Details
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Improvement
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Status: Closed
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Critical
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Resolution: Fixed
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None
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None
Description
Maven 1.x's "java" plugin offered a maven.compile.failonerror property, which could be set false in order to skip compilation errors.
I am working on a code generation framework that uses a Maven plugin. The mojo spawns a parallel lifecycle via @execute phase="test-compile", as the mojo itself is @phase generate-sources. This is necessary as the code generator needs to instantiate certain classes to obtain metadata. The nature of the generated types means that users might write code that depends on the generated types to already be compiled on the classpath, although this has not yet happened at this phase because the code generator requires compiled classes first. By the time the generated-sources phase completes and releases to the original lifecycle, the subsequent compilation will work as the generated sources are now available for compilation.
In practice this issue is easily resolved if AbstractCompilerMojo supported the Maven 1 style maven.compile.failonerror = false property, which could be injected via the MavenProject class during the parallel lifecycle (and reverted upon completion). The relevant lines are:
504 if ( compilationError )
505
508 else
509 {
510 for ( Iterator i = messages.iterator(); i.hasNext(); )
511
516 }
Could you change line 504 to reference an injected property, so the exception can be consumed with simply a warning?
At present I am planning on working around this issue by using exclude filters (excluding common filename patterns users are likely to generated dependent code for) but this is an inelegant solution by comparison with supporting the injected property. If there is another way to skip errors and I am not aware of it, would you please let me know. Thanks.