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Deploying Libraries

Getting your library into Clojars is fairly straightforward as is documented near the end of the Leiningen tutorial. However, deploying elsewhere is not always that straightforward.

Private Repositories

There may be times when you want to make a library available to your team without making it public. This is best done by setting up a private repository. There are several types of repositories.

Static HTTP

The simplest kind of private repository is a web server pointed at a directory full of static files. You can use a file:/// URL in your :repositories to deploy that way if the directory is local to the machine on which Leiningen is running.

SCP

If you already have a server set up with your SSH public keys, the scp transport is a simple way to publish and consume private dependencies. Place the following inside defproject:

:plugins [[org.apache.maven.wagon/wagon-ssh-external "2.6"]]
:repositories [["releases" "scp://somerepo.com/home/repo/"]]

Then place the following outside the defproject:

(cemerick.pomegranate.aether/register-wagon-factory!
 "scp" #(let [c (resolve 'org.apache.maven.wagon.providers.ssh.external.ScpExternalWagon)]
          (clojure.lang.Reflector/invokeConstructor c (into-array []))))

It's also possible to deploy to a repository using the scp transport and consume from it over http if you set up nginx or something similar to serve the repository directory over HTTP.

N.B. SCP deploys to Clojars are no longer supported.

S3

If you don't already have a server running, Amazon S3 is a low-maintenance choice; you can deploy to S3 buckets using the S3 wagon private plugin.

Artifactory/Nexus/Archiva

The most full-featured and complex route is to run a full-fledged repository manager. Both Artifactory, Archiva and Nexus provide this. They also proxy to other repositories, so you can set ^:replace metadata on :repositories in project.clj, and dependency downloads will speed up by quite a bit since Clojars and Maven Central won't need to be checked.

The private server will need to be added to the :repositories listing in project.clj. Artifactory, Archiva and Nexus offer separate repositories for snapshots and releases, so you'll want two entries for them:

:repositories [["snapshots" "https://blueant.com/archiva/snapshots"]
               ["releases" "https://blueant.com/archiva/internal"]]

If you are are deploying to a repository that is only used for deployment and never for dependency resolution, then it should be specified in a :deploy-repositories slot instead of included in the more general-purpose :repositories map; the former is checked by lein deploy before the latter. Deployment-only repositories useful across a number of locally developed projects may also be specified in the :user profile in ~/.lein/profiles.clj:

{:user {:deploy-repositories [["internal" "https://blueant.com/archiva/internal"]]}}

Other Non-standard Repository Protocols

If you are deploying to a repository that doesn't use one of the standard protocols (file: or https:), you may need to provide a wagon factory for that protocol. You can do so by specifying the wagon provider as a plugin dependency:

:plugins [[org.apache.maven.wagon/wagon-webdav-jackrabbit "2.4"]]

then registering a wagon factory function at the bottom of your project.clj:

(cemerick.pomegranate.aether/register-wagon-factory! "dav"
  #(eval '(org.apache.maven.wagon.providers.webdav.WebDavWagon.)))

This step is unnecessary for plugins that include explicit Leiningen support like S3 wagon private and lein-webdav as these declare their wagons in ways that can be inferred automatically.

Authentication

Deploying and reading from private repositories needs authentication credentials. Check your repository's documentation for details, but you'll usually need to provide a :username and :password (for a repository) or :passphrase (for GPG). Leiningen will prompt you for a password if you haven't set up credentials, but it's convenient to set it so you don't have to re-enter it every time you want to deploy. You will need gpg installed and a key pair configured. If you need help with either of those, see the GPG guide.

GPG

If you specify a :creds :gpg entry in one of your :repositories settings maps, Leiningen will decrypt ~/.lein/credentials.clj.gpg and use that to find the proper credentials for the given repository.

