I am trying to build our web project from the commandline but skipping the testing. I am using the command mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true
.
When I run the command from the traditional black & white Command Prompt (aka DOS shell) the command works, but when I run it from the command from "Windows PowerShell" I get the following error:
[ERROR] Unknown lifecycle phase ".test.skip=true". You must specify a valid lifecycle phase or a goal in the format <plugin-prefix>:<goal> or <plugin-group-id>:<plugin-
artifact-id>[:<plugin-version>]:<goal>. Available lifecycle phases are: validate, initialize, generate-sources, process-sources, generate-resources, process-resources,
compile, process-classes, generate-test-sources, process-test-sources, generate-test-resources, process-test-resources, test-compile, process-test-classes, test, prepar
e-package, package, pre-integration-test, integration-test, post-integration-test, verify, install, deploy, pre-site, site, post-site, site-deploy, pre-clean, clean, po
st-clean. -> [Help 1]
What is causing this discrepancy and how do I get PowerShell to behave like the traditional Command Prompt?
This is running on Windows 7.
According to this email thread:
When you run into problems with PowerShell's interpretation of arguments to be passed to a console EXE, try using the
echoargs.exe
utility that comes with the PowerShell Community Extensions. With this tool you can see how PowerShell supplies the arguments to the EXE e.g.:Short answer - use quoting
'-Dmaven.test.skip=true'
The following works for me.
It looks like the -D is a kind of a special character and requires escaping.
Note also that –X works fine and does not require escaping. Note the use of single quote in the replace command, if you use double quotes (i.e. ") you need to use ``.
I am using Powershell 2.0 (2.0.1.1) on windows 7