I'd say you should add it to your own pom to make it automatic, but that's me. I haven't been using maven2 for long enough to know what the overall preference is, but do generally like the idea of more things working "out of the box". (at least it's what I prefer personally)
On 6/13/06, James Carman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Well, that'd be nice. Do you suggest I just add that to my pom.xml files, then, so that folks can just do a clean build without any manual intervention? Or, do you think it's better for users to modify their settings.xml file if they want to use alternate repositories? -----Original Message----- From: Jesse Kuhnert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, June 13, 2006 12:45 PM To: Tapestry users Subject: Re: tapernate for maven ignorants? Ah sorry for the confusion then, my mistake for speaking before knowing what the problems were :) The jta/ejb spec issues may have been resolved recently. There are a number of maven2 repositories to choose from besides ibiblio: http://repository.jboss.com/maven2/ http://ibiblio.org/maven2/net/java/dev/glassfish/glassfish-transaction-api/( it's called something else, but is probably what you want) https://maven-repository.dev.java.net/nonav/repository/ On 6/13/06, James Carman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > The issue with the JTA.jar and the ejb3.0 specification jar are known > Maven issues. Third-party jars have to be downloaded manually and > installed into your local repository. Yes, it sucks. But, for now, it's > the only thing we have. I know that the Apache Software Foundation > doesn't allow third-party jars to be checked into their SVN repositories > or made available for download from their site because of licensing issues > (at least that's my understanding). That's kind of why I went to Maven > (that and it slims down my SVN repo quite a bit since it only contains > "source"). > > > Hmmmmmm... Sounds like a major usability issue. Maven in general is very > > easy to use, so if dependency resolution isn't happening right something > > is > > potentially broken or not documented properly? > > > > Normally I wouldn't be so vocal about things but I think tapernate is > > really > > crucial/has lots of potential to do a lot of good for tapestry, it would > > be > > a shame if minor usability issues were keeping it back ;) > > > > On 6/13/06, Andreas Bulling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > >> On 13. Jun 2006 - 08:12:42, Chris Chiappone wrote: > >> | The easiest way to get tapernate up and running is to download his > war > >> file > >> | example. Un-jar it and then just pull out all the jar files in > >> | WEB-INF/lib/ That way you will have all dependencies needed. > >> > >> Yes, that's what James proposed some days ago and what I've done > >> in the end. The problem with this is that the war file doesn't > >> seem to get updated (or at least I don't know for sure). > >> > >> @Henri > >> You can find the war file here: > >> www.carmanconsulting.com/mvn/com/carmanconsulting/tapernate-example/0.1 > >> > >> Cheers, > >> Andreas > >> > >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> > >> > > > > > > -- > > Jesse Kuhnert > > Tacos/Tapestry, team member/developer > > > > Open source based consulting work centered around > > dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind. > > > > > James Carman, President > Carman Consulting, Inc. > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- Jesse Kuhnert Tacos/Tapestry, team member/developer Open source based consulting work centered around dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- Jesse Kuhnert Tacos/Tapestry, team member/developer Open source based consulting work centered around dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind.