[jira] [Updated] (OFBIZ-10213) Update build.gradle to the latest dependencies

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[jira] [Updated] (OFBIZ-10213) Update build.gradle to the latest dependencies

Nicolas Malin (Jira)

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OFBIZ-10213?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Jacques Le Roux updated OFBIZ-10213:
------------------------------------
    Description:
We want to check from time to time if we need to update the dependencies.

It's easily done with the [gradle-versions-plugin |https://github.com/ben-manes/gradle-versions-plugin] which analyzes the dependencies and checks if there are newer versions available.

Running the check with
{code:java}
gradlew -PenableDependencyUpdates dependencyUpdates -Drevision=release
{code}

We get a list of dependencies to update. This is an umbrella task for action tasks.

We have problems with a number of libs, see OFBIZ-10922 for details. Some have been fixed since, notably Lucene+Solr

It then good to run OWASP dependency check to get a report about the security situation. Note though that all dependent libraries (ie also dependencies from the libraries OFBiz uses and recursively) are loaded by Gradle and analysed by the OWASP Dependency Check plugin. So it's materially impossible to check all the possible vulnerabilities. You can refer to

  was:
We want to check from time to time if we need to update the dependencies.

It's easily done with the [gradle-versions-plugin |https://github.com/ben-manes/gradle-versions-plugin] which analyzes the dependencies and checks if there are newer versions available.

Running the check with
{code:java}
gradlew -PenableDependencyUpdates dependencyUpdates -Drevision=release
{code}

We get a list of dependencies to update. This is an umbrella task for action tasks.

We have problems with a number of libs, see OFBIZ-10922 for details. Some have been fixed since, notably Lucene+Sole

It then good to run OWASP dependency check to get a report about the security situation. Note though that all dependent libraries (ie also dependencies from the libraries OFBiz uses and recursively) are loaded by Gradle and analysed by the OWASP Dependency Check plugin. So it's materially impossible to check all the possible vulnerabilities. You can refer to


> Update build.gradle to the latest dependencies
> ----------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: OFBIZ-10213
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OFBIZ-10213
>             Project: OFBiz
>          Issue Type: Task
>          Components: Gradle
>    Affects Versions: Trunk
>            Reporter: Jacques Le Roux
>            Assignee: Jacques Le Roux
>            Priority: Trivial
>         Attachments: OFBIZ-10213.patch, OFBIZ-10213.patch, OFBIZ-10213.patch
>
>
> We want to check from time to time if we need to update the dependencies.
> It's easily done with the [gradle-versions-plugin |https://github.com/ben-manes/gradle-versions-plugin] which analyzes the dependencies and checks if there are newer versions available.
> Running the check with
> {code:java}
> gradlew -PenableDependencyUpdates dependencyUpdates -Drevision=release
> {code}
> We get a list of dependencies to update. This is an umbrella task for action tasks.
> We have problems with a number of libs, see OFBIZ-10922 for details. Some have been fixed since, notably Lucene+Solr
> It then good to run OWASP dependency check to get a report about the security situation. Note though that all dependent libraries (ie also dependencies from the libraries OFBiz uses and recursively) are loaded by Gradle and analysed by the OWASP Dependency Check plugin. So it's materially impossible to check all the possible vulnerabilities. You can refer to



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