Modifications for featureUtility commands
You can modify several behaviors of the featureUtility
commands by declaring environment variables in the shell environment or by specifying properties in the featureUtility.properties
file that’s located in the {wlp.install.dir}/etc/
directory.
Properties that are specified in the featureUtility.properties
file take precedence over environment variables that are declared in the shell environment. For example, if you specify the featureLocalRepo
property in the featureUtility.properties
file, then any value set with the FEATURE_LOCAL_REPO
environment variable is overridden. You can specify modifications to the featureUtility
commands by using properties in the featureUtility.properties
file rather than environment variables. You can also easily see Maven repository and proxy settings that are contained in the featureUtility.properties
file by running the featureUtility viewSettings command. Settings that are configured with environment variables don’t show up with this information.
The following table lists the environment variables and their corresponding properties that you can specify to modify the featureUtility
commands:
Environment variable | Corresponding properties | Description |
---|---|---|
|
| Overrides Maven Central with an on-premises Maven repository. |
|
| The username for |
|
| The password for |
|
| Overrides the local Maven repository. |
|
| Configures the outbound HTTP proxy. |
|
| Configures the outbound HTTPS proxy. |
Install user features
You can specify the maven coordinates for the features BOM file to install user features by adding the customBomFileName.featuresbom
property in the featureUtility.properties
file, as shown in the following example:
customBomFileName.featuresbom=my.maven.coordinate:my-features-bom:version
Define custom repositories
You can also define remote repositories by adding the customRepoName.url
property in the featureUtility.properties
file. Each repository name must be unique, and defined repositories are accessed in the order that they’re specified. If a repository requires a username and password, also set the customRepoName.user
and customRepoName.password
properties. In the following example, two custom repositories, remoteRepo1
and remoteRepo2
, are defined. The remoteRepo2
repository is secure so it also requires a username and password:
remoteRepo1.url=http://my-remote-server1/maven2 remoteRepo2.url=https://my-remote-server2/secure/maven2 remoteRepo2.user=operator remoteRepo2.password={aes}KM8dhwcv892Ss1sawu9R+