On Jun 19, 2008, at 4:49 PM, Hans Dockter wrote:
On Jun 19, 2008, at 4:12 PM, JerodLass wrote:
I finally got back around to trying this, and the compiler has
trouble
finding the class SshResolver. If I use the full path of the
class in the
second SshResolver in the line, it then has trouble finding the class
com.jcraft.jsch.JSchException, which is in a different library. I
have
declared a dependency on Ivy in my settings file (though I tried
without it
first) and I also put in a dependency on jsch 0.1.38, which I
would think
would be resolved as a transitive dependency, but we still have a
problem
with JSchException. How can I get this ivy class to work for me?
Ivy is per default in the build script classpath. It does not need
to be added to the settings.gradle.
Adding JSch to the settings.gradle file is what I would have done
as well. I don't know yet why this does not work. I gonna try this
out soon.
I had no time yet to try it out myself. I assume it is a Gradle
problem with its classloaders. Could you try putting JSch in the lib
folder of the Gradle distribution and see if it works. You may
comment it out in the settings.gradle file.
- Hans
- Hans
-Jerod
hdockter wrote:
On Jun 12, 2008, at 3:45 PM, JerodLass wrote:
I am now exploring the idea of publishing to a repository, and I
was
wondering if there's an easy way to do this. What I have tried so
far is
along the lines of:
uploadLibs.configure{uploadResolvers.add(name: 'PublishRepo', url:
'http://server/published/maven/maven-repo', username: 'repoadmin',
password:
'adminpass')}
Which would then add the resolver, associated with the
repository, for
uploadLibs to publish to. I noticed that gradle ends up calling
ivy's
publish in the DefaultDependencyManager class, and I was just
wondering how
I can ship something out to a repo in gradle. My options are scp,
sftp, and
using webdav for an http publish (I also noticed some WebDav
classes). Any
tips would be much appreciated.
You have to create for example an Ivy scp resolver in your
gradlefile.
org.apache.ivy.plugins.resolver.SshResolver resolver = new
SshResolver()
resolver.user = 'user'
resolver.userPassword = 'pw'
// further configuration
uploadLibs {
uploadResolvers.add(resolver)
}
See http://ant.apache.org/ivy/history/latest-milestone/resolver/
ssh.html for all configuration options.
WebDav is not very well supported right now in Ivy. Gradle has
created its own limited WebDav resolver but for what you want to do
it is probably not sufficient.
- Hans
-Jerod
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