Honestly, I'd love to see it run from a cron job every 20 minutes or so on p.a.o that goes ahead and fixes everything. Thus, you never need to even run it at all. I know a bunch of companies do that to their own internal repos to keep them set correctly.
Dan On Monday 14 January 2008, Dan Fabulich wrote: > I'm blocked from releasing Maven Surefire due to permissions. > > Right now it's every developer's responsibility to run fix-permissions > when he/she deploys. This creates a problem, because it's easy for > developers to forget to run the script and get other later developers > in trouble. > > It seems like it'd be better to make fix-permissions.sh a setuid root > script that can fix permissions wherever they're broken, so it can by > run by the people currently suffering. > > Good idea? Bad idea? > > -Dan > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- J. Daniel Kulp Principal Engineer, IONA [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.dankulp.com/blog --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]