Re: Corporate Parent POM

2009-08-04 Thread Brian Fox
Right, if you have that many projects you want a repository manager to
host and share your internal artifacts (as well as proxy external
ones). See here for more info:
http://maven.apache.org/repository-management.html

On Fri, Jul 31, 2009 at 1:56 PM, Kalle
Korhonenkalle.o.korho...@gmail.com wrote:
 And the last missing piece is that you need to make the released
 parent pom available to the other builds. The best way is to use a
 proxy repo that proxies everything (including the company parent),
 then instruct Maven to use that proxy as a mirror for all repos (you
 can distribute/make available a sample settings.xml file for your
 users).

 Kalle


 On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 3:27 PM, Edelson,
 Justinjustin.edel...@mtvstaff.com wrote:
 You just refer to the parent as the parent. Maven does not require that
 the parent be in the same SVN repository as the child. If the parent
 isn't (which I would think is typically the case for corporate POMs),
 then it just has to be in a Maven repository somewhere.

 For example, the POM in this project:
 http://kenai.com/projects/boxspring/sources/main/show/trunk references
 the corporate POM I linked to below (well, the last release of it).

 Justin

 -Original Message-
 From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
 [mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 6:09 PM
 To: Edelson, Justin
 Cc: Maven Users List
 Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM
 Importance: High

 Hi Justin,

 Thanks for your input and it is very helpful in understanding how this
 can be worked out. Have another question - I am having 100 applications
 in 100 different SVN repositories and in this case how can I refer this
 Corporate POM in the parent POM of the individual applications which are
 residing in 100 different repositories. Can you please throw me some
 ideas on this aspect.



 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam

 -Original Message-
 From: Edelson, Justin [mailto:justin.edel...@mtvstaff.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 3:31 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM

 I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
 default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
 helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
 http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
 These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
 reasonably close.

 Justin

 -Original Message-
 From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
 [mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: Corporate Parent POM
 Importance: High

 Hello Experts,

 We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
 corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
 How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
 functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
 find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
 please point some references to my requirement.


 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam



 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
 financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
 All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
 completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
 comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
 JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

 This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
 confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
 applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
 notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
 information contained herein (including any reliance
 thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
 attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
 might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
 it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
 free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
 subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
 arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
 error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
 its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

 Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
 disclosures relating to European legal entities.

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
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 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation

Re: Corporate Parent POM

2009-07-31 Thread Kalle Korhonen
And the last missing piece is that you need to make the released
parent pom available to the other builds. The best way is to use a
proxy repo that proxies everything (including the company parent),
then instruct Maven to use that proxy as a mirror for all repos (you
can distribute/make available a sample settings.xml file for your
users).

Kalle


On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 3:27 PM, Edelson,
Justinjustin.edel...@mtvstaff.com wrote:
 You just refer to the parent as the parent. Maven does not require that
 the parent be in the same SVN repository as the child. If the parent
 isn't (which I would think is typically the case for corporate POMs),
 then it just has to be in a Maven repository somewhere.

 For example, the POM in this project:
 http://kenai.com/projects/boxspring/sources/main/show/trunk references
 the corporate POM I linked to below (well, the last release of it).

 Justin

 -Original Message-
 From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
 [mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 6:09 PM
 To: Edelson, Justin
 Cc: Maven Users List
 Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM
 Importance: High

 Hi Justin,

 Thanks for your input and it is very helpful in understanding how this
 can be worked out. Have another question - I am having 100 applications
 in 100 different SVN repositories and in this case how can I refer this
 Corporate POM in the parent POM of the individual applications which are
 residing in 100 different repositories. Can you please throw me some
 ideas on this aspect.



 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam

 -Original Message-
 From: Edelson, Justin [mailto:justin.edel...@mtvstaff.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 3:31 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM

 I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
 default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
 helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
 http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
 These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
 reasonably close.

 Justin

 -Original Message-
 From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
 [mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: Corporate Parent POM
 Importance: High

 Hello Experts,

 We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
 corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
 How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
 functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
 find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
 please point some references to my requirement.


 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam



 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
 financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
 All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
 completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
 comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
 JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

 This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
 confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
 applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
 notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
 information contained herein (including any reliance
 thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
 attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
 might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
 it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
 free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
 subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
 arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
 error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
 its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

 Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
 disclosures relating to European legal entities.

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org

 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
 financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
 All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
 completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
 comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect

RE: Corporate Parent POM

2009-07-30 Thread Edelson, Justin
I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
reasonably close.

Justin  

-Original Message-
From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
[mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Corporate Parent POM
Importance: High

Hello Experts,

We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
please point some references to my requirement.


Thanks  Regards,
Logu Rajamanickam



This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
information contained herein (including any reliance
thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
disclosures relating to European legal entities.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



RE: Corporate Parent POM

2009-07-30 Thread Logachandru X Rajamanickam
Hi Justin,

Thanks for your input and it is very helpful in understanding how this can be 
worked out. Have another question - I am having 100 applications in 100 
different SVN repositories and in this case how can I refer this Corporate POM 
in the parent POM of the individual applications which are residing in 100 
different repositories. Can you please throw me some ideas on this aspect.



Thanks  Regards,
Logu Rajamanickam

-Original Message-
From: Edelson, Justin [mailto:justin.edel...@mtvstaff.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 3:31 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM

I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
reasonably close.

Justin  

-Original Message-
From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
[mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Corporate Parent POM
Importance: High

Hello Experts,

We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
please point some references to my requirement.


