Increment Project-Version at build with Maven and Hudson

2010-11-25 Thread Manuel Doninger
Hello,
I use Hudson with Maven for building my Java Application. I have one
Maven project, where i want to increment automatically the version of
the project in the pom-file everytime when a Hudson-build runs. The
Maven-Release-Plugin isn't suitable in this case because i don't use
Snapshot-versions of that project. I know the Maven-Versions-Plugin
and its set-goal, but there i have to declare explicitly the new
version, as far as i understand the function of that goal..
Is there any other Maven- or Hudson-Plugin which can i use?

Regards,
Manuel

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Increment Project-Version at build with Maven and Hudson

2010-11-25 Thread Stephen Connolly
Why not follow the maven way, leave the version in SCM as a SNAPSHOT, and
let hudson do the releases for you... If you object to maven-release -plugin
effectively running the build twice, then switch the preparationGoals to
validate

- Stephen

---
Sent from my Android phone, so random spelling mistakes are a direct result
of using swype to type on the screen

On 25 Nov 2010 14:42, Manuel Doninger manuel.donin...@googlemail.com
wrote:

Hello,
I use Hudson with Maven for building my Java Application. I have one
Maven project, where i want to increment automatically the version of
the project in the pom-file everytime when a Hudson-build runs. The
Maven-Release-Plugin isn't suitable in this case because i don't use
Snapshot-versions of that project. I know the Maven-Versions-Plugin
and its set-goal, but there i have to declare explicitly the new
version, as far as i understand the function of that goal..
Is there any other Maven- or Hudson-Plugin which can i use?

Regards,
Manuel

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org


Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-10 Thread Yoav Landman
You may be interested to also look at the specific Hudson integration of
Artifactory for full build traceability. This is coming very soon to
TeamCity as well:
http://wiki.jfrog.org/confluence/display/RTF/Build+Integration

On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 9:26 PM, Lorenzo Thurman lore...@thethurmans.comwrote:

 Ok, thanks. Two more things to look at now, TeamCity and Artifactory.
 On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:

  The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.

 There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary,
 those who don't
 --Unknown

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com





Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-10 Thread Lorenzo Thurman
Thanks, I'll look at this.

On Apr 10, 2010, at 3:44 PM, Yoav Landman wrote:

 You may be interested to also look at the specific Hudson integration of
 Artifactory for full build traceability. This is coming very soon to
 TeamCity as well:
 http://wiki.jfrog.org/confluence/display/RTF/Build+Integration
 
 On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 9:26 PM, Lorenzo Thurman 
 lore...@thethurmans.comwrote:
 
 Ok, thanks. Two more things to look at now, TeamCity and Artifactory.
 On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:
 
 The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.
 
 There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary,
 those who don't
 --Unknown
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 

Nobody in the game of football should be called a genius. A genius is somebody 
like Norman Einstein.
  - Joe Theismann

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com








Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Lorenzo Thurman
I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the process 
of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
strengths/weaknesses of the product. 
Thanks

My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
--The Full Monty

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com




RE: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Adam Purkiss

 They are two different products that work well together rather then competing 
products. Why are you testing them?

 

Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts etc 
to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a project 
comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, manage 
dependancies and also run other tools on code.

 

My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare two 
things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a better 
understanding of what your objective is would help answer the question.
 
 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org
 
 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.
 
 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the process 
 of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product. 
 Thanks
 
 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
  
_
Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464

Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread David Hoffer
+1

First do a web search for what these things are before you decide what
to compare.

-Dave

On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 11:06 AM, Adam Purkiss ajpurk...@hotmail.com wrote:

  They are two different products that work well together rather then 
 competing products. Why are you testing them?



 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts etc 
 to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a project 
 comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, manage 
 dependancies and also run other tools on code.



 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare two 
 things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a better 
 understanding of what your objective is would help answer the question.

 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org

 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product.
 Thanks

 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com



 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Timothy Orme
They aren't really comparable. Hudson is a Continuous Integration tool. 
Maven is a build tool.


Hudson can use maven for its builds, but they aren't competing products.

If you're looking for a build tool its usually between Maven and Ant.

If you're looking for a continuous integration server, there are 
several, but I typically hear people going between hudson and cruisecontrol.


Hope that helps.

-Tim

On 4/7/2010 12:59 PM, Lorenzo Thurman wrote:

I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the process 
of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
strengths/weaknesses of the product.
Thanks

My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
--The Full Monty

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com



   


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Lorenzo Thurman
I'm beginning to see this now. I was asked to look at a number of products that 
we may use on a large ATG/jsp project we'll be working on. Hudson, 
CruiseControl, Maven and Ant. I don't any of us knows much about them, but I 
have to sort out the differences in each. I think I'm leaning towards a pairing 
of Hudson/Maven pairing, but it's still early. 

