Using the Jetty Maven Plugin

The Jetty Maven plugin is useful for rapid development and testing. It can optionally periodically scan your project for changes and automatically redeploy the webapp if any are found. This makes the development cycle more productive by eliminating the build and deploy steps: you use your IDE to make changes to the project, and the running web container automatically picks them up, allowing you to test them straight away.

The plugin has been substantially re-architected in jetty-10 to:

  • have less goals

  • make deployment modes (embedded, forked or to a jetty distribution) apply uniformly across all goals

  • simplify configuration options

  • make the purpose and operation of each goal clearer

  • rearchitect with composition rather than inheritance to make future extensions easier

There are now only 4 goals to run a webapp in jetty:

Plus two utility goals:

jetty:run and jetty:start are alike in that they both run an unassembled webapp in jetty,however jetty:run is designed to be used at the command line, whereas jetty:start is specifically designed to be bound to execution phases in the build lifecycle. jetty:run will pause maven while jetty is running, echoing all output to the console, and then stop maven when jetty exits. jetty:start will not pause maven, will write all its output to a file, and will not stop maven when jetty exits.

jetty:run-war and jetty:start-war are similar in that they both run an assembled war file in jetty. However, jetty:run-war is designed to be run at the command line, whereas jetty:start-war is specifically designed to be bound to execution phases in the build lifecycle. jetty:run-war will pause maven while jetty is running, echoing all output to the console, and then stop maven when jetty exits. jetty:start-war will not not pause maven, will write all its output to a file, and will not stop maven when jetty exits.

While the Jetty Maven Plugin can be very useful for development we do not recommend its use in a production capacity. In order for the plugin to work it needs to leverage many internal Maven apis and Maven itself it not a production deployment tool. We recommend either the traditional xrefr:og-deploy[distribution] deployment approach or using embedded Jetty.

Get Up and Running

First, add jetty-maven-plugin to your pom.xml definition:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
</plugin>

Then, from the same directory as your root pom.xml, type:

mvn jetty:run

This starts Jetty and serves up your project on http://localhost:8080/.

Jetty will continue to run until you stop it. By default, it will not automatically restart your webapp. Set a non-zero <scan> value to have jetty scan your webapp for changes and automatically redeploy, or set <scan> to 0 to cause manual redeployment by hitting the Enter key.

You can terminate the plugin with a Ctrl+c in the terminal window where it is running.

The classpath of the running Jetty instance and its deployed webapp are managed by Maven, and may not be exactly what you expect. For example: a webapp’s dependent jars might be referenced via the local repository, or other projects in the reactor, not the WEB-INF/lib directory.

Supported Goals

The goals prefixed with "run" are designed to be used at the command line. They first run a maven build on your project to ensure at least the classes are all built. They then start jetty and pause the maven build process until jetty is manually terminated, at which time the build will also be terminated. Jetty can scan various files in your project for changes and redeploy the webapp as necessary, or you can choose to manually trigger a redeploy if you prefer. All output from jetty is echoed to the console.

The goals prefixed with "start" are designed to be used with build lifecycle bindings in the pom, and not at the command line. No part of your project will be rebuilt by invoking these goals - you should ensure that your bind the execution to a build phase where all necessary parts of your project have been built. Maven will start and terminate jetty at the appropriate points in the build lifecycle, continuing with the build. Jetty will not scan any files in your project for changes, and your webapp will not be redeployed either automatically or manually. Output from jetty is directed to a file in the target directory.

To see a list of all goals supported by the Jetty Maven plugin, do:

mvn jetty:help

To see the detailed list of parameters that can be configured for a particular goal, in addition to its description, do:

mvn jetty:help -Ddetail=true -Dgoal= <goal name>

Deployment Modes

All of the "run" and "start" goals can deploy your webapp either into the running maven process, or forked into a new child process, or forked into a jetty distribution on disk.

This is controlled by setting the deployMode configuration parameter in the pom, but can also be set by defining the maven property 'jetty.deployMode'.

Embedded

deployMode of EMBED. This is the "classic" jetty maven plugin deployment mode, running in-process with maven. This is the default mode.

These extra configuration parameters are available:

httpConnector

Optional. Note that to configure a https connector, you will need to use xml configuration files instead, setting the jettyXmls parameter. This parameter can only be used to configure a standard http connector. If not specified, Jetty will create a ServerConnector instance listening on port 8080. You can change this default port number by using the system property jetty.http.port on the command line, for example, mvn -Djetty.http.port=9999 jetty:run. Alternatively, you can use this configuration element to set up the information for the ServerConnector. The following are the valid configuration sub-elements:

port

The port number for the connector to listen on. By default it is 8080.

host

The particular interface for the connector to listen on. By default, all interfaces.

name

The name of the connector, which is useful for configuring contexts to respond only on particular connectors.

idleTimeout

Maximum idle time for a connection. You could instead configure the connectors in a standard jetty xml config file and put its location into the jettyXml parameter. Note that since Jetty 9.0 it is no longer possible to configure a https connector directly in the pom.xml: you need to use jetty xml config files to do it.

loginServices

Optional. A list of org.eclipse.jetty.security.LoginService implementations. Note that there is no default realm. If you use a realm in your web.xml you can specify a corresponding realm here. You could instead configure the login services in a jetty xml file and add its location to the jettyXml parameter. See Configuring Security.

requestLog

Optional. An implementation of the org.eclipse.jetty.server.RequestLog request log interface. An implementation that respects the NCSA format is available as org.eclipse.jetty.server.NCSARequestLog. There are three other ways to configure the RequestLog:

  • In a jetty xml config file, as specified in the jettyXml parameter.

