Hi Brent,

Have you tried Archiva? And if so, what are the advantages of Nexus
over Archiva?

/Casper

On Nov 26, 9:03 pm, Brent <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I highly recommend using Nexus maven repo manager.  Pretty much
> everyone else is moving toward it for maven as well.
>
> http://nexus.sonatype.org/
>
> Just take a look at the demo site.  It's real easy to setup as well.
> I used to use artifactory, but switched to this one.
>
> --Brenthttp://geekyryan.blogspot.com/
>
> On Nov 26, 2:09 pm, RogerV <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > The animus expressed toward .XML style syntax is something that tends
> > to resonate with me. I do tend to like declarative approaches - which
> > both Ant and Maven more or less take - vs overly imperative approaches
> > to describing builds. Hence I tend to resist the temptation to take a
> > full blown scripting language approach to describing project builds.
>
> > As to another area where XML inflicts cognitive pain - Spring
> > Framework applicationContext.xml files.
>
> > I do believe in separating bean initialization away from compiled Java
> > code into a strictly interpreted-at-runtime text file of some kind. I
> > like a few annotations for some things but I don't want to use them to
> > fully replace the semantic actions that go on in
> > applicationContext.xml files.
>
> > I want a better bean configuration/initialization script language -
> > but not really an imperative language. I don't want to script logic
> > there, I just want to declare the initialization actions and the bean
> > relationships.
>
> > So hence I've grabbed ANTLR and am devising a new configuration DSL to
> > supplant XML. I'm calling it jfig. The syntax of jfig looks like this:
>
> > applicationContext.jfig
> > ===============================================
>
> > properties_include "classpath:application.properties";
>
> > org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource dataSource {
> >     @destroy-method = close;
> >     driverClassName = "${jdbc.driverClassName}";
> >     url = "${jdbc.url}";
> >     username = "${jdbc.username}";
> >     password = "${jdbc.password}";
> >     defaultAutoCommit = true;
>
> > }
>
> > org.springframework.orm.ibatis.SqlMapClientFactoryBean sqlMapClient {
> >     configLocation = "classpath:sqlmap-config.xml";
> >     dataSource = $dataSource;
>
> > }
>
> > java.util.Properties props {
> >         "James Ward" = "Adobe Flex evangelist";
> >         "Stu Stern" = "Gorilla Logic - Flex Monkey test automation";
> >         Dilbert = "character in popular comic strip of same title";
>
> > }
>
> > java.util.HashMap map {
> >         this($props);
>
> > }
>
> > ===============================================
>
> > The '@' prefixes Spring BeanDefintion attributes that can be set.
>
> > The '$' prefixes bean ID names when they're being referenced as a
> > dependency.
>
> > Obviously includes for Java .properties definitions are supported and
> > use the ${foo.bar} syntax for referencing property definitions in any
> > bean configuration.
>
> > Notice the 'this' keyword is used when doing constructor injection (as
> > opposed to setter injection). Constructor injection can still be
> > combined with setter injection too.
>
> > The java.util.Properties class is specially recognized so that it's
> > easy to initialize an instance with name/value pairs, and then that
> > can be used to initialize other beans that accept a Properties
> > argument.
>
> > A certain amount of type checking will be done during jfig config file
> > parsing. If a bean class doesn't exist on the classpath, or a property
> > is not found, or is not of a compatible type (same with constructor
> > args), then will fail on the spot, referencing the relevant lines in
> > the jfig file.
>
> > Very early days. I've got a working parser that processes this syntax
> > and instantiates these beans. I'm next going to rewrite the parse
> > actions to start invoking Spring Framework APIs for bean definition
> > and bean registration.
>
> > Later on I'll use ANTLR to creat an ActionScript runtime in order to
> > devise a mini dependency injection framework for Flex apps - using
> > this same jfig syntax. It'll hold the AST in memory as the so-called
> > "application context". To instantiate a requested bean will involve
> > traversing the AST to instantiate dependencies in a just-in-time
> > manner.
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