Thx for the reply.

On Apr 7, 2010, at 12:06 PM, Adam Purkiss wrote:

 
 They are two different products that work well together rather then competing 
 products. Why are you testing them?
 
 
 
 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts etc 
 to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a project 
 comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, manage 
 dependancies and also run other tools on code.
 
 
 
 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare two 
 things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a better 
 understanding of what your objective is would help answer the question.
 
 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org
 
 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.
 
 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product. 
 Thanks
 
 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 
 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.
  -- Henry David Thoreau

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com




Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread David Hoffer
The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.

-Dave

On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com wrote:
 I'm beginning to see this now. I was asked to look at a number of products 
 that we may use on a large ATG/jsp project we'll be working on. Hudson, 
 CruiseControl, Maven and Ant. I don't any of us knows much about them, but I 
 have to sort out the differences in each. I think I'm leaning towards a 
 pairing of Hudson/Maven pairing, but it's still early.

 Thx for the reply.

 On Apr 7, 2010, at 12:06 PM, Adam Purkiss wrote:


 They are two different products that work well together rather then 
 competing products. Why are you testing them?



 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts 
 etc to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a 
 project comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, 
 manage dependancies and also run other tools on code.



 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare two 
 things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a better 
 understanding of what your objective is would help answer the question.

 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org

 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product.
 Thanks

 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com



 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464

 Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.
  -- Henry David Thoreau

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com




-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Kathryn Huxtable
If you're using TeamCity, do you also use IDEA for your IDE?

-K, who rather prefers Nexus to Artifactory, having used both. Artifactory is 
pretty good, though.

On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:

 The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.
 
 -Dave
 
 On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com wrote:
 I'm beginning to see this now. I was asked to look at a number of products 
 that we may use on a large ATG/jsp project we'll be working on. Hudson, 
 CruiseControl, Maven and Ant. I don't any of us knows much about them, but I 
 have to sort out the differences in each. I think I'm leaning towards a 
 pairing of Hudson/Maven pairing, but it's still early.
 
 Thx for the reply.
 
 On Apr 7, 2010, at 12:06 PM, Adam Purkiss wrote:
 
 
 They are two different products that work well together rather then 
 competing products. Why are you testing them?
 
 
 
 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts 
 etc to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a 
 project comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, 
 manage dependancies and also run other tools on code.
 
 
 
 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare two 
 things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a better 
 understanding of what your objective is would help answer the question.
 
 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org
 
 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.
 
 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product.
 Thanks
 
 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 
 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464
 
 Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.
  -- Henry David Thoreau
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 
 
 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org
 


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Lorenzo Thurman
Ok, thanks. Two more things to look at now, TeamCity and Artifactory.
On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:

 The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.

There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary, those 
who don't
--Unknown

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com




Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread David Hoffer
Personally yes I use IDEA but others use Eclipse, etc.  (IDEA has very
good maven integration.)

-Dave

On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:23 PM, Kathryn Huxtable
kath...@kathrynhuxtable.org wrote:
 If you're using TeamCity, do you also use IDEA for your IDE?

 -K, who rather prefers Nexus to Artifactory, having used both. Artifactory is 
 pretty good, though.

 On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:

 The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.

 -Dave

 On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com wrote:
 I'm beginning to see this now. I was asked to look at a number of products 
 that we may use on a large ATG/jsp project we'll be working on. Hudson, 
 CruiseControl, Maven and Ant. I don't any of us knows much about them, but 
 I have to sort out the differences in each. I think I'm leaning towards a 
 pairing of Hudson/Maven pairing, but it's still early.

 Thx for the reply.

 On Apr 7, 2010, at 12:06 PM, Adam Purkiss wrote:


 They are two different products that work well together rather then 
 competing products. Why are you testing them?



 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts 
 etc to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a 
 project comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, 
 manage dependancies and also run other tools on code.



 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare 
 two things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a 
 better understanding of what your objective is would help answer the 
 question.

 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org

 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product.
 Thanks

 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com



 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464

 Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.
  -- Henry David Thoreau

 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com




 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Kathryn Huxtable
Yes, it does have good maven integration. I'm so used to Eclipse, though.

I was just wondering, since TeamCity is a JetBrains product like IDEA.

-K

On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:27 PM, David Hoffer wrote:

 Personally yes I use IDEA but others use Eclipse, etc.  (IDEA has very
 good maven integration.)
 
