283 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
283 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
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---
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redirect_from: 'https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/articles/artifactory_and_gitlab/index.html'
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---
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# How to deploy Maven projects to Artifactory with GitLab CI/CD
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> **[Article Type](../../../development/writing_documentation.md#types-of-technical-articles):** tutorial ||
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> **Level:** intermediary ||
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> **Author:** [Fabio Busatto](https://gitlab.com/bikebilly) ||
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> **Publication date:** 2017-08-15
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## Introduction
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In this article, we will show how you can leverage the power of [GitLab CI/CD](https://about.gitlab.com/features/gitlab-ci-cd/)
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to build a [Maven](https://maven.apache.org/) project, deploy it to [Artifactory](https://www.jfrog.com/artifactory/), and then use it from another Maven application as a dependency.
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You'll create two different projects:
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- `simple-maven-dep`: the app built and deployed to Artifactory (available at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-dep)
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- `simple-maven-app`: the app using the previous one as a dependency (available at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-app)
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We assume that you already have a GitLab account on [GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com/), and that you know the basic usage of Git and [GitLab CI/CD](https://about.gitlab.com/features/gitlab-ci-cd/).
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We also assume that an Artifactory instance is available and reachable from the internet, and that you have valid credentials to deploy on it.
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## Create the simple Maven dependency
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First of all, you need an application to work with: in this specific case we will
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use a simple one, but it could be any Maven application. This will be the
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dependency you want to package and deploy to Artifactory, in order to be
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available to other projects.
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### Prepare the dependency application
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For this article you'll use a Maven app that can be cloned from our example
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project:
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1. Log in to your GitLab account
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1. Create a new project by selecting **Import project from ➔ Repo by URL**
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1. Add the following URL:
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```
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https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-dep.git
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```
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1. Click **Create project**
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This application is nothing more than a basic class with a stub for a JUnit based test suite.
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It exposes a method called `hello` that accepts a string as input, and prints a hello message on the screen.
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The project structure is really simple, and you should consider these two resources:
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- `pom.xml`: project object model (POM) configuration file
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- `src/main/java/com/example/dep/Dep.java`: source of our application
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### Configure the Artifactory deployment
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The application is ready to use, but you need some additional steps to deploy it to Artifactory:
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1. Log in to Artifactory with your user's credentials.
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1. From the main screen, click on the `libs-release-local` item in the **Set Me Up** panel.
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1. Copy to clipboard the configuration snippet under the **Deploy** paragraph.
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1. Change the `url` value in order to have it configurable via secret variables.
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1. Copy the snippet in the `pom.xml` file for your project, just after the
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`dependencies` section. The snippet should look like this:
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```xml
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<distributionManagement>
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<repository>
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<id>central</id>
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<name>83d43b5afeb5-releases</name>
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<url>${env.MAVEN_REPO_URL}/libs-release-local</url>
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</repository>
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</distributionManagement>
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```
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Another step you need to do before you can deploy the dependency to Artifactory
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is to configure the authentication data. It is a simple task, but Maven requires
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it to stay in a file called `settings.xml` that has to be in the `.m2` subdirectory
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in the user's homedir.
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Since you want to use GitLab Runner to automatically deploy the application, you
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should create the file in the project's home directory and set a command line
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parameter in `.gitlab-ci.yml` to use the custom location instead of the default one:
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1. Create a folder called `.m2` in the root of your repository
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1. Create a file called `settings.xml` in the `.m2` folder
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1. Copy the following content into a `settings.xml` file:
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```xml
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<settings xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.1.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.1.0.xsd"
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xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
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<servers>
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<server>
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<id>central</id>
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<username>${env.MAVEN_REPO_USER}</username>
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<password>${env.MAVEN_REPO_PASS}</password>
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</server>
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</servers>
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</settings>
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```
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Username and password will be replaced by the correct values using secret variables.
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### Configure GitLab CI/CD for `simple-maven-dep`
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Now it's time we set up [GitLab CI/CD](https://about.gitlab.com/features/gitlab-ci-cd/) to automatically build, test and deploy the dependency!
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GitLab CI/CD uses a file in the root of the repo, named `.gitlab-ci.yml`, to read the definitions for jobs
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that will be executed by the configured GitLab Runners. You can read more about this file in the [GitLab Documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/yaml/).
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First of all, remember to set up secret variables for your deployment. Navigate to your project's **Settings > CI/CD** page
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and add the following secret variables (replace them with your current values, of course):
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- **MAVEN_REPO_URL**: `http://artifactory.example.com:8081/artifactory` (your Artifactory URL)
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- **MAVEN_REPO_USER**: `gitlab` (your Artifactory username)
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- **MAVEN_REPO_PASS**: `AKCp2WXr3G61Xjz1PLmYa3arm3yfBozPxSta4taP3SeNu2HPXYa7FhNYosnndFNNgoEds8BCS` (your Artifactory Encrypted Password)
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Now it's time to define jobs in `.gitlab-ci.yml` and push it to the repo:
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```yaml
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image: maven:latest
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variables:
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MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: "-s .m2/settings.xml --batch-mode"
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MAVEN_OPTS: "-Dmaven.repo.local=.m2/repository"
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cache:
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paths:
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- .m2/repository/
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- target/
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build:
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stage: build
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS compile
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test:
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stage: test
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS test
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deploy:
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stage: deploy
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS deploy
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only:
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- master
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```
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GitLab Runner will use the latest [Maven Docker image](https://hub.docker.com/_/maven/), which already contains all the tools and the dependencies you need to manage the project,
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in order to run the jobs.
