On 20-Jul-08, at 10:13 PM, Brett Porter wrote:


On 18/07/2008, at 11:54 PM, Jason van Zyl wrote:

I am actually trying to work with a developer who knows Hudson very well to create a better bridge from Maven and Hudson. Basically using Maven SCM (instead of the proliferation of Hudson plugins doing exactly the same thing), creating a Plexus adapter so that I can use all the Plexus components in Hudson, and bridge for Maven plugins into Hudson. This will be my attempt to bridge the two worlds and give Hudson first-class Maven support (some of it is honestly wonky).

Cool - especially if this leads to general improvement of Maven SCM.

I mean I'm not going to stop you guys from doing whatever with Continuum I just find working with Hudson easier, and the setup here has honestly never been overly stable. Life is short, I used what works for the Maven 2.1 ITs.

Exactly - I think Wendy was just suggesting the right tool for the job at hand, not an alternative for the Maven 2.1 ITs or CI in general.

Anyway, as Emmanuel said, off-topic :)

The important thing is that the release process does not use your credentials for either SVN or SSH when it's not you doing the release.


I don't think that's important at all, but I can easily fix it.

What's important is that the release is is made in a sane way, with as much constant as possible. Who does the release would be easily recorded. But I can easily collect credentials so a release manager can store them for reuse and fully automate the process.

Thanks,
Brett

--
Brett Porter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://blogs.exist.com/bporter/


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Thanks,

Jason

----------------------------------------------------------
Jason van Zyl
Founder,  Apache Maven
jason at sonatype dot com
----------------------------------------------------------

You are never dedicated to something you have complete confidence in.
No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow.
They know it is going to rise tomorrow. When people are fanatically
dedicated to political or religious faiths or any other kind of
dogmas or goals, it's always because these dogmas or
goals are in doubt.

  -- Robert Pirzig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance


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