We have something similar to what you describe set up for some of our
customers.
An Artifactory instance sits outside the firewall. Whenever new artifacts
are needed they are resolved with dependencies on this external Artifactory
machine with a barebones pom.xml or ivy.xml (we do not eagerly fetch public
repos, just the stuff the build needs). Once new remote artifacts
and dependencies have been pulled in they are identified and downloaded by a
script, using the 'All Artifacts Created in Date Range' REST API (
http://wiki.jfrog.org/confluence/display/RTF/Artifactory's+REST+API). They
are then transfered on a portable media device, pass some sort of "security
clearance" and imported into the internal Artifactory.
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 6:18 PM, tgoeke <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> If someone wanted to operate Artifactory behind a firewall on an
> essentially
> closed network, what would be the best workflow for replicating artifacts
> from the public repos?
>
> Assume this is a closed network with no Internet access, and that it will
> be
> *impossible* to ever get Internet access.
>
> Would it make sense to set up an Artifactory in an Internet accessible
> network, and then export the archive to DVD or Bluray and import into the
> internal Artifactory? As part of the process, we would want to eagerly
> import the public repos into our external Artifactory on a schedule to
> allow
> for new artifacts to get populated into our internal repo.
>
> Ideally, we would be able to do weekly deltas and so import only the
> modified artifacts from the public repos.
>
> TIA!
> --
> View this message in context:
> http://forums.jfrog.org/Operating-Artifactory-behind-a-firewall-tp5355387p5355387.html
> Sent from the Artifactory - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>
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