All of this is perfectly possible with Ivy and not very hard to do. If you have troubles with creating such a repository, don't hesitate to post your questions in more detail to this mailing list.
If you want to publish by doing an svn check-in, you might want to take a look at the 'ivysvn' project, which extends Ivy with an svn-resolver: http://code.google.com/p/ivysvn/ Maarten ----- Original Message ---- From: Adib <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Sun, March 6, 2011 3:38:55 AM Subject: Contineous Deployment Hi, I am highly experienced with Ant but new to Ivy and I am finding Ivy extremely confusing to understand, I have spent a lot of time reading the docs, trying out the tutorial and have not been able to figure out if what i want to do can be done with ivy or how to do it. What I would like to do: 1) Setup a private ivy repository to share with a private development team over the internet 2) Use subversion over https as the ivy repository, this subversion repo will not be used to store my applications source code 3) I want to control what goes into the repository so I have no interest in copying stuff from any of the public maven repos I want to build my ivy.xml files in the repo by hand so that i can know exactly what is on my classpath and why 4) The ivy repo should host my own modules and third party modules I add to it. 5) I want to be able to publish my own modules into the ivy repo by doing an svn check-in Is the configuration that I want doable with ivy and how hard is it to configure something like this? Cheers Adib
