* Use a valid SemVer format for the SNAPSHOT version
* Update pom.xml
* Update pom.xml
---------
Co-authored-by: Stian Thorgersen <stianst@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Stian Thorgersen <stian@redhat.com>
* Remove Red Hat Single Sign-On product profile from upstream
Closes#14916
* review suggestions: Remove Red Hat Single Sign-On product profile from upstream
Closes#14916
Co-authored-by: Peter Skopek <pskopek@redhat.com>
* WF 25.0.1 upgrade light
* Re-enable adapters with old WF versions
* Put server-overlay and server-legacy-dist back to reduce size of PR changes
* Remove some more changes that are not needed
* Fix issues adding to provider properties
* Fix user-profile updates for tests
* tls fixes
* Set WF to 23 for adapter tests
Co-authored-by: Pedro Igor <pigor.craveiro@gmail.com>
Symlinks are frequently unavailable on Windows (must be on NTFS and user must
have SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege). Removing the symlinks for licenses/common/
should enable the build to function mostly normally on Windows. The individual
license files will be incorrect, but that shouldn't matter for local builds.
Release builds are done on *nix.
The plugin rolls several different plugin executions into one. The common files
are distributed using a resource jar, used by and unpacked by the plugin.
org.keycloak dependencies will be automatically added to the xml during the
build, removing the need for runs of download-license-files.sh every time the
keycloak version changes.
Documentation on "why and how" for the license data has also been added.
To reduce code duplication issues, plugin definitions are stored in
keycloak-parent, but only active in the projects that need them (not bound to
any phase by default). Also, the common files have been moved into
licenses/common/, so that a single symlink will suffice to replicate the
current and future files needed by the plugin executions. While the
assembly.xml definitions remain duplicated, they are fairly minimal and
shouldn't need to change often.
License data is available for all adapters shipped in the product, plus
server-feature-pack.
The keycloak slot is populated with data, in addition to the rh-sso slot. A
number of the adapters don't depend on any third-party artifacts, so they have
(mostly) blank license.xml files.
Use a newer version of the server-provisioning-plugin.
By using a newer version of the plugin, we can reduce
the amount of build code that replicates the provisioning
logic when building overlays.
This applies to both:
* Server distribution overlay
* Adapter distribution overlay
Both overlays are created purely by using the provisioning
plugin and the feature-packs produced elsewhere in the build,
along with the admin-cli artifact when appropriate.