Thanks for this - given that maven repo is the I suspect that it should
answer most of the needs. It's not absolutely critical to have every
single source jar, but certainly nice to have as many as can be obtained
with minimal effort (Not too interested in JavaDocs though as you can
find this in the source).
I'll take a look at the trunk and the archives.
Cheers,
Phil
Xavier Hanin wrote:
On 7/11/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
I think the problem is not getting an archive with the sources with Ivy.
The problem would be having a repository giving these archives ...
AFAIK the Maven-repos contain only the binaries.
Maven repo contains sources and javadocs for some (most?) modules. With
latest IvyDE version (on trunk) you get automatic download and
attachment of
javadoc and sources from the maven repository. For other repositories (eg
enterprise repository), you have to provide source and javadoc
artifacts in
the repository and declare them as artifacts in your modules. There
has been
several discussions about that recently on the mailing list, please run a
search if you would like to have details.
HTH,
Xavier
Jan
>-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>Von: Phil Zoio [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Gesendet: Mittwoch, 11. Juli 2007 11:19
>An: Phil Zoio
>Cc: [email protected]
>Betreff: How does one get source jars using Ivy
>
>Is anybody able to provide an answer to this question?
>
>It would be very nice to be able to automatically retrieve the source
>that goes with any artifact jar. If you have to spend a lot of time
>searching and downloading the source code for managed dependencies
>(which I would want to have if it's available), it negates a
>lot of the
>value of using a dependency management tool.
>
>Thanks
>
>Phil
>
>
>Phil Zoio wrote:
>
>> Hi there,
>>
>> Is there any simple way of getting source jars to back up the binary
>> artifacts retrieved via Ivy?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> Phil Zoio
>> http://www.realsolve.co.uk/
>>
>>
>
>