 -Dave
 
 On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:23 PM, Kathryn Huxtable
 kath...@kathrynhuxtable.org wrote:
 If you're using TeamCity, do you also use IDEA for your IDE?
 
 -K, who rather prefers Nexus to Artifactory, having used both. Artifactory 
 is pretty good, though.
 
 On Apr 7, 2010, at 1:20 PM, David Hoffer wrote:
 
 The tool stack we use is SVN, Maven, TeamCity  Artifactory.
 
 -Dave
 
 On Wed, Apr 7, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com wrote:
 I'm beginning to see this now. I was asked to look at a number of products 
 that we may use on a large ATG/jsp project we'll be working on. Hudson, 
 CruiseControl, Maven and Ant. I don't any of us knows much about them, but 
 I have to sort out the differences in each. I think I'm leaning towards a 
 pairing of Hudson/Maven pairing, but it's still early.
 
 Thx for the reply.
 
 On Apr 7, 2010, at 12:06 PM, Adam Purkiss wrote:
 
 
 They are two different products that work well together rather then 
 competing products. Why are you testing them?
 
 
 
 Hudson put simply is a CI server that you provide Maven/Ant/Shell scripts 
 etc to and it does builds and you can generate reports about, Maven is a 
 project comprehension tool that can be used as a way to build software, 
 manage dependancies and also run other tools on code.
 
 
 
 My descriptions are basic at best but I think you are trying to compare 
 two things that I would be using together and not instead of so maybe a 
 better understanding of what your objective is would help answer the 
 question.
 
 From: lore...@thethurmans.com
 Subject: Maven and Hudson
 Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 11:59:05 -0500
 To: users@maven.apache.org
 
 I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.
 
 Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in the 
 process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions on the 
 strengths/weaknesses of the product.
 Thanks
 
 My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
 --The Full Monty
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 
 _
 Got a phone? Get Hotmail  Messenger for mobile!
 http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9724464
 
 Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.
  -- Henry David Thoreau
 
 Lorenzo Thurman
 lore...@thethurmans.com
 
 
 
 
 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org
 
 
 
 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org
 
 
 
 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org
 


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Stephen Connolly

maven is a build tool, you would compare it with ANT, make, cmake, etc

Hudson is a continuous integration server, you would compare it with  
cron, cruisecontrol, bamboo, etc


ci servers such as Hudson use build tools such as maven to build your  
source code


if you are trying to compare Hudson to maven you will have a hard time  
as it is like comparing apples and wheelbarrows


Sent from my [rhymes with tryPod] ;-)

On 7 Apr 2010, at 17:59, Lorenzo Thurman lore...@thethurmans.com  
wrote:



I hope this question is suitable for the list, if not apologies.

Can someone give me a comparison between Maven and Hudson? I'm in  
the process of testing both of these, but would like some opinions  
on the strengths/weaknesses of the product.

Thanks

My Break-Dancing days are over, but there's always the Funky Chicken
--The Full Monty

Lorenzo Thurman
lore...@thethurmans.com




-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven and Hudson

2010-04-07 Thread Lorenzo Thurman
Yes, I see that now. I have a simple project running under Hudson  
using Maven to do the builds. Pretty sweet actually!


--My break-dancing days are nover, but there's always the funky  
chicken

The Full Monty

On Apr 7, 2010, at 5:25 PM, Stephen Connolly stephen.alan.conno...@gmail.com 
 wrote:


if you are trying to compare Hudson to maven you will have a hard  
time as it is like comparing apples and wheelbarrows


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Maven 2 - Hudson

2009-12-25 Thread Maruf Aytekin
Hi all,

We are moving our projects to  Maven2 and also planning to use Hudson
as CI tool. I cannot get Hudson send out SCM changes in the build
email. I am trying to generate SCM changes report with Maven and send
email from Maven. On hudson form people are not suggesting this. All
suggests CI tool to send out emails.

What would be the best and goo dpractice way to achieve this? Any idea
would be appreceated.

Regards
Maruf

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Jason van Zyl


On 2009-10-07, at 9:38 AM, Michael Hüttermann wrote:


Hello,

do you plan to continue the work in the context nexus/hudson/ec2 you
kicked off and described here:
http://www.sonatype.com/people/2009/06/nexus-open-source-and-hudson-on-ec2/



That's orthogonal to anything we're doing with Maven.

E.g. are you planning to provide new Maven versions in ec2  
continuously,

to add more convenience features, .. or similar things ?



Maven 3.x builds on the standard Sonatype grid here:  
https://grid.sonatype.org/ci/view/Maven%203.0.x/

It's just a standard VMWare grid. But we do use Hudson extensively.



Thank you.

