You should be able to publish the content of a maven generated site (or any
site, FTM) into an Artifactory local repository and be able to browse it.
That being said, even though technically it is possible to overload this use
case on a repository manager, we see Artifactory primarily as a binary
artifacts repository, rather than as a convenience web server. A lot of
"smartness" is built into the request processing which doesn't really fit
web-hosting: locking, security, checksum-based storage, resource merging,
request queueing etc.
Our view is, it is just too easy to publish a generated site into an apache
docroot and keep the repository (as well as the repository logs) clean and
focused on its primary goal.
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 7:15 PM, Remijan, Michael <
[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm working on some Artifactory vs. Nexus comparisons. Does Artifactory
> support the "maven-site" repository so generated websites can be
> automatically uploaded and browsed?
>
>
>
>
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Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs
proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance.
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http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev
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