Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
444 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

plugins - Grails very slow to resolve certain dependencies

My 'resolving dependencies' is up around 30 seconds for a lightening fast computer and network.

I've looked at this question Grails: Very slow deploy time. 'Resolving Dependencies...' takes 10+ seconds, and I don't appear to have any 'snapshot' dependencies. I've cleared out my ivy cache and forced a redownload of everything, no help. Enabling logging, these few lines are the offenders. Nothing is being downloaded, but it appears that attempts are made to look for something remotely every time, given my network traffic. Note these are the ONLY entries that have the [some number] version before them, and then a different one after - that can't be coincidence - what does it mean? How can I stop grails from trying to find these slightly different versions?

    .... these lines take 20+seconds, everything else is in the milliseconds ...
found commons-logging#commons-logging;1.1.1 in grailsPlugins
[1.1.1] commons-logging#commons-logging;[1.1, 2.0)
found org.apache.httpcomponents#httpclient;4.1.2 in default
[4.1.2] org.apache.httpcomponents#httpclient;[4.1, 5.0)
found org.apache.httpcomponents#httpcore;4.1.2 in default
found org.codehaus.jackson#jackson-core-asl;1.9.1 in default
[1.9.1] org.codehaus.jackson#jackson-core-asl;[1.4,)
found javax.mail#mail;1.4.4 in default
[1.4.4] javax.mail#mail;[1.4,)

I am using two plugins that must be the offenders, and have listed their dependencies.groovy below. I've tried commenting out any explicit remote URLs.?

SimpleDB:

    grails.project.class.dir = "target/classes"
grails.project.test.class.dir = "target/test-classes"
grails.project.test.reports.dir = "target/test-reports"

grails.project.dependency.resolution = {

    inherits "global"

    log "warn"

    String datastoreVersion = "1.0.0.M9"

    repositories {
        grailsPlugins()
        grailsHome()
        grailsCentral()
        mavenRepo "http://repo.grails.org/grails/core" //tried commenting this out, no help
        mavenLocal()
        mavenCentral()
        mavenRepo 'http://repository.codehaus.org'  //tried commenting this out, no help

}

dependencies {

    def excludes = {
        transitive = false
    }
    compile("org.grails:grails-datastore-gorm-simpledb:$datastoreVersion",
             "org.grails:grails-datastore-gorm-plugin-support:$datastoreVersion",
             "org.grails:grails-datastore-gorm:$datastoreVersion",
             "org.grails:grails-datastore-core:$datastoreVersion",
             "org.grails:grails-datastore-simpledb:$datastoreVersion",
             "org.grails:grails-datastore-web:$datastoreVersion") {
         transitive = false
     }        

    runtime("stax:stax:1.2.0", excludes)
    runtime('com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk:1.2.0')

    test("org.grails:grails-datastore-gorm-test:$datastoreVersion",
         "org.grails:grails-datastore-simple:$datastoreVersion") {
        transitive = false
    }
}

plugins {
    build ":release:1.0.0.RC3", {
        exported = false
    }
}

}

Ajax uploader:

 grails.project.class.dir = "target/classes"
grails.project.test.class.dir = "target/test-classes"
grails.project.test.reports.dir = "target/test-reports"
grails.release.scm.enabled=false

grails.project.dependency.resolution = {
    // inherit Grails' default dependencies
    inherits("global") {
        // uncomment to disable ehcache
        // excludes 'ehcache'
    }
    log "warn" // log level of Ivy resolver, either 'error', 'warn', 'info', 'debug' or 'verbose'
    repositories {
        grailsPlugins()
        grailsHome()
        grailsCentral()

        // uncomment the below to enable remote dependency resolution
        // from public Maven repositories
        mavenLocal()
        mavenCentral()
        //mavenRepo "http://snapshots.repository.codehaus.org"
        //mavenRepo "http://repository.codehaus.org"
        //mavenRepo "http://download.java.net/maven/2/"
        //mavenRepo "http://repository.jboss.com/maven2/"
    }
    dependencies {
        // specify dependencies here under either 'build', 'compile', 'runtime', 'test' or 'provided' scopes eg.

        test 'org.gmock:gmock:0.8.1'
    }
    plugins {

        //build ':release:1.0.0.RC3'

    }
}
See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Answer

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

and I've found the culprit. If a plugin you use relies on a library in maven that has 'open ended' dependencies, grails will go and look each time if there are newer versions to download in the range. I have no idea why anyone would specify it like this. It seems it would lead to unreliable behaviour. For me, the culprit is Amazon's java aws library, naturally required by the simpledb plugin that talks to Amazon's cloud.

http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.amazonaws/aws-java-sdk/1.2.10

note how some of its dependencies are like this

org.apache.httpcomponents httpclient [4.1, 5.0)

it appears that every time, grails is looking for a newer version (and downloading if it exists, I just noticed 4.2-alpha1 of httpclient come down when I ran this time).

By removing that dependency from the plugin and manually adding the required libraries to my .lib folder, I reduced my startup time from >30sec to <1sec


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...