Best regards
Michael

--
mich...@huettermann.net
http://huettermann.net

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Thanks,

Jason

--
Jason van Zyl
Founder,  Apache Maven
http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
--


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Anders Hammar
There is also Artifactory Online, a repo manager service.

While seeing the benefits of services and also of using the cloud in
general, I'm having a hard time ignoring the fact that I would like to have
my repo manager locally. One great benefit of a repo manager is improved
speed when downloading artifacts, which I wouldn't get when it's hosted
outside of my LAN.

/Anders

On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 19:16, Jason van Zyl ja...@sonatype.com wrote:


 On 2009-10-07, at 9:38 AM, Michael Hüttermann wrote:

  Hello,

 do you plan to continue the work in the context nexus/hudson/ec2 you
 kicked off and described here:

 http://www.sonatype.com/people/2009/06/nexus-open-source-and-hudson-on-ec2/


 That's orthogonal to anything we're doing with Maven.

  E.g. are you planning to provide new Maven versions in ec2 continuously,
 to add more convenience features, .. or similar things ?


 Maven 3.x builds on the standard Sonatype grid here:
 https://grid.sonatype.org/ci/view/Maven%203.0.x/

 It's just a standard VMWare grid. But we do use Hudson extensively.


 Thank you.

 Best regards
 Michael

 --
 mich...@huettermann.net
 http://huettermann.net

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org


 Thanks,

 Jason

 --
 Jason van Zyl
 Founder,  Apache Maven
 http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
 --


 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org




Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Michael Hüttermann
that is a good point. What do you think about running a build server in
the Cloud while having the repo manager locally ?


 While seeing the benefits of services and also of using the cloud in
 general, I'm having a hard time ignoring the fact that I would like to
 have
 my repo manager locally. One great benefit of a repo manager is improved
 speed when downloading artifacts, which I wouldn't get when it's hosted
 outside of my LAN.


Michael

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Anders Hammar
Yes, I was thinking about that one. Didn't really come to a good conclusion.

Pros:
* Easy to scale out
* Easy to start up (you don't have to buy the hardware etc)

Cons:
* Security (if you need to retrieve the code and you don't want to have your
version management system publicly available)
* If the repo manager is locally and the build server is externally,
retrieving artifacts will be slower. However, possibly not a big issue
unless you need to squeeze out that extra performance (time wise).
* Cost (?)

What I'm thinking is that it could be an easy way to get started, but as
your build server(s) is most likely something you want for a long time and
it will be working constantly, I think it might make more sense having it
locally on your own hardware. It think it will be far more expensive to have
it in the cloud compared to this. However, I don't have any figures to
back this up, it's just my guess.

Anyone else having any thoughts?

/Anders

On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 10:17, Michael Hüttermann mich...@huettermann.netwrote:

 that is a good point. What do you think about running a build server in
 the Cloud while having the repo manager locally ?


  While seeing the benefits of services and also of using the cloud in
  general, I'm having a hard time ignoring the fact that I would like to
  have
  my repo manager locally. One great benefit of a repo manager is improved
  speed when downloading artifacts, which I wouldn't get when it's hosted
  outside of my LAN.


 Michael

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org




Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Brian Fox
On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 4:52 AM, Anders Hammar and...@hammar.net wrote:
 Yes, I was thinking about that one. Didn't really come to a good conclusion.

 Pros:
 * Easy to scale out
 * Easy to start up (you don't have to buy the hardware etc)

 Cons:
 * Security (if you need to retrieve the code and you don't want to have your
 version management system publicly available)
 * If the repo manager is locally and the build server is externally,
 retrieving artifacts will be slower. However, possibly not a big issue
 unless you need to squeeze out that extra performance (time wise).
 * Cost (?)

 What I'm thinking is that it could be an easy way to get started, but as
 your build server(s) is most likely something you want for a long time and
 it will be working constantly, I think it might make more sense having it
 locally on your own hardware. It think it will be far more expensive to have
 it in the cloud compared to this. However, I don't have any figures to
 back this up, it's just my guess.

 Anyone else having any thoughts?

I'm thinking along the same lines. The virtual cloud instances are
good for sporadic use but aren't as cost effective for around the
clock cpu / disk io that you would see from a CI system. Also a CI
system puts a heavy load on your repository (push and pull) so it
needs to be near the repo. Having your repo in the cloud invalidates
many of the benefits, namely proxying and caching that speeds up your
builds and provides you the ability to continue working when your
network is unstable.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Michael Hüttermann
What could be a practical scenario in the CI context for Clouding ?

Michael


 On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 4:52 AM, Anders Hammar and...@hammar.net wrote:
 Yes, I was thinking about that one. Didn't really come to a good
 conclusion.