:repositories [["releases" {:url "https://blueant.com/archiva/internal"
                            :creds :gpg}]]

First write your credentials map to ~/.lein/credentials.clj like so:

{#"blueant" {:password "locative1"}
 #"https://repo.clojars.org"
 {:username "milgrim" :password "locative1"}
 "s3p://s3-repo-bucket/releases"
 {:username "AKIAIN..." :passphrase "1TChrGK4s..."}}

Then encrypt it with gpg:

$ gpg --default-recipient-self -e \
    ~/.lein/credentials.clj > ~/.lein/credentials.clj.gpg

Remember to delete the plaintext credentials.clj once you've encrypted it. Due to a bug in gpg you currently need to use gpg-agent and have already unlocked your key before Leiningen launches, but with gpg-agent you only have to enter your passphrase periodically; it will keep it cached for a given period.

Note to windows users: Be sure to download the full version of Gpg4win and select GPA for installation. You then need to run gpg-connect-agent /bye from the command line before starting lein.

Full-disk Encryption

If you use full-disk encryption, it may be safe to store your credentials without using GPG. In this case, you can create an :auth profile containing a :repository-auth key mapping URL regexes to credentials. Your ~/.lein/profiles.clj file would look something like this:

{:user {...}
 :auth {:repository-auth {#"blueant" {:username "milgrim"
                                      :password "locative1"}}}}

Credentials in the Environment

Unattended builds can specify :env instead of :gpg in the repository specification to have credentials looked up in the environment. For example, specifying :password :env will cause Leiningen to look up (System/getenv "LEIN_PASSWORD") for that value. You can control which environment variable is looked up for each value by using a namespaced keyword, like so:

:repositories [["releases" {:url "https://blueant.com/archiva/internal"
                            :username :env/archiva_username
                            :password :env/archiva_password}]]

Finally, you can opt to load credentials from the environment or GPG credentials by using a vector of :gpg and :env/* values to define the priority of each:

:repositories [["releases" {:url "https://blueant.com/archiva/internal"
                            :username [:gpg :env/archiva_username]
                            :password [:gpg :env/archiva_password]}]]

In this example, both :username and :password will be looked up in ~/.lein/credentials.clj.gpg first, and only if a value is not available there will the ARCHIVA_* env vars be checked. This allows you to avoid creating profiles just to use different credential sources in e.g. a local development environment vs. a centralized build environment.

Note that the forms :env and :env/varname are only supported within the :repositories key. Plugins may decide to implement this themselves, but this is not default behaviour.

Deployment

Once you've set up a private repository and configured project.clj appropriately, you can deploy to it:

$ lein deploy [repository-name]

If the project's current version is a SNAPSHOT, it will default to deploying to the "snapshots" repository; otherwise it will default to "releases". In order to make lein deploy with no argument target Clojars, include this in your project.clj:

{:deploy-repositories [["releases" :clojars]
                       ["snapshots" :clojars]]}

You can use this to alias any :repositories entry; Clojars is just the most common use case.

Releasing Simplified

Once you have your repositories and user credentials configured for deploying, much of the work involved in actually deploying a release version can be tedious and difficult to perform in a consistent fashion from one release to the next. To simplify the release process, there is a lein release [$LEVEL] task where $LEVEL can be refer to any of :major, :minor, :patch, :alpha, :beta, or :rc. The simplification lies in the list of :release-tasks that get run on each call to lein release. For example, suppose that your project.clj starts off as follows:

(defproject leiningen "2.4.0-SNAPSHOT" ...)

Using the default :release-tasks and the following command line:

$ lein release :patch

The following events will happen:

  1. The change task is run to remove whatever qualifier is currently on the version in project.clj. In this case, project.clj should look something like (defproject leiningen "2.4.0" ...).

  2. vcs tasks will be run to commit this change and then tag the repository with the release version number.

  3. The deploy task will be the same as if lein deploy had been run from the command line. NOTE This will require a valid "releases" entry either in :deploy-repositories or :repositories

  4. The change task is run once more to "bump" the version number in project.clj. Which version level is decided by the argument passed to lein release, in this case :patch. Afterword, project.clj will look something like (defproject leiningen "2.4.1-SNAPSHOT" ...).

  5. Finally, vcs tasks will be run once more to commit the new change to project.clj and then push these two new commits to the default remote repository.

The release process will fail if there are uncommitted changes.

