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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-17602?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=18050869#comment-18050869
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David Smiley commented on SOLR-17602:
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When I filed this issue, I was very clear in the description (not in a "how"
but in goals). I read it today and I wish I had this as much as the day I
wrote it. I protest against changing this issue just for me to write it all
over again. Instead, the work Christos did can be another JIRA or no-JIRA
(it's just build work so whatever).
> Maintain final JAR dependencies in source control to track changes
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: SOLR-17602
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-17602
> Project: Solr
> Issue Type: Task
> Components: Build
> Reporter: David Smiley
> Priority: Major
> Labels: pull-request-available
> Time Spent: 1h 10m
> Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> When we make changes to Solr's dependencies (add/remove/change), we edit our
> build files, and the code review process shows these changes to corresponding
> build files. However, what we all *really* want to know is the impact the
> change has on the artifacts our users consume. Almost nobody validates the
> impact; we hope for the best and find out of problems long later.
> This issue tracks one artifact: Solr's final assembly (any of the zip,
> tar.gz, or Docker). I propose committing to source control a machine
> generated file listing of the dependencies in a text file. This file shall
> be updated based on executing a gradle task TBD. When gradle "check" is run,
> it will henceforth ensure that this file hasn't been modified or doesn't
> match the output of the script's generation (details TBD).
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