Wednesday, March 11, 2009, 4:28:52 PM, Brown, Carlton wrote: > Are you overriding the defaultCache attribute in your ivysettings file, > or are you just defining caches as attributes of resolvers?
Aha! I only set the last. I never realized that <caches defaultCacheDir="..."> does what it does. It seems it solves the problem, so thanks a lot! (I believe I read all the pages about the concepts, but don't remember this things was addressed. If it isn't, it should be.) > -----Original Message----- > From: Daniel Dekany [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Monday, March 09, 2009 12:47 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: How to prevent "unknown resolver" errors? > > I declared own cache for all resolvers that I use, and that solved this > problem for a while. But if I resolve something that is also in the > default cache of Ivy (I mean ${user.home}/.ivy2/cache) the project > pollutes or otherwise access it, and that will cause "unknown resolver" > errors again. > > For example, I store ant#ant in my own repo, called "myResolver", which > uses its own cache. Still, if the default cache of Ivy also contains > ant#ant (same revision), when I ivy:resolve in my project, > ${user.home}/.ivy2/cache/ant/ant/ivydata-[revision].properties is > modified so that it's last line will be resolver=myResolver. Thus, when > something else than my project uses the ${user.home}/.ivy2/cache later > to get ant#ant, I get a "unknown resolver myResolver" error. Why does my > project touch the default cache at all when I set a project-specific > cache for all resolvers that it uses? > > -- > Best regards, > Daniel Dekany > > > ----------------------------------------- > ==================================================== > This message contains PRIVILEGED and CONFIDENTIAL > information that is intended only for use by the > named recipient. If you are not the named recipient, > any disclosure, dissemination, or action based on > the contents of this message is prohibited. In such > case please notify us and destroy and delete all > copies of this transmission. Thank you. > ==================================================== > -- Best regards, Daniel Dekany