Overriding the default :release-tasks

You can use the lein-pprint plugin to see the default value of :release-tasks:

$ lein pprint :release-tasks
[["vcs" "assert-committed"]
 ["change" "version" "leiningen.release/bump-version" "release"]
 ["vcs" "commit"]
 ["vcs" "tag"]
 ["deploy"]
 ["change" "version" "leiningen.release/bump-version"]
 ["vcs" "commit"]
 ["vcs" "push"]]

This :release-tasks value can be overridden in project.clj. An example might be a case in which you want the default workflow up to lein deploy but don't want to automatically bump the version in project.clj:

  :release-tasks [["vcs" "assert-committed"]
                  ["change" "version"
                   "leiningen.release/bump-version" "release"]
                  ["vcs" "commit"]
                  ["vcs" "tag"]
                  ["deploy"]]

The :release-tasks vector should have every element be either a task name or a collection in which the first element is a task name and the rest are arguments to that task, just like :prep-tasks or :aliases entries.

Of course, :release-tasks doesn't have to look anything like the default, the default is just an assumed convention among most Clojure libraries using Leiningen. Applications will have different requirements that are varied enough that Leiningen doesn't attempt to support them out of the box.

If you just want to change the deploy step so it goes to Clojars, you don't have to replace the whole :release-tasks vector, just set this:

:deploy-repositories {"releases" {:url "https://repo.clojars.org" :creds :gpg}}

Committing

By default, ["vcs" "commit"] will commit with the message "Version <version>". You can override that by passing a format-ready string to the task, like so: ["vcs" "commit" "Version %s [skip ci]"].

Tagging

By default ["vcs" "tag"] will create a GPG signed tag with your project version number. You can add a tag prefix by passing the prefix after "tag", for example: ["vcs" "tag" "v"]. You can disable tag signing by passing --no-sign, for example: ["vcs" "tag" "v" "--no-sign"] or ["vcs" "tag" "--no-sign"].

Deploying to Maven Central

Deploying your libraries and other artifacts to Maven Central is often desirable. Most tools that use the Maven repository format (including Leiningen, Gradle, sbt, and Maven itself) include Maven Central or one of its mirrors as a default repository for resolving project dependencies. So deploying your libraries to Maven Central offers the widest distribution, especially if your users are likely to be in languages other than Clojure.

Thankfully, Leiningen can deploy your libraries to Maven Central, with a few additional bits of configuration. All of the guidance about deploying to private repositories laid out above applies; but, here's a step-by-step recipe from start to finish:

  1. Register an account and groupId on oss.sonatype.org; refer to this for details on how to get registered (you can ignore most of the info on that page regarding configuring Maven and/or ant, since we'll not be touching those tools). Note that all artifacts you deploy to Sonatype OSS will need to use the groupId(s) you choose, so your project coordinates should be set up to match; e.g.:
(defproject your.group.id/projectname "x.y.z" ...)
  1. Add your credentials for oss.sonatype.org to your ~/.lein/credentials.clj.gpg file. Something like this will do:
{#"https://oss.sonatype.org/.*"
 {:username "username" :password "password"}}

Refer to the instructions earlier on this page for how to encrypt a plain-text credentials.clj using GPG.

  1. Add the Sonatype OSS deployment repository endpoints to your project.clj, e.g.:
:deploy-repositories [["releases" {:url "https://oss.sonatype.org/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2/"
                                   :creds :gpg}
                       "snapshots" {:url "https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/"
                                    :creds :gpg}]]
  1. Conform to Sonatype OSS' requirements for uploaded artifacts' pom.xml files; all you need to do is make sure the following slots are populated properly in your project.clj:
  :description
  :url
  :license
  :scm
  :pom-addition

Examples of OSS-acceptable values for these entries can be seen in this project.clj file. Note that all of them should be appropriate for your project; blind copy/paste is not appropriate here.

  1. Run lein deploy. Leiningen will push all of the files it would otherwise send to Clojars or your other private repository to the proper OSS repository (either releases or snapshots depending on whether your project's version number has -SNAPSHOT in it or not).

  2. If you're deploying a release, log in to oss.sonatype.org, and close and release/promote your staged repository. (This manual step will eventually be automated through the use of a plugin.) The release will show up in OSS' releases repository immediately, and sync to Maven Central on the next cycle (~ 1-4 hours usually).

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