The repository is just an xml file that must be accessible via a url.
So all you have to do is to have your ide move the bundle plus the
repository to a server some place and point obr to that. You can
configure the maven-bundle-plugin to publish the repository.xml and
the bundle to a remote maven repo for example. If that repo is
accessible via for example http your good to go as you can point the
obr in the framework to that remote url.

regards,

Karl

On Fri, Dec 3, 2010 at 10:36 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
> That's very very close to what I want. The only thing that is missing is
> that I want my IDE, the repository, and the OSGI server to be running on
> separate physical machines.
>
> Quoting [email protected]:
>
>> Is an OBR repository a new concept or is it just difficult to implement?
>>
>> Quoting Guillaume Nodet <[email protected]>:
>>
>>> The real problem is that there's no real usable obr repository, so
>>> you're really on your own here.  However obr use a url to actually
>>> dowload and install the bundles that you can point to a known location
>>> if you manage thoses repositories.  What we're using in Karaf to
>>> remove this absolute url is to use a maven based url which uses the
>>> groupid, artifactid and url instead of an absolute url, which gives
>>> you a nice indirection and allow you to use tools such as nexus to
>>> manage your artifacts.
>>>
>>> On Friday, December 3, 2010,  <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I have a vanilla 3.0.2 felix install up and running. However, I   cannot
>>>> seem to figure out how to install the bundles which are   listed by the OBR
>>>> commands. Every example I've found has me   manually installing bundles 
>>>> from
>>>> my local machine, which strikes  me  as defeating the purpose of having a
>>>> bundle repository in the  first  place.
>>>>
>>>> In my ideal world I would create a bundle in IntelliJ, deploy the
>>>> bundle to a remote bundle repository with a maven plugin, and then   
>>>> install
>>>> the bundle into OSGI from the remote bundle repository.
>>>>
>>>> I am looking for something similar to the Linux "yum" command  where  I
>>>> can tell OSGI to install a specific bundle and it will   automatically
>>>> download and install that bundle along with its   dependencies. Is this
>>>> something that OBR is capable of doing or am   I way off base?
>>>>
>>>> -John
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>
>>> --
>>> Cheers,
>>> Guillaume Nodet
>>> ------------------------
>>> Blog: http://gnodet.blogspot.com/
>>> ------------------------
>>> Open Source SOA
>>> http://fusesource.com
>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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-- 
Karl Pauls
[email protected]

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