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Adding a Module
This document explains how to add a new client module into the repository.
Adding a new module to Azure SDKs for Java will require changes to Maven and Azure Pipeline configurations. New modules may be added to an existing group, such as Azure Storage, or be the beginning of a new group; the differences on what needs to be configured will be called out in this document.
If the module is in a new group a new directory will need to be added under sdk/
, such as sdk/<new group>
.
Being by adding a new directory in the directory group for the module, such as sdk/<group>/<new module>
. The directory name should match the package name sans the starting com, so if the package is com.azure.newservice.newpackage
the directory will be azure-newservice-newpackage
.
After the directory has been added there are a few required files that must be added, they are the following:
-
CHANGELOG.md
that follows the changelog guideline. -
pom.xml
that usespom.client.xml
as its parent POM. -
README.md
that uses the README template. -
src
directory containing the Java code for the module.
Failing to follow the CHANGELOG
or README
specifications may result in PR validation failures as there are validation steps which ensure guidelines are met.
pom.client.xml serves as a parent POM to all client modules in the repository. Changes made to this file will be the same when adding a new module to an existing group or creating a new group.
Begin by adding your new modules into the modules
configuration section, this should be added based on the alphabetical sorting of your new module. This will ensure that your module is loaded when the pom.client.xml
project is opened in IDEs such as IntelliJ and that is it built during aggregate Maven lifecycle steps.
<modules>
<!-- existing modules sorted alphabetically before your module -->
<module>path to your module's pom.xml directory</module>
<!-- existing modules sorted alphabetically after your module -->
</modules>
Azure SDKs for Java contains a few POM files which are used as aggregators for running linting and code coverage tools such as SpotBugs and Jacoco code coverage.
There are additional, but optional, changes that may be required when setting up a new module.
During PR validation a script will run to ensure that all README.md files contained within the repository match a given structure. If your new module leverages code generation the README file which contains the AutoRest configuration and Swagger transforms won't, nor should, comply with this structure. An entry will need to be added to docsettings configuration file in the known_content_issues
section to suppress this file from failing PR validation.
If a new module group is being added, which requires adding a new sub-folder directory, you'll want to add a new entry to CODEOWNERS. This allows GitHub to automatically assign the specified users as reviewers to all PRs opened against the new module group.
This section will outline commonly ran into issues when setting up a new module and outline how to resolve them.
In this example we are adding a new module Azure Core MQTT which contains all commonly used functionality for the MQTT protocol, akin to Azure Core AMQP.
In this example we are adding a new module Azure New Service which is the beginning of a new SDK group.
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