On 12/02/07, Oleg Kalnichevski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, 2007-02-12 at 15:13 +0000, sebb wrote:
> On 12/02/07, Oleg Kalnichevski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Mon, 2007-02-12 at 14:06 +0000, sebb wrote:
> > > Since JMeter is an end-product, I don't see the point of having it on 
ibiblio.
> > >
> > > But perhaps I'm missing something.
> > >
> > > JMeter releases are available through all the normal mirrors.
> > >
> > > S.
> >
> > I assume I am not the only person on this planet who would like to be
> > able to use JMeter for load testing as a part of automated deployment
> > process. The absence of official Maven artifacts limits JMeter's appeal
> > as a load test tool of choice for continuous integration servers such as
> > Continuum, which I personally find very unfortunate.
>
> I'm not saying it cannot be deployed there.
>
> If it requires JMeter to be _built_ under Maven, then I'm afraid it's
> a non-starter.
>
> [I just don't have the time to reorganise everything the Maven way - I
> spent quite a long time on it a year or so ago, and asked on the Maven
> user lists, and someone even offered to sort things out, but was
> unable to do so.]
>
> However, if it is just a question of uploading the new jars every time
> we make a release, then of course we can do that.

I am not implying JMeter must be built using Maven. I understand
building JMeter is a non-trivial process, and Maven2 can be a major pain
in the rectum if the project directly layout does not conform to the
Maven guidelines. Manual deployment of JMeter artifacts to ibiblio.org
is suboptimal but I believe quite a few users of JMeter would be very
thankful for that.

OK - can you point me to any documentation describing how to do it?

S

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