[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG-2205?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16327595#comment-16327595 ]
Chris Povirk commented on MNG-2205: ----------------------------------- I just learned that JUnitĀ [stopped using provided/optional scope for their annotation dependencies for similar reasons|https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/1105]: Users were reporting problems because the annotations weren't visible to downstream projects (e.g., [1|https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/1104], [2|https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/1210]). > "provided" scope dependencies must be transitive > ------------------------------------------------ > > Key: MNG-2205 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MNG-2205 > Project: Maven > Issue Type: Bug > Components: Dependencies > Reporter: David Boden > Priority: Critical > Attachments: transitivetest.zip > > > A provided scope dependency can also be thought of as "compile-only". > Project A requires Sybase JConnect on the runtime classpath. Project A > declares a "provided" dependency on Sybase JConnect. > Project B depends upon Project A. Project B declares a "compile" dependency > on Project A. > Project C depends upon Project B. Project C declares a "compile" dependency > on Project B. > {noformat} > C > | - compile dependency > B > | - compile dependency > A > | - provided dependency > Sybase JConnect > {noformat} > So, does Project C transitively depend on Sybase JConnect. Yes, of course! > The "provided" dependency needs to be transitive. > Ultimately, when Project C gets deployed, Sybase JConnect needs to be > somewhere on the runtime classpath in order for the application to function. > It's valid for Project C to assume that Sybase JConnect is available and use > JDBC all over the Project C code. Project C is safe to do this because it can > happily deduce that Sybase JConnect will be there in the runtime environment > because Project A NEEDS IT. > I've got Use Cases all over my aggregated build which make it absolutely > critical and common sense that provided scope dependencies are transitive. > For the (very rare) odd case where you don't want to inherit provided > dependencies, you can <exclude/> them. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v7.6.3#76005)