6.2 KiB
FAQ
Q: How do you pronounce Leiningen?
A: It's LINE-ing-en. ['laɪnɪŋən]
Q: What's a group ID? How do snapshots work?
A: See the
tutorial
for background.
Q: How should I pick my version numbers?
A: Use semantic versioning.
Q: What if my project depends on jars that aren't in any repository?
A: You will need to get them in a repository. The
deploy guide
explains how to set up a private repository. In general it's easiest
to deploy them to a static HTTP server or a private S3 bucket with the
s3-wagon-private
plugin. Once the repo is set up, lein deploy private-repo com.mycorp/somejar 1.0.0 somejar.jar pom.xml
will push the artifacts out. If you don't
have a pom, you can create a dummy project with lein new
and
generate a pom from that. If you are just doing exploratory coding
you can deploy to file:///$HOME/.m2/repository
and the jars will
be available locally.
Q: I want to hack two projects in parallel, but it's annoying to switch between them.
A: Leiningen provides a feature called checkout dependencies.
See the
tutorial
to learn more.
Q: Is it possible to exclude indirect dependencies?
A: Yes. Some libraries, such as log4j, depend on projects that are
not included in public repositories and unnecessary for basic
functionality. Projects listed as :dependencies
may exclude
any of their dependencies by using the :exclusions
key. See
lein help sample
for details.
Q: Why doesn't deps
task populate the lib
directory in version 2?
A: The only reason version 1 copied the jars around in the first
place was to support existing tooling that needed a cheap way to
calculate a project's classpath. Now that Leiningen has a mature
plugin ecosystem, this is no longer needed; jars can be referenced
directly out of the ~/.m2/repository
directory. If you need to see
a listing of all the dependencies that will be used and their
versions, use lein deps :tree
. To get the classpath use lein classpath
.
Q: What does java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: clojure.lang.RestFn.<init>(I)V
mean?
A: It means you have some code that was AOT (ahead-of-time)
compiled with a different version of Clojure than the one you're
currently using. If it persists after running lein clean
then it
is a problem with your dependencies. Note that for
your own project that AOT compilation in Clojure is much less
important than it is in other languages. There are a few
language-level features that must be AOT-compiled to work, generally
for Java interop. If you are not using any of these features, you
should not AOT-compile your project if other projects may depend
upon it.
Q: I specified a dependency on version X but am getting version Y; what's up?
A: One of your dependencies' dependencies has declared a
dependency on a hard version range, which overrides your "soft"
declaration. If you change yours to a hard version range, it will
refuse to function due to conflicts, so it's best to find the
dependency that's at fault via the
lein-pedantic plugin and
add an :exclusions
clause to it. See lein help sample
for how
exclusions work. You may also want to report a bug with the
dependency that uses hard version ranges as they cause all kinds of
problems and exhibit unintuitive behaviour.
Q: I'm behind an HTTP proxy; how can I fetch my dependencies?
A: Set the $http_proxy
environment variable in Leiningen 2.x. You can also
set $http_no_proxy
for a list of hosts that should be reached directly, bypassing
the proxy. This is a list of patterns separated by |
and may start or end with
a *
for wildcard, e.g. localhost|*.mydomain.com
.
For Leiningen 1.x versions, see the instructions for
configuring a Maven proxy
using ~/.m2/settings.xml
.
Q: What can be done to speed up launch?
A: The main delay involved in Leiningen comes from starting two
JVMs: one for your project and one for Leiningen itself. Most people
use a development cycle that involves keeping a single project REPL
process running for as long as they're working on that project.
Depending on your editor you may be able to do this via its Clojure
integration. (See nrepl.el or
foreplay, for example.)
Otherwise you can use the basic lein repl
.
Q: Still too slow; what else can make startup faster?
A: The wiki has a page covering
ways to improve startup time.
Q: It looks like a different set of dependencies are being used in
the repl vs other tasks.
A: The repl needs to add a few extra implicit dependencies in
order to function. For instance, it needs to load an
nREPL server, and it loads
a client for fetching
ClojureDocs examples, both which have
dependencies that could interfere with the dependencies declared in
your own project. You can declare a :leiningen/reply
profile to
override the clojuredocs client dependencies. While you can't run
the repl task without nREPL in the dependencies, specifying your own
version of it will override the version Leiningen adds. Another way
around the problem would be to load a bare repl by invoking lein trampoline run -m clojure.main/repl
, though you may want to use
rlwrap
on that to get proper key bindings and history.
Q: What does "Unrecognized VM option 'TieredStopAtLevel=1'" mean?
A: Old versions of the JVM do not support the directives Leiningen
uses for tiered compilation which allow the JVM to boot more
quickly. You can disable this behaviour with export LEIN_JVM_OPTS=
or upgrade your JVM to something more recent. (newer than b25 of Java 6)