1. I want a 3rd party repository because the jars I am using bulds that are in a public cvs, but have not yet been "blessed" by the owners. I would upload them to the main repository myself, but as I do not own them I would tyhink that is at leats rude if not worse. Since I am using it in my own project however I feel having my own repository would be ok.
2. The repository would be on my sourceforge account on the net. I am only looking to host a couple of jar files with the rest relying on ibiblio. Thanks Marc On 12/8/06, Mykel Alvis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm about to start working on this again in the maven user wiki, but there are a lot of questions to be asked. 1. Why are you doing this? It makes a lot of sense to do, but your reasons for doing it determine things later in the chain. 2. Where are you doing this? In a publicly accessible location, or internally, or both. 3. How do you want to do it? In it's simplest case, deployments into the public areas of a web server can be used as a repository, but that's not always the best way. There are a number of products that allow some forms of management for what are often called "3rd party repos", such as Proximity, Archiva, maven-proxy, etc. They work with varying degrees of effectiveness and difficulty in setup/maintenance On 12/8/06, Marc Boorshtein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello All, > > I'm trying to understand how to create a 3rd party repository. I'm > not looking to build a mirror of ibiblio, but instead have my own 3rd > party repository in addition to the repository. > > Thanks > Marc > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- I'm just an unfrozen caveman software developer. I don't understand your strange, "modern" ways.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
