Hi all, I've just committed what might be the seed for getting mvn under Gump do what we want it to do.
Inside http(s)://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/gump/mvnrepo/trunk you'll find a very small Restlet (<http://www.restlet.org/>) based web application that can do the following: * if asked for /maven2/{groupId}/{artifactId}/{version}/{something}.jar and the webapps has a local file registered, for the given groupId and artifactId => serve the local file * proxy any other request that comes in to http://repo1.maven.org/ (cool, eh?) So if you start it, it will be a transparent proxy for <http://repo1.maven.org/>, but if you add local file names for a given combination of groupId and artfactId (by using the extremely slick /addartifact.html page) it will serve those files instead. The idea is to start it and add all known JARs we are going to create. Then we'd have to configure mvn to use our local web-app and any artifact retrieved from the repo that is built by Gump will be ours. The application completely ignores the requested version, of course. I haven't really given it a full spin and I think we'll have to intercept .md5 downloads as well (at least I hope mvn would render artifacts illegal if they didn't match the checksums) but wanted to open up development ASAP. We'll have to clean out the local mvn repo after each run as well. I've chosen Restlet since I am a Java weeny[1][2] and I knew that Restlet would give me two key features for free: URI templates and proxying requests. If you look at the webapp, it is a whopping six classes, one of which is just setting up the application, one is a very thin (and probably unnecessary) layer on top of Restlet's Redirector and one serves out static HTML. Let me know what you think Stefan Footnotes: [1] who'd love to do more Lisp [2] who gets paid for being a C# weeny --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]