From what I have understood is that in M1, you can easily create a
repository "by hand", but in M2, this is much harder. It is better to use Proximity to create your repository (if you are talking about a company-wide 'local' repository) or just let M2 download the correct dependencies from ibiblio if that is an option.
regards, Wim 2006/10/9, Sybren Stüvel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I can manually install every JAR file in my local M1 repository into the M2 repository, but that would be rather time consuming. Isn't there a tool that can convert a M1 repos to M2 format? Sybren Naess, Ronny wrote: > Sorry, I read you where converting the other way :-) I don not belive > you can reference maven 1 dependencies without a maven 2 pom. > > You might need to concider upgrading your dependencies, or you can > upload the needed dependencies to you internal repository if not found > on a public one with maven-deploy-plugin. > -- Sybren Stüvel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Software Engineer CHESS iBusiness Nieuwe Gracht 13, Haarlem Postbus 5021, 2000 CA Haarlem --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
