposed to Dependabot's opt-out approach. Dependabot attempts to update everything, and you have to opt out of certain dependencies (by commenting in pull requests!). If you have multiple repositories with similar needs, you have to opt out for each repository again and again. If I understand Tomas's project correctly, you can define configuration upfront, and it won't touch dependencies that are not configured.
Tomas, please correct me if I'm wrong here :-)
LT
This tools sounds similar to https://github.com/marketplace/dependabot-previewWhat are the main differences ?
Rostislav
On 2 Sep 2019, at 09:44, Tomas Hofman <thofman@redhat.com> wrote:
Hello,
would the Wildfly team be interested in (or opposed to) receiving component
upgrade PRs, which would be created automatically when a new component version
is released? (I'm talking about new micro/SP versions, depending on the
component, i.e. version that could be reasonably expected to be suitable for
consumption, without issues like breaking API changes etc.)
I'm working on a tool [1], which is able to provide these PRs.
The tool scans given project for dependencies, and then looks at what versions
of those dependencies are available in Maven Central and possibly other
repositories. I can configure rules for each dependency, that specify what
versions should be considered viable for upgrading (e.g. for "org.picketlink:*"
we would only offer new "SP" builds in the same micro, for most of the other
dependencies we would only offer new micros, and some artifacts would perhaps
be blacklisted). Example of this configuration is here [2].
Advantages that I believe could be gained from this:
* It would bring us an advantage of having new component micros tested soon in
Wildfly, and therefore having more confidence when we need to do the same
upgrades in EAP.
* It would also help in preventing EAP running ahead of Wildfly in component
versions, which happens occasionally. EAP release coordinator usually spots
this problem and creates missing PR in Wildfly, but it's a manual check and
therefore a small risk remains.
* It would ensure Wildfly is consuming latest component fixes.
You can review PRs generated last week in my fork of Wildfly [3].
It's a work in progress, I expect the tool and it's configuration would evolve
according to experiences we would get from using it...
What do you think?
[1] https://github.com/TomasHofman/maven-dependency-updater/
[2]
https://github.com/jboss-set/dependency-alignment-configs/blob/master/wildfly-18-minimal.json#L44
[3] https://github.com/TomasHofman/wildfly/pulls
--
Tomas Hofman
Software Engineer, JBoss SET
Red Hat
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