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The command didn't quite work for us so we dug in and figured it out.
Here's our feedback and solution for a dotnet project, using PowerShell 7.4.2 on Windows 11.
grep and sed are not available out of the box on Windows (cmd/powershell). A simple workaround is to use the binaries that come with git. (tip: Set-Alias in powershell makes things easier)
With git installed under C:\Program Files\Git we can use C:\"Program Files"\Git\usr\bin\grep.exe and C:\"Program Files"\Git\usr\bin\sed.exe.
the regex didn't quite work for us, needed to make minor changes (depends on the flavour used by the binary and powershell I guess). This worked for us using the git sed binary under powershell :
sed -E -e 's/\s+> ([a-zA-Z0-9\.\_\-]+)\s+([0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+).*/nuget\/nuget\/\-\/\1\/\2/g'
It is stated in the readme but can easily be overlooked by non-java developers ;)
dash-licenses requires java SDK and not JRE (which is easier to come across). We got version 22 from https://jdk.java.net/22/
Finally, the tested powershell commands (broken up into several steps):
dotnet restore
# filters packages and writes into packages-filtered.txt
dotnet list package --include-transitive |Select-String-Pattern '>'|Select-String-Pattern '\s(Microsoft|NETStandard|NuGet|System|runtime)'-NotMatch|Out-file-FilePath 'packages.txt'# runs the replacement and dash-licences on the filtered package list# prints output to console and a summary to output.txt
cat packages.txt | sed -E -e 's/\s+> ([a-zA-Z0-9\.\_\-]+)\s+([0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+).*/nuget\/nuget\/\-\/\1\/\2/g'| java -jar org.eclipse.dash.licenses-1.0.2.jar -|Out-file-FilePath 'output.txt'
That's it.
If you like, we could propose changes in a merge request, but feel free to copypaste from here.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
We used the tool to check licenses of our dotnet project and would like to give you our feedback to the instructions provided in readme here:
https://github.com/eclipse/dash-licenses?tab=readme-ov-file#example-net
The command didn't quite work for us so we dug in and figured it out.
Here's our feedback and solution for a dotnet project, using PowerShell 7.4.2 on Windows 11.
grep and sed are not available out of the box on Windows (cmd/powershell). A simple workaround is to use the binaries that come with git. (tip:
Set-Alias
in powershell makes things easier)With git installed under
C:\Program Files\Git
we can useC:\"Program Files"\Git\usr\bin\grep.exe
andC:\"Program Files"\Git\usr\bin\sed.exe
.the regex didn't quite work for us, needed to make minor changes (depends on the flavour used by the binary and powershell I guess). This worked for us using the git sed binary under powershell :
It is stated in the readme but can easily be overlooked by non-java developers ;)
dash-licenses requires java SDK and not JRE (which is easier to come across). We got version 22 from
https://jdk.java.net/22/
Finally, the tested powershell commands (broken up into several steps):
That's it.
If you like, we could propose changes in a merge request, but feel free to copypaste from here.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: