This is to fix the regression added in #2433. In this fix
we're going to fail the build early if --use-timestamp is
provided and working directory is *not* clean. And also
fail the build if something in the script has returned
non-zero value.
- new flag `-T, --use-timestamp` to use `timestamp` when POM version contains SNAPSHOT
- in the final artifacts (jar) name
- in the final package (rpm, deb) name
- in `/etc/cloudstack-release` file of SystemVMs
- in the Management Server > About dialog
- if there's a "branding" string in the POM version (e.g. `x.y.z.a-NAME[-SNAPSHOT]`),
the branding name will be used in the final generated pacakge name such as following:
- `cloudstack-management-x.y.z.a-NAME.NUMBER.el7.centos.x86_64`
- `cloudstack-management_x.y.z.a-NAME-NUMBER~xenial_all.deb`
- branding string can be overriden with newly added `-b, --brand` flag
- handle the new format version for VR version
- fix long opts (they were broken)
- tolerate and show a warning message for unrecognized flags
- usage help reformat
* Deprecate Version class in favor or CloudStackVersion
We do not need to build a tarball before building the DEB packages
Saves a few minutes on building DEB packages
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
- Switches Travis to use jdk1.8
- Changes java-version to 1.8
- Change jdk/maven version to 1.8
- Switch to F5/java8 compatible library release
- Switch packaging to use jdk 1.8, and jre 1.8 in init/systemd scripts
- Switch systemvm to openjdk-8-jre
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
- systemd: Add a /etc/sysconfig/cloudstack-* file
This allows users to easily override variables passed to Java when
starting up.
It also creates a foundation for sharing the systemd service profile
between CentOS and Ubuntu since it only requires the environment file
to be changed.
- deb: Add Ubuntu 16.04 support
Ubuntu 16.04 differs from Ubuntu 14.04 in a few ways:
- systemd instead of sysvinit / upstart
- Java 8 support
The packaging now detects on which distribution it is being
build and based on that it installs different files in the
packages, but it also changes the Dependencies.
Packages for Ubuntu 16.04 will require Java 8 as a JRE
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>