Polyglot for Maven is a set of
extensions for Maven 3.3.1+
that allows the POM model to be written in
dialects other than XML. Several of the dialects also allow inlined plugins: the
Ruby, Groovy and Scala dialects allow this.
Here's an example POM written in the Ruby dialect:
project 'Polyglot :: Aggregator' do
model_version '4.0.0'
id 'io.tesla.polyglot:tesla-polyglot:0.0.1-SNAPSHOT'
inherit 'io.tesla:tesla:4'
packaging 'pom'
properties( 'sisuInjectVersion' => '0.0.0.M2a',
'teslaVersion' => '3.1.0' )
modules [ 'tesla-polyglot-common',
'tesla-polyglot-atom',
'tesla-polyglot-ruby',
'tesla-polyglot-groovy',
'tesla-polyglot-yaml',
'tesla-polyglot-clojure',
'tesla-polyglot-scala',
'tesla-polyglot-java',
'tesla-polyglot-xml',
'tesla-polyglot-cli',
'tesla-polyglot-maven-plugin' ]
overrides do
jar 'org.eclipse.sisu:org.eclipse.sisu.inject:${sisuInjectVersion}'
jar 'org.eclipse.sisu:org.eclipse.sisu.plexus:${sisuInjectVersion}'
jar 'org.apache.maven:maven-model-builder:3.1.0'
jar 'org.apache.maven:maven-embedder:3.1.0'
jar( 'junit:junit:4.11', :scope => 'test' )
end
plugin 'org.codehaus.plexus:plexus-component-metadata:1.5.4' do
execute_goals 'generate-metadata', 'generate-test-metadata'
end
build do
execute("first", :validate) do |context|
puts "Hello from JRuby!"
end
end
end
To use Polyglot for Maven you need to edit
${maven.multiModuleProjectDirectory}/.mvn/extensions.xml
and add the
appropriate language extension.
The scala dialect supports a separate configuration parameter
polyglot.scala.outputdir
to specify a different output directory. This avoids the
deletion during a Maven clean phase run, when set to a different folder such as
.polyglot-cache
instead of the default target
. Inspect polyglot-maven-examples/scala/.mvn/maven.config
for an example setup.
The available languages, in alphabetical order, with their artifact id are:
Language | Artifact Id |
---|---|
Atom | polyglot-atom |
Groovy | polyglot-groovy |
Clojure | polyglot-clojure |
Kotlin | polyglot-kotlin |
Ruby | polyglot-ruby |
Scala | polyglot-scala |
YAML | polyglot-yaml |
Java | polyglot-java |
XML | polyglot-xml |
The groupId value is io.takari.polyglot
.
Edit the extensions.xml
file and add the following, replacing ARTIFACTID with
the artifactId for your chosen language.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<extensions>
<extension>
<groupId>io.takari.polyglot</groupId>
<artifactId>ARTIFACTID</artifactId>
<version>0.4.6</version>
</extension>
</extensions>
We have created a simple Maven plugin that will help you convert any existing
pom.xml
files:
mvn io.takari.polyglot:polyglot-translate-plugin:translate \
-Dinput=pom.xml -Doutput=pom.{format}
Where the supported formats are rb
, groovy
, scala
, yaml
, atom
, java
and of course xml
. See
here for more info. You can
even convert back to xml
or cross-convert between all supported formats.
The whole interoperability story has not been worked out but you can create a XML-formatted POM from the Polyglot version. Currently mixing different dialects within a reactor is not supported.
A pom.xml
will currently not be installed or deployed except for the Ruby DSL
and the Scala DSL but we are working towards this feature for all DSLs.
Some support in IDE's like IntelliJ IDEA and Eclipse exist and the different markup languages are understood by various syntax highlighters. However, full integration of the markup syntax and the specific Maven-related aspects is not available.
Maven plugins or Maven plugin goals that rely on the XML format are not supported, since they are either attempting to parse the XML directly or modify it in automated fashion do not work with Polyglot Maven. Examples are:
pom.xml
(like e.g. display-dependency-updates
) work as expected though)Fixes would have to be implemented in these plugins. Workarounds or replacement workflows for most usecases exist.
Despite the warning above, Polyglot Maven is pretty stable right now. Have a look at the integration tests for each dialect in this repository for some examples as well as our dedicated polyglot-maven-examples project.
Some dialect folder contain specific README files with futher instructions as as test code with example projects and more. Ensure to check the ones for your specific dialect out as well.
The following projects are real world usage examples that use Polyglot Maven in their regular development and release work:
Specific docs and more can be found in the Kotlin dialect specific readme.
https://github.com/jruby - Extensive usage of Polyglot Ruby and contributions to the project from the team, and is recommended when creating java extensions for jruby.
The ruby-processing project has examples of creating java extensions for jruby (see JRubyArt and propane builds) as well as simpler projects where the polyglot maven is used in creating gem wrappers for processing.org java libraries (eg toxicgem and geomerative gems).
https://bitbucket.org/snakeyaml/snakeyaml/src/master/ - Extensive usage of Polyglot YAML and contributions to the project from the team.
https://urbanise.com - Using Polyglot YAML for building next generation strata management platform.
Specific docs and more can be found in the Scala dialect specific readme.
Java Projects
LambdaTest - A simple Java project with a standalone pom.scala
CmdOption (until version 0.6.0
) - A Java project with a
top-level reactor project and an additional shared scala file included into
both pom.scala
s (Switched over to Mill after version 0.6.0
)
Scala Projects
Domino (until version 1.1.3
) - A simple project using
Polyglot Scala. (Switched over to Mill after version 1.1.3
)
Blended (until version 2.4.0.2
) - A complex multi-project
using Polyglot Scala. Now archived. It's also an example where the #include
feature is
heavily used to share common configuration but avoid Maven parent poms, which
are often problematic. (Switched later to sbt and then Mill)
Please let us know of your usage by filing an issue so we can add it here.