Thanks  Regards,
Logu Rajamanickam



This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
information contained herein (including any reliance
thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
disclosures relating to European legal entities.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org

This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of
any financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any
transaction. All market prices, data and other information are not
warranted as to completeness or accuracy and are subject to change
without notice. Any comments or statements made herein do not
necessarily reflect those of JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries
and affiliates.

This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure
under applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you
are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or
use of the information contained herein (including any reliance
thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect
that might affect any computer system into which it is received and
opened, it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it
is virus free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase 
Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss
or damage arising in any way from its use. If you received this
transmission in error, please immediately contact the sender and
destroy the material in its entirety, whether in electronic or hard
copy format. Thank you.

Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
disclosures relating to European legal entities

Re: Corporate Parent POM

2009-07-30 Thread Anders Hammar
Hi,

The corporate POM would typically be published in a (corporate) Maven
repository. You just configure Maven to use this repository and it
will fetch it from there (if correctly referred in the parent element
of the project's pom).

/Anders

On Fri, Jul 31, 2009 at 00:09, Logachandru X
Rajamanickamlogachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com wrote:
 Hi Justin,

 Thanks for your input and it is very helpful in understanding how this can be 
 worked out. Have another question - I am having 100 applications in 100 
 different SVN repositories and in this case how can I refer this Corporate 
 POM in the parent POM of the individual applications which are residing in 
 100 different repositories. Can you please throw me some ideas on this aspect.



 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam

 -Original Message-
 From: Edelson, Justin [mailto:justin.edel...@mtvstaff.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 3:31 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM

 I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
 default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
 helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
 http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
 These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
 reasonably close.

 Justin

 -Original Message-
 From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
 [mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
 Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: Corporate Parent POM
 Importance: High

 Hello Experts,

 We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
 corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
 How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
 functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
 find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
 please point some references to my requirement.


 Thanks  Regards,
 Logu Rajamanickam



 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
 financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
 All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
 completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
 comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
 JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

 This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
 confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
 applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
 notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
 information contained herein (including any reliance
 thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
 attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
 might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
 it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
 free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
 subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
 arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
 error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
 its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

 Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
 disclosures relating to European legal entities.

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org

 This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
 intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of
 any financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any
 transaction. All market prices, data and other information are not
 warranted as to completeness or accuracy and are subject to change
 without notice. Any comments or statements made herein do not
 necessarily reflect those of JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries
 and affiliates.

 This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
 confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure
 under applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you
 are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or
 use of the information contained herein (including any reliance
 thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
 attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect
 that might affect any computer system into which it is received and
 opened, it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it
 is virus free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase 
 Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable

RE: Corporate Parent POM

2009-07-30 Thread Edelson, Justin
You just refer to the parent as the parent. Maven does not require that
the parent be in the same SVN repository as the child. If the parent
isn't (which I would think is typically the case for corporate POMs),
then it just has to be in a Maven repository somewhere.

For example, the POM in this project:
http://kenai.com/projects/boxspring/sources/main/show/trunk references
the corporate POM I linked to below (well, the last release of it).

Justin

-Original Message-
From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
[mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 6:09 PM
To: Edelson, Justin
Cc: Maven Users List
Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM
Importance: High

Hi Justin,

Thanks for your input and it is very helpful in understanding how this
can be worked out. Have another question - I am having 100 applications
in 100 different SVN repositories and in this case how can I refer this
Corporate POM in the parent POM of the individual applications which are
residing in 100 different repositories. Can you please throw me some
ideas on this aspect.



Thanks  Regards,
Logu Rajamanickam

-Original Message-
From: Edelson, Justin [mailto:justin.edel...@mtvstaff.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 3:31 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: RE: Corporate Parent POM

I think the best way to do this is through properties where you set a
default in the corporate POM and allow children to override it. If it
helps you, the open-source version of our corporate poms are on kenai:
http://kenai.com/projects/mtvn-master-pom/sources/source/show/trunk.
These are not identical to our internal corporate poms, but they're
reasonably close.

Justin  

-Original Message-
From: Logachandru X Rajamanickam
[mailto:logachandru.x.rajamanic...@jpmchase.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2009 4:05 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Corporate Parent POM
Importance: High

Hello Experts,

We have nearly 100 applications and I would like to have a central
corporate POM which is a parent to the child POMs in all applications.
How should I design a POM at the top level to govern and delegate the
functionalities to the child POMs in all the applications? Trying to
find some examples on the web, but could not find any as such. Can  you
please point some references to my requirement.


Thanks  Regards,
Logu Rajamanickam



This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
information contained herein (including any reliance
thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other defect that
might affect any computer system into which it is received and opened,
it is the responsibility of the recipient to ensure that it is virus
free and no responsibility is accepted by JPMorgan Chase  Co., its
subsidiaries and affiliates, as applicable, for any loss or damage
arising in any way from its use. If you received this transmission in
error, please immediately contact the sender and destroy the material in
its entirety, whether in electronic or hard copy format. Thank you.

Please refer to http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures for
disclosures relating to European legal entities.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org

This communication is for informational purposes only. It is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
financial instrument or as an official confirmation of any transaction.
All market prices, data and other information are not warranted as to
completeness or accuracy and are subject to change without notice. Any
comments or statements made herein do not necessarily reflect those of
JPMorgan Chase  Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates.

This transmission may contain information that is privileged,
confidential, legally privileged, and/or exempt from disclosure under
applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the
information contained herein (including any reliance
thereon) is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Although this transmission and any
attachments are believed to be free of any virus or other