Adrian,

Do you have a need to publish to the repository?
Do you have the SSH or HTTP/HTTPS port open?

If your answers are no and then yes, you could do the following:

1.  Create your SVN repository

2.  Checkout a working copy on a machine that will house the ivy repository.

3.  Add a cron  job (scheduled task if using windows) to  do an svn update
     on a periodic basis (we do every 5 minutes).

4.  Use the built in ssh resolver, or put an apache in front of it, and use 
http/https.


----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Once you start down the dark path, forever will it
dominate your destiny.  Consume you it will " - Yoda

----- Original Message ----
From: Adrian Woodhead <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, October 1, 2007 11:48:44 AM
Subject: SvnResolver?

Hey Ivy devs,

We are looking at using Ivy to manage dependencies and would like to set 
up our own repository but have issues with firewalls where the only port 
open between most machines is for Subversion. So ideally we would like a 
resolver that uses a Subversion repository so we have everything in one 
place. I saw this mentioned on the wiki:

http://wiki.apache.org/ivy/SvnResolver

But as pointed out, it hasn't been updated for 2 years. It doesn't work 
with the latest Alpha release of Ivy either (the API seems to have 
changed). So I was thinking of writing a new Svn Resolver that uses the 
new API but before I start I'd like to make sure nobody else is working 
on this? Does anyone have any advice or tips for me? I'd be happy to 
donate the code when done.

Regards,

Adrian





       
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