  • In a context xml config file, as specified in the contextXml parameter.

  • In the webApp element.

    See Configuring Request Logs for more information.

server

Optional as of Jetty 9.3.1. This would configure an instance of org.eclipse.jetty.server.Server for the plugin to use, however it is usually not necessary to configure this, as the plugin will automatically configure one for you. In particular, if you use the jettyXmls element, then you generally don’t want to define this element, as you are probably using the jettyXmls file/s to configure up a Server with a special constructor argument, such as a custom threadpool. If you define both a server element and use a jettyXmls element which points to a config file that has a line like <Configure id="Server" class="org.eclipse.jetty.server.Server"> then the the xml configuration will override what you configure for the server in the pom.xml.

useProvidedScope

Default value is false. If true, the dependencies with <scope>provided</scope> are placed onto the container classpath. Be aware that this is not the webapp classpath, as provided indicates that these dependencies would normally be expected to be provided by the container. You should very rarely ever need to use this. See Container Classpath vs WebApp Classpath.

Forked

deployMode of FORK. This is similar to the old "jetty:run-forked" goal - a separate process is forked to run your webapp embedded into jetty. These extra configuration parameters are available:

env

Optional. Map of key/value pairs to pass as environment to the forked JVM.

jvmArgs

Optional. A space separated string representing arbitrary arguments to pass to the forked JVM.

forkWebXml

Optional. Defaults to target/fork-web.xml. This is the location of a quickstart web xml file that will be generated during the forking of the jetty process. You should not need to set this parameter, but it is available if you wish to control the name and location of that file.

useProvidedScope

Default value is false. If true, the dependencies with <scope>provided</scope> are placed onto the container classpath. Be aware that this is NOT the webapp classpath, as "provided" indicates that these dependencies would normally be expected to be provided by the container. You should very rarely ever need to use this. See Container Classpath vs WebApp Classpath.

In a jetty distribution

deployMode of EXTERNAL. This is similar to the old "jetty:run-distro" goal - your webapp is deployed into a dynamically downloaded, unpacked and configured jetty distribution. A separate process is forked to run it. These extra configuration parameters are available:

jettyBase

Optional. The location of an existing jetty base directory to use to deploy the webapp. The existing base will be copied to the target/ directory before the webapp is deployed. If there is no existing jetty base, a fresh one will be made in target/jetty-base.

jettyHome

Optional. The location of an existing unpacked jetty distribution. If one does not exist, a fresh jetty distribution will be downloaded from maven and installed to the target directory.

jettyOptions

Optional. A space separated string representing extra arguments to the synthesized jetty command line. Values for these arguments can be found in the section titled "Options" in the output of java -jar $jetty.home/start.jar --help.

jvmArgs

Optional. A space separated string representing arguments that should be passed to the jvm of the child process running the distro.

modules

Optional. An array of names of additional jetty modules that the jetty child process will activate. Use this to change the container classpath instead of useProvidedScope. These modules are enabled by default: server,http,webapp,deploy.

Common Configuration

The following configuration parameters are common to all of the "run-" and "start-" goals:

deployMode

One of EMBED, FORK or EXTERNAL. Default EMBED. Can also be configured by setting the Maven property jetty.deployMode. This parameter determines whether the webapp will run in jetty in-process with Maven, forked into a new process, or deployed into a jetty distribution. See Deployment Modes.

jettyXmls

Optional. A comma separated list of locations of jetty xml files to apply in addition to any plugin configuration parameters. You might use it if you have other webapps, handlers, specific types of connectors etc., to deploy, or if you have other Jetty objects that you cannot configure from the plugin.

skip

Default is false. If true, the execution of the plugin exits. Same as setting the SystemProperty -Djetty.skip on the command line. This is most useful when configuring Jetty for execution during integration testing and you want to skip the tests.

excludedGoals

Optional. A list of Jetty plugin goal names that will cause the plugin to print an informative message and exit. Useful if you want to prevent users from executing goals that you know cannot work with your project.

supportedPackagings

Optional. Defaults to war. This is a list of maven <packaging> types that can work with the jetty plugin. Usually, only war projects are suitable, however, you may configure other types. The plugin will refuse to start if the <packaging> type in the pom is not in list of supportedPackagings.

systemProperties

Optional. Allows you to configure System properties for the execution of the plugin. For more information, see Setting System Properties.

systemPropertiesFile

Optional. A file containing System properties to set for the execution of the plugin. By default, settings that you make here do not override any system properties already set on the command line, by the JVM, or in the POM via systemProperties. Read Setting System Properties for how to force overrides.

jettyProperties

Optional. A map of property name, value pairs. Allows you to configure standard jetty properties.

Container Classpath vs WebApp Classpath

The Servlet Specification makes a strong distinction between the classpath for a webapp, and the classpath of the container. When running in maven, the plugin’s classpath is equivalent to the container classpath. It will make a classpath for the webapp to be deployed comprised of <dependencies> specified in the pom.

If your production environment places specific jars onto the container’s classpath, the equivalent way to do this with maven is to define these as <dependencies> for the plugin itself, not the project. See configuring maven plugins. This is suitable if you are using either EMBED or FORK mode. If you are using EXTERNAL mode, then you should configure the modules parameter with the names of the jetty modules that place these jars onto the container classpath.

Note that in EMBED or FORK mode, you could also influence the container classpath by setting the useProvidedScope parameter to true: this will place any dependencies with <scope>provided<scope> onto the plugin’s classpath. Use this very cautiously: as the plugin already automatically places most jetty jars onto the classpath, you could wind up with duplicate jars.

jetty:run

The run goal deploys a webapp that is not first built into a WAR. A virtual webapp is constructed from the project’s sources and its dependencies. It looks for the constituent parts of a webapp in the maven default project locations, although you can override these in the plugin configuration. For example, by default it looks for:

  • resources in ${project.basedir}/src/main/webapp

  • classes in ${project.build.outputDirectory}

  • web.xml in ${project.basedir}/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/

The plugin first runs a maven parallel build to ensure that the classes are built and up-to-date before deployment. If you change the source of a class and your IDE automatically compiles it in the background, the plugin picks up the changed class (note you need to configure a non-zero scan interval for automatic redeployment).

If the plugin is invoked in a multi-module build, any dependencies that are also in the maven reactor are used from their compiled classes. Prior to jetty-9.4.7 any dependencies needed to be built first.

Once invoked, you can configure the plugin to run continuously, scanning for changes in the project and automatically performing a hot redeploy when necessary. Any changes you make are immediately reflected in the running instance of Jetty, letting you quickly jump from coding to testing, rather than going through the cycle of: code, compile, reassemble, redeploy, test.

The maven build will be paused until jetty exits, at which time maven will also exit.

Stopping jetty is accomplished by typing cntrl-c at the command line.

Output from jetty will be logged to the console.

Here is an example, which turns on scanning for changes every ten seconds, and sets the webapp context path to /test:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <scan>10</scan>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

Configuration

webApp

This is an instance of org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext, which is an extension to the class org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.WebAppContext. You can use any of the setter methods on this object to configure your webapp. Here are a few of the most useful ones:

contextPath

The context path for your webapp. By default, this is set to /. If using a custom value for this parameter, you should include the leading /, example /mycontext.

descriptor

The path to the web.xml file for your webapp. By default, the plugin will look in src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.

defaultsDescriptor

The path to a webdefault.xml file that will be applied to your webapp before the web.xml. If you don’t supply one, Jetty uses a default file baked into the jetty-webapp.jar.

overrideDescriptor

The path to a web.xml file that Jetty applies after reading your web.xml. You can use this to replace or add configuration.

jettyEnvXml

Optional. Location of a jetty-env.xml file, which allows you to make JNDI bindings that satisfy env-entry, resource-env-ref, and resource-ref linkages in the web.xml that are scoped only to the webapp and not shared with other webapps that you might be deploying at the same time (for example, by using a jettyXml file).

tempDirectory

The path to a dir that Jetty can use to expand or copy jars and jsp compiles when your webapp is running. The default is ${project.build.outputDirectory}/tmp.

baseResource

The path from which Jetty serves static resources. Defaults to src/main/webapp. If this location does not exist (because, for example, your project does not use static content), then the plugin will synthesize a virtual static resource location of target/webapp-synth.

resourceBases

Use instead of baseResource if you have multiple directories from which you want to serve static content. This is an array of directory locations, either as urls or file paths.

baseAppFirst

Defaults to "true". Controls whether any overlaid wars are added before or after the original base resource(s) of the webapp. See the section on overlaid wars for more information.

containerIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to ./jetty-servlet-api-[/]\.jar$|.javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-[/]\.jar|.taglibs-standard-impl-.\.jar. This is a pattern that is applied to the names of the jars on the container’s classpath (ie the classpath of the plugin, not that of the webapp) that should be scanned for fragments, tlds, annotations etc. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern that is documented here. You can define extra patterns of jars that will be included in the scan.

webInfIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to matching all of the dependency jars for the webapp (ie the equivalent of WEB-INF/lib). You can make this pattern more restrictive to only match certain jars by using this setter. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.WebInfIncludeJarPattern that is documented here.

contextXml

The path to a context xml file that is applied to your webapp AFTER the webApp element.

classesDirectory

Location of your compiled classes for the webapp. You should rarely need to set this parameter. Instead, you should set <build><outputDirectory> in your pom.xml.

testClassesDirectory

Location of the compiled test classes for your webapp. By default this is ${project.build.testOutputDirectory}.

useTestScope

If true, the classes from testClassesDirectory and dependencies of scope "test" are placed first on the classpath. By default this is false.

scan

The pause in seconds between sweeps of the webapp to check for changes and automatically hot redeploy if any are detected. By default this is -1, which disables hot redeployment scanning. A value of 0 means no hot redeployment is done, and that you must use the Enter key to manually force a redeploy. Any positive integer will enable hot redeployment, using the number as the sweep interval in seconds.

scanTargetPatterns

Optional. List of extra directories with glob-style include/excludes patterns (see javadoc for FileSystem.getPathMatcher) to specify other files to periodically scan for changes.

scanClassesPattern

Optional. Include and exclude patterns that can be applied to the classesDirectory for the purposes of scanning, it does not affect the classpath. If a file or directory is excluded by the patterns then a change in that file (or subtree in the case of a directory) is ignored and will not cause the webapp to redeploy. Patterns are specified as a relative path using a glob-like syntax as described in the javadoc for FileSystem.getPathMatcher.

scanTestClassesPattern

Optional. Include and exclude patterns that can be applied to the testClassesDirectory for the purposes of scanning, it does not affect the classpath. If a file or directory is excluded by the patterns then a change in that file (or subtree in the case of a directory) is ignored and will not cause the webapp to redeploy. Patterns are specified as a relative path using a glob-like syntax as described in the javadoc for FileSystem.getPathMatcher.

See Deployment Modes for other configuration parameters available when using the run goal in EMBED, FORK or EXTERNAL modes.

Here’s an example of a pom configuration for the plugin with the run goal:

<project>
...
  <plugins>
...
    <plugin>
      <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
      <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
      <version>{jetty-version}</version>
      <configuration>
        <webApp>
          <contextPath>/</contextPath>
          <descriptor>${project.basedir}/src/over/here/web.xml</descriptor>
          <jettyEnvXml>${project.basedir}/src/over/here/jetty-env.xml</jettyEnvXml>
          <baseResource>${project.basedir}/src/staticfiles</baseResource>
        </webApp>
        <classesDirectory>${project.basedir}/somewhere/else</classesDirectory>
        <scanClassesPattern>
          <excludes>
             <exclude>**/Foo.class</exclude>
          </excludes>
        </scanClassesPattern>
        <scanTargetPatterns>
          <scanTargetPattern>
            <directory>src/other-resources</directory>
            <includes>
              <include>**/*.xml</include>
              <include>**/*.properties</include>
            </includes>
            <excludes>
              <exclude>**/myspecial.xml</exclude>
              <exclude>**/myspecial.properties</exclude>
            </excludes>
          </scanTargetPattern>
        </scanTargetPatterns>
      </configuration>
    </plugin>
  </plugins>
...
</project>

If, for whatever reason, you cannot run on an unassembled webapp, the goal run-war works on assembled webapps.

jetty:run-war

When invoked at the command line this goal first executes a maven build of your project to the package phase.

By default it then deploys the resultant war to jetty, but you can use this goal instead to deploy any war file by simply setting the <webApp><war> configuration parameter to its location.

If you set a non-zero scan, Jetty watches your pom.xml and the WAR file; if either changes, it redeploys the war.

The maven build is held up until jetty exits, which is achieved by typing cntrl-c at the command line.

All jetty output is directed to the console.

Configuration

Configuration parameters are:

webApp
war

The location of the built WAR file. This defaults to ${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.war. You can set it to the location of any pre-built war file.

contextPath

The context path for your webapp. By default, this is set to /. If using a custom value for this parameter, you should include the leading /, example /mycontext.

defaultsDescriptor

The path to a webdefault.xml file that will be applied to your webapp before the web.xml. If you don’t supply one, Jetty uses a default file baked into the jetty-webapp.jar.

overrideDescriptor

The path to a web.xml file that Jetty applies after reading your web.xml. You can use this to replace or add configuration.

containerIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to ./jetty-servlet-api-[/]\.jar$|.javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-[/]\.jar|.taglibs-standard-impl-.\.jar. This is a pattern that is applied to the names of the jars on the container’s classpath (ie the classpath of the plugin, not that of the webapp) that should be scanned for fragments, tlds, annotations etc. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern that is documented here. You can define extra patterns of jars that will be included in the scan.

webInfIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to matching all of the dependency jars for the webapp (ie the equivalent of WEB-INF/lib). You can make this pattern more restrictive to only match certain jars by using this setter. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.WebInfIncludeJarPattern that is documented here.

tempDirectory

The path to a dir that Jetty can use to expand or copy jars and jsp compiles when your webapp is running. The default is ${project.build.outputDirectory}/tmp.

contextXml

The path to a context xml file that is applied to your webapp AFTER the webApp element.

scan

The pause in seconds between sweeps of the webapp to check for changes and automatically hot redeploy if any are detected. By default this is -1, which disables hot redeployment scanning. A value of 0 means no hot redeployment is done, and that you must use the Enter key to manually force a redeploy. Any positive integer will enable hot redeployment, using the number as the sweep interval in seconds.

scanTargetPatterns

Optional. List of directories with ant-style include/excludes patterns to specify other files to periodically scan for changes.

See Deployment Modes for other configuration parameters available when using the run-war goal in EMBED, FORK or EXTERNAL modes.

jetty:start

This is similar to the jetty:run goal, however it is not designed to be run from the command line and does not first execute the build up until the test-compile phase to ensure that all necessary classes and files of the webapp have been generated. It will not scan your project for changes and restart your webapp. It does not pause maven until jetty is stopped.

Instead, it is designed to be used with build phase bindings in your pom. For example to you can have maven start your webapp at the beginning of your tests and stop at the end.

If the plugin is invoked as part of a multi-module build, any dependencies that are also in the maven reactor are used from their compiled classes. Prior to jetty-9.4.7 any dependencies needed to be built first.

Here’s an example of using the pre-integration-test and post-integration-test Maven build phases to trigger the execution and termination of Jetty:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <stopKey>foo</stopKey>
    <stopPort>9999</stopPort>
  </configuration>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <id>start-jetty</id>
      <phase>pre-integration-test</phase>
      <goals>
        <goal>start</goal>
      </goals>
    </execution>
    <execution>
      <id>stop-jetty</id>
      <phase>post-integration-test</phase>
       <goals>
         <goal>stop</goal>
       </goals>
     </execution>
  </executions>
</plugin>

This goal will generate output from jetty into the target/jetty-start.out file.

Configuration

These configuration parameters are available:

webApp

This is an instance of org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext, which is an extension to the class org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.WebAppContext. You can use any of the setter methods on this object to configure your webapp. Here are a few of the most useful ones:

contextPath

The context path for your webapp. By default, this is set to /. If using a custom value for this parameter, you should include the leading /, example /mycontext.

descriptor

The path to the web.xml file for your webapp. The default is src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml.

defaultsDescriptor

The path to a webdefault.xml file that will be applied to your webapp before the web.xml. If you don’t supply one, Jetty uses a default file baked into the jetty-webapp.jar.

overrideDescriptor

The path to a web.xml file that Jetty applies after reading your web.xml. You can use this to replace or add configuration.

jettyEnvXml

Optional. Location of a jetty-env.xml file, which allows you to make JNDI bindings that satisfy env-entry, resource-env-ref, and resource-ref linkages in the web.xml that are scoped only to the webapp and not shared with other webapps that you might be deploying at the same time (for example, by using a jettyXml file).

tempDirectory

The path to a dir that Jetty can use to expand or copy jars and jsp compiles when your webapp is running. The default is ${project.build.outputDirectory}/tmp.

baseResource

The path from which Jetty serves static resources. Defaults to src/main/webapp.

resourceBases

Use instead of baseResource if you have multiple directories from which you want to serve static content. This is an array of directory names.

baseAppFirst

Defaults to "true". Controls whether any overlaid wars are added before or after the original base resource(s) of the webapp. See the section on overlaid wars for more information.

containerIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to ./jetty-servlet-api-[/]\.jar$|.javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-[/]\.jar|.taglibs-standard-impl-.\.jar. This is a pattern that is applied to the names of the jars on the container’s classpath (ie the classpath of the plugin, not that of the webapp) that should be scanned for fragments, tlds, annotations etc. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern that is documented here. You can define extra patterns of jars that will be included in the scan.

webInfIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to matching all of the dependency jars for the webapp (ie the equivalent of WEB-INF/lib). You can make this pattern more restrictive to only match certain jars by using this setter. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.WebInfIncludeJarPattern that is documented here.

contextXml

The path to a context xml file that is applied to your webapp AFTER the webApp element.

classesDirectory

Location of your compiled classes for the webapp. You should rarely need to set this parameter. Instead, you should set build outputDirectory in your pom.xml.

testClassesDirectory

Location of the compiled test classes for your webapp. By default this is ${project.build.testOutputDirectory}.

useTestScope

If true, the classes from testClassesDirectory and dependencies of scope "test" are placed first on the classpath. By default this is false.

stopPort

Optional. Port to listen on for stop commands. Useful to use in conjunction with the stop and start goals.

stopKey

Optional. Used in conjunction with stopPort for stopping jetty. Useful to use in conjunction with the stop and start goals.

These additional configuration parameters are available when running in FORK or EXTERNAL mode:

maxChildStartChecks

Default is 10. This is maximum number of times the parent process checks to see if the forked jetty process has started correctly

maxChildStartCheckMs

Default is 200. This is the time in milliseconds between checks on the startup of the forked jetty process.

jetty:start-war

Similarly to the jetty:start goal, jetty:start-war is designed to be bound to build lifecycle phases in your pom.

It will not scan your project for changes and restart your webapp. It does not pause maven until jetty is stopped.

By default, if your pom is for a webapp project, it will deploy the war file for the project to jetty. However, like the jetty:run-war project, you can nominate any war file to deploy by defining its location in the <webApp><war> parameter.

If the plugin is invoked as part of a multi-module build, any dependencies that are also in the maven reactor are used from their compiled classes. Prior to jetty-9.4.7 any dependencies needed to be built first.

This goal will generate output from jetty into the target/jetty-start-war.out file.

Configuration

These configuration parameters are available:

webApp
war

The location of the built WAR file. This defaults to ${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.war. You can set it to the location of any pre-built war file.

contextPath

The context path for your webapp. By default, this is set to /. If using a custom value for this parameter, you should include the leading /, example /mycontext.

defaultsDescriptor

The path to a webdefault.xml file that will be applied to your webapp before the web.xml. If you don’t supply one, Jetty uses a default file baked into the jetty-webapp.jar.

overrideDescriptor

The path to a web.xml file that Jetty applies after reading your web.xml. You can use this to replace or add configuration.

containerIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to ./jetty-servlet-api-[/]\.jar$|.javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-[/]\.jar|.taglibs-standard-impl-.\.jar. This is a pattern that is applied to the names of the jars on the container’s classpath (ie the classpath of the plugin, not that of the webapp) that should be scanned for fragments, tlds, annotations etc. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern that is documented here. You can define extra patterns of jars that will be included in the scan.

webInfIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to matching all of the dependency jars for the webapp (ie the equivalent of WEB-INF/lib). You can make this pattern more restrictive to only match certain jars by using this setter. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.WebInfIncludeJarPattern that is documented here.

tempDirectory

The path to a dir that Jetty can use to expand or copy jars and jsp compiles when your webapp is running. The default is ${project.build.outputDirectory}/tmp.

contextXml

The path to a context xml file that is applied to your webapp AFTER the webApp element.

stopPort

Optional. Port to listen on for stop commands. Useful to use in conjunction with the stop.

stopKey

Optional. Used in conjunction with stopPort for stopping jetty. Useful to use in conjunction with the stop.

These additional configuration parameters are available when running in FORK or EXTERNAL mode:

maxChildStartChecks

Default is 10. This is maximum number of times the parent process checks to see if the forked jetty process has started correctly

maxChildStartCheckMs

Default is 200. This is the time in milliseconds between checks on the startup of the forked jetty process.

jetty:stop

The stop goal stops a FORK or EXTERNAL mode running instance of Jetty. To use it, you need to configure the plugin with a special port number and key. That same port number and key will also be used by the other goals that start jetty.

Configuration

stopPort

A port number for Jetty to listen on to receive a stop command to cause it to shutdown.

stopKey

A string value sent to the stopPort to validate the stop command.

stopWait

The maximum time in seconds that the plugin will wait for confirmation that Jetty has stopped. If false or not specified, the plugin does not wait for confirmation but exits after issuing the stop command.

Here’s a configuration example:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <stopPort>9966</stopPort>
    <stopKey>foo</stopKey>
    <stopWait>10</stopWait>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

Then, while Jetty is running (in another window), type:

mvn jetty:stop

The stopPort must be free on the machine you are running on. If this is not the case, you will get an "Address already in use" error message after the "Started ServerConnector …​" message.

jetty:effective-web-xml

This goal calculates a synthetic web.xml (the "effective web.xml") according to the rules of the Servlet Specification taking into account all sources of discoverable configuration of web components in your application: descriptors (webdefault.xml, web.xml, web-fragment.xml`s, `web-override.xml) and discovered annotations (@WebServlet, @WebFilter, @WebListener). No programmatic declarations of servlets, filters and listeners can be taken into account.

You can calculate the effective web.xml for any pre-built war file by setting the <webApp><war> parameter, or you can calculate it for the unassembled webapp by setting all of the usual <webApp> parameters as for jetty:run.

Other useful information about your webapp that is produced as part of the analysis is also stored as context parameters in the effective-web.xml. The effective-web.xml can be used in conjunction with the Quickstart feature to quickly start your webapp (note that Quickstart is not appropriate for the mvn jetty goals).

The effective web.xml from these combined sources is generated into a file, which by default is target/effective-web.xml, but can be changed by setting the effectiveWebXml configuration parameter.

Configuration

effectiveWebXml

The full path name of a file into which you would like the effective web xml generated.

webApp
war

The location of the built WAR file. This defaults to ${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.war. You can set it to the location of any pre-built war file. Or you can leave it blank and set up the other webApp parameters as per jetty:run, as well as the webAppSourceDirectory, classes and testClasses parameters.

contextPath

The context path for your webapp. By default, this is set to /. If using a custom value for this parameter, you should include the leading /, example /mycontext.

defaultsDescriptor

The path to a webdefault.xml file that will be applied to your webapp before the web.xml. If you don’t supply one, Jetty uses a default file baked into the jetty-webapp.jar.

overrideDescriptor

The path to a web.xml file that Jetty applies after reading your web.xml. You can use this to replace or add configuration.

containerIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to ./jetty-servlet-api-[/]\.jar$|.javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-[/]\.jar|.taglibs-standard-impl-.\.jar. This is a pattern that is applied to the names of the jars on the container’s classpath (ie the classpath of the plugin, not that of the webapp) that should be scanned for fragments, tlds, annotations etc. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern that is documented here. You can define extra patterns of jars that will be included in the scan.

webInfIncludeJarPattern

Defaults to matching all of the dependency jars for the webapp (ie the equivalent of WEB-INF/lib). You can make this pattern more restrictive to only match certain jars by using this setter. This is analogous to the context attribute org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.WebInfIncludeJarPattern that is documented here.

tempDirectory

The path to a dir that Jetty can use to expand or copy jars and jsp compiles when your webapp is running. The default is ${project.build.outputDirectory}/tmp.

contextXml

The path to a context xml file that is applied to your webapp AFTER the webApp element.

You can also generate the origin of each element into the effective web.xml file. The origin is either a descriptor eg web.xml,web-fragment.xml,override-web.xml file, or an annotation eg @WebServlet. Some examples of elements with origin attribute information are:

<listener origin="DefaultsDescriptor(file:///path/to/distro/etc/webdefault.xml):21">
<listener origin="WebDescriptor(file:///path/to/base/webapps/test-spec/WEB-INF/web.xml):22">
<servlet-class origin="FragmentDescriptor(jar:file:///path/to/base/webapps/test-spec/WEB-INF/lib/test-web-fragment.jar!/META-INF/web-fragment.xml):23">
<servlet-class origin="@WebServlet(com.acme.test.TestServlet):24">

To generate origin information, use the following configuration parameters on the webApp element:

originAttribute

The name of the attribute that will contain the origin. By default it is origin.

generateOrigin

False by default. If true, will force the generation of the originAttribute onto each element.

Using Overlaid wars

If your webapp depends on other war files, the jetty:run and jetty:start goals are able to merge resources from all of them. It can do so based on the settings of the maven-war-plugin, or if your project does not use the maven-war-plugin to handle the overlays, it can fall back to a simple algorithm to determine the ordering of resources.

With maven-war-plugin

The maven-war-plugin has a rich set of capabilities for merging resources. The jetty:run and jetty:start goals are able to interpret most of them and apply them during execution of your unassembled webapp. This is probably best seen by looking at a concrete example.

Suppose your webapp depends on the following wars:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
  <artifactId>X</artifactId>
  <type>war</type>
</dependency>
<dependency>
  <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
  <artifactId>Y</artifactId>
  <type>war</type>
</dependency>

Containing:

WebAppX:

 /foo.jsp
 /bar.jsp
 /WEB-INF/web.xml

WebAppY:

 /bar.jsp
 /baz.jsp
 /WEB-INF/web.xml
 /WEB-INF/special.xml

They are configured for the maven-war-plugin:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
  <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <overlays>
      <overlay>
        <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
        <artifactId>X</artifactId>
        <excludes>
          <exclude>bar.jsp</exclude>
        </excludes>
      </overlay>
      <overlay>
        <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
        <artifactId>Y</artifactId>
        <excludes>
          <exclude>baz.jsp</exclude>
        </excludes>
      </overlay>
      <overlay>
      </overlay>
    </overlays>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

Then executing jetty:run would yield the following ordering of resources: com.acme.X.war : com.acme.Y.war: ${project.basedir}/src/main/webapp. Note that the current project’s resources are placed last in the ordering due to the empty <overlay/> element in the maven-war-plugin. You can either use that, or specify the <baseAppFirst>false</baseAppFirst> parameter to the jetty-maven-plugin.

Moreover, due to the exclusions specified above, a request for the resource ` bar.jsp` would only be satisfied from com.acme.Y.war. Similarly as baz.jsp is excluded, a request for it would result in a 404 error.

Without maven-war-plugin

The algorithm is fairly simple, is based on the ordering of declaration of the dependent wars, and does not support exclusions. The configuration parameter <baseAppFirst> (see for example jetty:run for more information) can be used to control whether your webapp’s resources are placed first or last on the resource path at runtime.

