Actually, I already had this in my settings.xml

<mirror>
<!--This sends everything else to /public -->
<id>nexus</id>
<mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
<url>http://nexus:8081/nexus/content/groups/public</url>
</mirror>

so I must have been battling some other configuration problem. Fortunately things seem to be working right now, and my mojo is working.

Cheers, Eric

On 2011-08-29 12:45 PM, Ansgar Konermann wrote:
Am 29.08.2011 17:25 schrieb "Eric Kolotyluk"<[email protected]>:
OK, this is what I have in my settings.xml

<profile>
<id>nexus</id>
<!--Enable snapshots for the built in central repo to direct -->
<!--all requests to nexus via the mirror -->
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>central</id>
<url>http://central</url>
<releases><enabled>true</enabled></releases>
<snapshots><enabled>true</enabled></snapshots>
</repository>
</repositories>
<pluginRepositories>
<pluginRepository>
<id>central</id>
<url>http://central</url>
<releases><enabled>true</enabled></releases>
<snapshots><enabled>true</enabled></snapshots>
</pluginRepository>
</pluginRepositories>
</profile>

Do I need to configure something else?
Yes.<mirrors>

The URL you configured for repository "central" is invalid, so the only way
to get this working is to either specify a mirror redirecting all artifact
requests to your repository manager *or* correcting the "central" url.

Furthermore, make sure that the mirror url points to a content group which
contains at least central *and* your hosted snapshot repo.

Best regards

Ansgar

Cheers, Eric


On 2011-08-29 7:53 AM, Ron Wheeler wrote:
I am not sure but I think that you are deploying to the SNAPSHOT repo but
maven is looking for plugins in the repo that you have defined as your
plug-in repo.
Check your settings.xml to see where you tell Maven to find plugins.

Ron

On 29/08/2011 10:44 AM, Eric Kolotyluk wrote:
This is what I have in my POM

<distributionManagement>
<downloadUrl>http://nexus:8081/nexus/content/groups/public</downloadUrl>
<repository>
<uniqueVersion>false</uniqueVersion>
<id>nexus</id>
<name>Kodak Release Repository</name>
<url>http://nexus:8081/nexus/content/repositories/releases</url>
<layout>default</layout>
</repository>
<snapshotRepository>
<id>nexus</id>
<name>Kodak Snapshot Repository</name>
<url>http://nexus:8081/nexus/content/repositories/snapshots</url>
<layout>default</layout>
</snapshotRepository>
</distributionManagement>

Is there something else I need to configure?

Cheers, Eric

On 2011-08-29 7:40 AM, Ron Wheeler wrote:
Just a wild guess until someone smarter comes along.
Do you have your settings looking for plugins in your SNAPSHOT repo?
I think that the plugin repo is defined separately from the artifact
repos.
Only a guess.

Ron

On 29/08/2011 10:32 AM, Eric Kolotyluk wrote:
OK, I'm trying to get my first mojo working.

I created a project with the maven-plugin archetype and used the
default mojo that is there, but I cannot seem to get it to run.
The first time I tried to run it maven complained it could not find
the plugin. So then I ran a maven install, but it still could not find it
because it would only look in Nexus for it - why doesn't it just look in the
local repository? Then I ran a maven deploy, so the plugin project artifacts
are definitely in Nexus now, but maven is still complaining it cannot find
the POM for the plugin.
I suspect the problem is my plugin is version 0.0.1-SNAPSHOT but the
files in Nexus are like

nexus/content/repositories/snapshots/com/kodak/jni4net/jni4net-maven-plugin/0.0.1-SNAPSHOT/jni4net-maven-plugin-0.0.1-20110829.135006-1.pom

and the POM I am trying to run the plugin from looks like

<plugin>
<groupId>com.kodak.jni4net</groupId>
<artifactId>jni4net-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>0.0.1-SNAPSHOT</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<phase>validate</phase>
<goals>
<goal>proxygen</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>

Does anyone have any advice?

By the way, if I want to share this plugin with the open source
community, how would I go about learning how to do that? Is there some
global repository I can submit it to (because I do not want to have to
publish a repository from our corporate intranet on the internet)? jni4net
comes from SourceForge - perhaps that would be the best place to start?
Cheers, Eric

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