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Environment variables are set to instruct Maven to use the `homedir` of the repo instead of the user's home when searching for configuration and dependencies.
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Caching the `.m2/repository folder` (where all the Maven files are stored), and the `target` folder (where our application will be created), is useful for speeding up the process
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by running all Maven phases in a sequential order, therefore, executing `mvn test` will automatically run `mvn compile` if necessary.
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Both `build` and `test` jobs leverage the `mvn` command to compile the application and to test it as defined in the test suite that is part of the application.
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Deploy to Artifactory is done as defined by the secret variables we have just set up.
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The deployment occurs only if we're pushing or merging to `master` branch, so that the development versions are tested but not published.
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Done! Now you have all the changes in the GitLab repo, and a pipeline has already been started for this commit. In the **Pipelines** tab you can see what's happening.
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If the deployment has been successful, the deploy job log will output:
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```
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[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
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[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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[INFO] Total time: 1.983 s
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```
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>**Note**:
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the `mvn` command downloads a lot of files from the internet, so you'll see a lot of extra activity in the log the first time you run it.
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Yay! You did it! Checking in Artifactory will confirm that you have a new artifact available in the `libs-release-local` repo.
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## Create the main Maven application
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Now that you have the dependency available on Artifactory, it's time to use it!
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Let's see how we can have it as a dependency to our main application.
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### Prepare the main application
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We'll use again a Maven app that can be cloned from our example project:
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1. Create a new project by selecting **Import project from ➔ Repo by URL**
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1. Add the following URL:
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```
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https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/maven/simple-maven-app.git
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```
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1. Click **Create project**
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This one is a simple app as well. If you look at the `src/main/java/com/example/app/App.java`
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file you can see that it imports the `com.example.dep.Dep` class and calls the `hello` method passing `GitLab` as a parameter.
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Since Maven doesn't know how to resolve the dependency, you need to modify the configuration:
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1. Go back to Artifactory
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1. Browse the `libs-release-local` repository
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1. Select the `simple-maven-dep-1.0.jar` file
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1. Find the configuration snippet from the **Dependency Declaration** section of the main panel
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1. Copy the snippet in the `dependencies` section of the `pom.xml` file.
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The snippet should look like this:
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```xml
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<dependency>
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<groupId>com.example.dep</groupId>
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<artifactId>simple-maven-dep</artifactId>
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<version>1.0</version>
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</dependency>
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```
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### Configure the Artifactory repository location
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At this point you defined the dependency for the application, but you still miss where you can find the required files.
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You need to create a `.m2/settings.xml` file as you did for the dependency project, and let Maven know the location using environment variables.
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Here is how you can get the content of the file directly from Artifactory:
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1. From the main screen, click on the `libs-release-local` item in the **Set Me Up** panel
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1. Click on **Generate Maven Settings**
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1. Click on **Generate Settings**
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1. Copy to clipboard the configuration file
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1. Save the file as `.m2/settings.xml` in your repo
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Now you are ready to use the Artifactory repository to resolve dependencies and use `simple-maven-dep` in your main application!
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### Configure GitLab CI/CD for `simple-maven-app`
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You need a last step to have everything in place: configure the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file for this project, as you already did for `simple-maven-dep`.
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You want to leverage [GitLab CI/CD](https://about.gitlab.com/features/gitlab-ci-cd/) to automatically build, test and run your awesome application,
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and see if you can get the greeting as expected!
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All you need to do is to add the following `.gitlab-ci.yml` to the repo:
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```yaml
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image: maven:latest
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stages:
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- build
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- test
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- run
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variables:
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MAVEN_CLI_OPTS: "-s .m2/settings.xml --batch-mode"
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MAVEN_OPTS: "-Dmaven.repo.local=.m2/repository"
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cache:
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paths:
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- .m2/repository/
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- target/
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build:
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stage: build
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS compile
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test:
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stage: test
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS test
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run:
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stage: run
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script:
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS package
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- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS exec:java -Dexec.mainClass="com.example.app.App"
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```
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It is very similar to the configuration used for `simple-maven-dep`, but instead of the `deploy` job there is a `run` job.
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Probably something that you don't want to use in real projects, but here it is useful to see the application executed automatically.
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And that's it! In the `run` job output log you will find a friendly hello to GitLab!
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## Conclusion
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In this article we covered the basic steps to use an Artifactory Maven repository to automatically publish and consume artifacts.
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A similar approach could be used to interact with any other Maven compatible Binary Repository Manager.
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Obviously, you can improve these examples, optimizing the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file to better suit your needs, and adapting to your workflow.
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