For example, suppose our webapp depends on these two wars:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
  <artifactId>X</artifactId>
  <type>war</type>
</dependency>
<dependency>
  <groupId>com.acme</groupId>
  <artifactId>Y</artifactId>
  <type>war</type>
</dependency>

Suppose the webapps contain:

WebAppX:

 /foo.jsp
 /bar.jsp
 /WEB-INF/web.xml

WebAppY:

 /bar.jsp
 /baz.jsp
 /WEB-INF/web.xml
 /WEB-INF/special.xml

Then our webapp has available these additional resources:

/foo.jsp (X)
/bar.jsp (X)
/baz.jsp (Y)
/WEB-INF/web.xml (X)
/WEB-INF/special.xml (Y)

Configuring Security Settings

You can configure LoginServices in the plugin. Here’s an example of setting up the HashLoginService for a webapp:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <scan>10</scan>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
    <loginServices>
      <loginService implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.security.HashLoginService">
        <name>Test Realm</name>
        <config>${project.basedir}/src/etc/realm.properties</config>
      </loginService>
    </loginServices>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

Using Multiple Webapp Root Directories

If you have external resources that you want to incorporate in the execution of a webapp, but which are not assembled into war files, you can’t use the overlaid wars method described above, but you can tell Jetty the directories in which these external resources are located. At runtime, when Jetty receives a request for a resource, it searches all the locations to retrieve the resource. It’s a lot like the overlaid war situation, but without the war.

Here is a configuration example:

<configuration>
  <webApp>
    <contextPath>/${build.finalName}</contextPath>
    <resourceBases>
      <resourceBase>src/main/webapp</resourceBase>
      <resourceBase>/home/johndoe/path/to/my/other/source</resourceBase>
      <resourceBase>/yet/another/folder</resourceBase>
    </resourceBases>
  </webApp>
</configuration>

Running More than One Webapp

With jetty:run

You can use either a jetty.xml file to configure extra (pre-compiled) webapps that you want to deploy, or you can use the <contextHandlers> configuration element to do so. If you want to deploy webapp A, and webapps B and C in the same Jetty instance:

Putting the configuration in webapp A’s pom.xml:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <scan>10</scan>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
    <contextHandlers>
      <contextHandler implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext">
        <war>${project.basedir}../../B.war</war>
        <contextPath>/B</contextPath>
      </contextHandler>
      <contextHandler implementation="org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext">
        <war>${project.basedir}../../C.war</war>
        <contextPath>/C</contextPath>
      </contextHandler>
    </contextHandlers>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

If the ContextHandler you are deploying is a webapp, it is essential that you use an org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext instance rather than a standard org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.WebAppContext instance. Only the former will allow the webapp to function correctly in the maven environment.

Alternatively, add a jetty.xml file to webapp A. Copy the jetty.xml file from the Jetty distribution, and then add WebAppContexts for the other 2 webapps:

<Ref refid="Contexts">
  <Call name="addHandler">
    <Arg>
      <New class="org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext">
        <Set name="contextPath">/B</Set>
        <Set name="war">../../B.war</Set>
      </New>
    </Arg>
  </Call>
  <Call>
    <Arg>
      <New class="org.eclipse.jetty.maven.plugin.MavenWebAppContext">
        <Set name="contextPath">/C</Set>
        <Set name="war">../../C.war</Set>
      </New>
    </Arg>
  </Call>
</Ref>

Then configure the location of this jetty.xml file into webapp A’s jetty plugin:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>{jetty-version}</version>
  <configuration>
    <scan>10</scan>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
    <jettyXml>src/main/etc/jetty.xml</jettyXml>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

For either of these solutions, the other webapps must already have been built, and they are not automatically monitored for changes. You can refer either to the packed WAR file of the pre-built webapps or to their expanded equivalents.

Setting System Properties

You can specify property name/value pairs that Jetty sets as System properties for the execution of the plugin. This feature is useful to tidy up the command line and save a lot of typing.

However, sometimes it is not possible to use this feature to set System properties - sometimes the software component using the System property is already initialized by the time that maven runs (in which case you will need to provide the System property on the command line), or by the time that Jetty runs. In the latter case, you can use the maven properties plugin to define the system properties instead. Here’s an example that configures the logback logging system as the Jetty logger:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
  <artifactId>properties-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>1.0-alpha-2</version>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <goals>
        <goal>set-system-properties</goal>
      </goals>
      <configuration>
        <properties>
          <property>
            <name>logback.configurationFile</name>
            <value>${project.baseUri}/resources/logback.xml</value>
          </property>
        </properties>
      </configuration>
    </execution>
  </executions>
</plugin>

If a System property is already set (for example, from the command line or by the JVM itself), then by default these configured properties DO NOT override them. However, they can override system properties set from a file instead, see specifying system properties in a file.

Specifying System Properties in the POM

Here’s an example of how to specify System properties in the POM:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <configuration>
    <systemProperties>
        <fooprop>222</fooprop>
    </systemProperties>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

Specifying System Properties in a File

You can also specify your System properties in a file. System properties you specify in this way do not override System properties that set on the command line, by the JVM, or directly in the POM via systemProperties.

Suppose we have a file called mysys.props which contains the following:

fooprop=222

This can be configured on the plugin like so:

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
  <artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <configuration>
    <systemPropertiesFile>${project.basedir}/mysys.props</systemPropertiesFile>
    <webApp>
      <contextPath>/test</contextPath>
    </webApp>
  </configuration>
</plugin>

You can instead specify the file by setting the System property jetty.systemPropertiesFile on the command line.