 Pros:
 * Easy to scale out
 * Easy to start up (you don't have to buy the hardware etc)

 Cons:
 * Security (if you need to retrieve the code and you don't want to have
 your
 version management system publicly available)
 * If the repo manager is locally and the build server is externally,
 retrieving artifacts will be slower. However, possibly not a big issue
 unless you need to squeeze out that extra performance (time wise).
 * Cost (?)

 What I'm thinking is that it could be an easy way to get started, but as
 your build server(s) is most likely something you want for a long time
 and
 it will be working constantly, I think it might make more sense having
 it
 locally on your own hardware. It think it will be far more expensive to
 have
 it in the cloud compared to this. However, I don't have any figures to
 back this up, it's just my guess.

 Anyone else having any thoughts?

 I'm thinking along the same lines. The virtual cloud instances are
 good for sporadic use but aren't as cost effective for around the
 clock cpu / disk io that you would see from a CI system. Also a CI
 system puts a heavy load on your repository (push and pull) so it
 needs to be near the repo. Having your repo in the cloud invalidates
 many of the benefits, namely proxying and caching that speeds up your
 builds and provides you the ability to continue working when your
 network is unstable.

 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
 For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org





-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-08 Thread Brian Fox
On Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 12:14 PM, Michael Hüttermann
mich...@huettermann.net wrote:
 What could be a practical scenario in the CI context for Clouding ?

I could see it being handy as temporary or sporadic load extension, or
alternative config support. IOW, once a day to run a build on a
different jdk/browser/os/other, driven as a slave from hudson, but not
as the primary system.

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Maven/Nexus/Hudson/EC2

2009-10-07 Thread Michael Hüttermann
Hello,

do you plan to continue the work in the context nexus/hudson/ec2 you
kicked off and described here:
http://www.sonatype.com/people/2009/06/nexus-open-source-and-hudson-on-ec2/

E.g. are you planning to provide new Maven versions in ec2 continuously,
to add more convenience features, .. or similar things ?


Thank you.

Best regards
Michael

--
mich...@huettermann.net
http://huettermann.net

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Maven vs. Hudson

2009-03-18 Thread Łukasz Warchoł

Hello,
Can anybody tell me what are de differences between Maven and Hudson?
Thanks in advance,
Luke


Re: Maven vs. Hudson

2009-03-18 Thread Eric Cornely
Hudson planify and run any maven goal and give you the status of your 
project.


I installed hudson and configured it to checkout my project from svn and 
run mvn clean package every night.


If anybody break a test or introduce any error, hudson send an email to 
our mailing list and i also can see reports made by hudson about the 
time it takes to build the project and so on...


It's http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_integration

� wrote:

Hello,
Can anybody tell me what are de differences between Maven and Hudson?
Thanks in advance,
Luke



-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org



Re: Maven vs. Hudson

2009-03-18 Thread Mick Knutson
Maven is a project centric build tool

Hudson is an build automation server. Which can automate the the running of
Ant or Maven or Scripts.

---
Thank You...

Mick Knutson, President

BASE Logic, Inc.
Enterprise Architecture, Design, Mentoring  Agile Consulting
p. (866) BLiNC-411: (254-6241-1)
f. (415) 685-4233

Website: http://baselogic.com
Linked IN: http://linkedin.com/in/mickknutson
Twitter: http://twitter.com/mickknutson
Vacation Rental: http://tahoe.baselogic.com
---



2009/3/18 Łukasz Warchoł warchol...@gmail.com

 Hello,
 Can anybody tell me what are de differences between Maven and Hudson?
 Thanks in advance,
 Luke



Re: Maven vs. Hudson

2009-03-18 Thread Bob Aiello
The comparison would be better if you said Hudson vs CruseControl or Maven vs 
Ant
--Original Message--
From: Łukasz Warchoł
To: users@maven.apache.org
ReplyTo: Maven Users List
Sent: Mar 18, 2009 6:50 AM
Subject: Maven vs. Hudson

Hello,
Can anybody tell me what are de differences between Maven and Hudson?
Thanks in advance,
Luke



bob.aie...@ieee.org - http://www.linkedin.com/in/BobAiello - 
Sent via BlackBerry

Re: Maven vs. Hudson

2009-03-18 Thread Anders Kristian Andersen

Yes good question

You use maven to define your projects for building your jar, war and ear

You use hudson to run these projects in an automated way.

/Anders


On 18/03/2009, at 11.50, Łukasz Warchoł wrote:


Hello,
Can anybody tell me what are de differences between Maven and Hudson?
Thanks in advance,
Luke



-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@maven.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@maven.apache.org