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= `mvnd` - the Maven Daemon This project aims at providing faster https://maven.apache.org/[Maven] builds using techniques known from Gradle and Takari. Architecture overview: * `mvnd` embeds Maven (so there is no need to install Maven separately). * The actual builds happen inside a long living background process, a.k.a. daemon. * One daemon instance can serve multiple consecutive requests from the `mvnd` client. * The `mvnd` client is a native executable built using https://www.graalvm.org/reference-manual/native-image/[GraalVM]. It starts faster and uses less memory compared to starting a traditional JVM. * Multiple daemons can be spawned in parallel if there is no idle daemon to serve a build request. This architecture brings the following advantages: * The JVM for running the actual builds does not need to get started anew for each build. * The classloaders holding classes of Maven plugins are cached over multiple builds. The plugin jars are thus read and parsed just once. SNAPSHOT versions of Maven plugins are not cached. * The native code produced by the Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler inside the JVM is kept too. Compared to stock Maven, less time is spent by the JIT compilation. During the repeated builds the JIT-optimized code is available immediately. This applies not only to the code coming from Maven plugins and Maven Core, but also to all code coming from the JDK itself. == Additional features `mvnd` brings the following features on top of the stock Maven: * `-T1C` is used by default. This means builing in parallel using as many threads as CPU cores on your machine. If your source tree does not support parallel builds, pass `-T1` on the command line to make your build serial. * Improved console output: we believe that the output of a parallel build on a stock Maven is hard to follow. Therefore, we implemented a simplified a non-rolling view showing the status of each build thread on a separate line. This is what it looks like on a machine with 24 cores: + image::src/main/images/console-output.png[] + Once the build is finshed, the complete Maven output is forwarded to the console. == How to install `mvnd` === Install using https://sdkman.io/[SDKMAN!] If SDKMAN! supports your operating system, it is as easy as [source,shell] ---- $ sdk install mvnd ---- If you used the manual install in the past, please make sure that the settings in `~/.m2/mvnd.properties` still make sense. With SDKMAN!, the `~/.m2/mvnd.properties` file is typically not needed at all, because both `JAVA_HOME` and `MVND_HOME` are managed by SDKMAN!. === Install manually * Download the latest ZIP suitable for your platform from https://github.com/mvndaemon/mvnd/releases * Unzip to a directory of your choice * Add the `bin` directory to `PATH` * Optionally, you can create `~/.m2/mvnd.properties` and set the `java.home` property in case you do not want to bother with setting `JAVA_HOME` environment variable. * Test whether `mvnd` works: + [source,shell] ---- $ mvnd --version Maven Daemon 0.0.0 (native) Apache Maven 3.6.3 (cecedd343002696d0abb50b32b541b8a6ba2883f) Maven home: /home/ppalaga/orgs/mvnd/mvnd/daemon/target/maven-distro Java version: 11.0.1, vendor: AdoptOpenJDK, runtime: /home/data/jvm/adopt-openjdk/jdk-11.0.1+13 Default locale: en_IE, platform encoding: UTF-8 OS name: "linux", version: "5.6.13-200.fc31.x86_64", arch: "amd64", family: "unix" ---- + If you are on Windows and see a message that `VCRUNTIME140.dll was not found`, you need to install `vc_redist.x64.exe` from https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/2977003/the-latest-supported-visual-c-downloads. See https://github.com/oracle/graal/issues/1762 for more information. == Usage `mvnd` is designed to accept the same command line options like stock `mvn` (plus some extras - see below), e.g.: [source,shell] ---- mvnd clean install ---- == `mvnd` specific options `--status` lists running daemons `--stop` kills all running daemons == Build `mvnd` from source === Prerequisites: * `git` * Maven * Download and unpack GraalVM CE from https://github.com/graalvm/graalvm-ce-builds/releases[GitHub] * Set `JAVA_HOME` to where you unpacked GraalVM in the previous step. Check that `java -version` output is as expected: + [source,shell] ---- $ $JAVA_HOME/bin/java -version openjdk version "11.0.7" 2020-04-14 OpenJDK Runtime Environment GraalVM CE 20.1.0 (build 11.0.7+10-jvmci-20.1-b02) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM GraalVM CE 20.1.0 (build 11.0.7+10-jvmci-20.1-b02, mixed mode, sharing) ---- + * Install the `native-image` tool: + [source,shell] ---- $ $JAVA_HOME/bin/gu install native-image ---- * `native-image` may require additional software to be installed depending on your platform - see the https://www.graalvm.org/docs/reference-manual/native-image/#prerequisites[`native-image` documentation]. === Build `mvnd` [source,shell] ---- $ git clone https://github.com/mvndaemon/mvnd.git $ cd mvnd $ mvn clean verify -Pnative ... $ cd client $ file target/mvnd target/mvnd: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, BuildID[sha1]=93a554f3807550a13c986d2af9a311ef299bdc5a, for GNU/Linux 3.2.0, with debug_info, not stripped $ ls -lh target/mvnd -rwxrwxr-x. 1 ppalaga ppalaga 25M Jun 2 13:23 target/mvnd ---- This project is still in prototype mode, so feedback is most welcomed!
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