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http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-2205?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#action_101928
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Paul Gier commented on MNG-2205:
--------------------------------

If you make provided transitive, then what is the difference between the 
"provided" and "compile" scopes?  Doesn't the compile scope already give the 
transitive behaviour that you're looking for?

>From your original example above, I don't see where the problem is.  If 
>project C is using JDBC with a JConnect driver, and JConnect is being provided 
>on the runtime classpath, by the app server or whatever, then I would think 
>your app would run fine.

The XML beans example sounds like it should be compile scope.  It is required 
on the compile classpath, and should be inherited transitively.  Why not use 
the default compile scope for this?


> "provided" scope dependencies must be transitive
> ------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: MNG-2205
>                 URL: http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-2205
>             Project: Maven 2
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Dependencies
>            Reporter: David Boden
>            Priority: Critical
>             Fix For: 2.1.x
>
>
> 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.
> C
> | - compile dependency
> B
> | - compile dependency
> A
> | - provided dependency
> Sybase JConnect
> 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.

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