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How to release Atmosphere
Sebastian Lövdahl edited this page Feb 6, 2023
·
5 revisions
Add a disable-java8-doclint
profile to .m2/settings.xml
for making it possible to build a release:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--
User-specific configuration for maven. Includes things that should not
be distributed with the pom.xml file, such as developer identity, along with
local settings, like proxy information. The default location for the
settings file is ~/.m2/settings.xml
-->
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd">
<!-- ... -->
<profiles>
<profile>
<id>disable-java8-doclint</id>
<activation>
<jdk>[1.8,)</jdk>
</activation>
<properties>
<additionalparam>-Xdoclint:none</additionalparam>
</properties>
</profile>
</profiles>
Tof you need to release an Atmosphere version, you must do:
mvn release:prepare -DautoVersionSubmodules=true && mvn release:perform
If successful, go to Sonatype and open "Staging Repositories". Search for a repository with atmosphere in the name, click it, and choose close
and then release
above the list of repositories. Next update README.md with the issue's change log (last section).
- Understanding Atmosphere
- Understanding @ManagedService
- Using javax.inject.Inject and javax.inject.PostConstruct annotation
- Understanding Atmosphere's Annotation
- Understanding AtmosphereResource
- Understanding AtmosphereHandler
- Understanding WebSocketHandler
- Understanding Broadcaster
- Understanding BroadcasterCache
- Understanding Meteor
- Understanding BroadcastFilter
- Understanding Atmosphere's Events Listeners
- Understanding AtmosphereInterceptor
- Configuring Atmosphere for Performance
- Understanding JavaScript functions
- Understanding AtmosphereResourceSession
- Improving Performance by using the PoolableBroadcasterFactory
- Using Atmosphere Jersey API
- Using Meteor API
- Using AtmosphereHandler API
- Using Socket.IO
- Using GWT
- Writing HTML5 Server-Sent Events
- Using STOMP protocol
- Streaming WebSocket messages
- Configuring Atmosphere's Classes Creation and Injection
- Using AtmosphereInterceptor to customize Atmosphere Framework
- Writing WebSocket sub protocol
- Configuring Atmosphere for the Cloud
- Injecting Atmosphere's Components in Jersey
- Sharing connection between Browser's windows and tabs
- Understanding AtmosphereResourceSession
- Manage installed services
- Server Side: javadoc API
- Server Side: atmosphere.xml and web.xml configuration
- Client Side: atmosphere.js API