RE: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
Use Nexus as a local proxy/cache. You can download and run it out of the box with no config so it's the easiest and lightest instance to run on a local machine. Just hook up your Maven to it with a mirrorOf central (or *) and run your build ahead of time. This will populate Nexus with all the artifacts you need. You can then clear your local repository to show how Maven downloads the artifacts from central From: Edward Song [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 3:53 PM To: users@maven.apache.org Subject: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround For demo purposes, I wanted to show the benefits of Apache Maven to a few others. There is a firewall and proxy over here that will not allow Maven to go get artifacts from the central maven repository and the networking guy will not provide the necessary authentication info to allow Maven to tunnel through the proxy. Is there a way to get an install of Maven which contains the latest artifact snapshots by default? Looking for a quick fix. Thanks in advance. Ed
RE: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
Thanks Wayne for your reply, They're super strict with their networking and only allow HTTP traffic through a firewall and the demo computer is onsite. So installs can only be done from an internal approved resource. Despite their tight restrictions, they have a manual build process, and need some way to demonstrate that loosening the restriction via Maven and Archiva, would be a good solution for them. My current plan is to use Archiva on a laptop and bring it in to the client site, which works great by the way. But this is an instance, where a build with the most up to date snapshots would be beneficial. I guess my query is, of installing an internal repository by default, without looking towards an external repository at all for the initial snapshots? Thanks, Edward Song -Original Message- From: Wayne Fay [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 4:34 PM To: Maven Users List Subject: Re: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround Just connect to the Maven repo before your demo and let it update. You may want to run with -o for offline so it doesn't try to update again during the demo. Or perhaps consider running Archiva locally (on the same laptop that you're demo'ing Maven with). That sounds easiest to me. You'll want to update Archiva before the demo, of course, but then you can delete ~/.m2/repository and show Maven auto-downloading from the Archiva repo etc. Wayne On 4/7/08, Edward Song [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: For demo purposes, I wanted to show the benefits of Apache Maven to a few others. There is a firewall and proxy over here that will not allow Maven to go get artifacts from the central maven repository and the networking guy will not provide the necessary authentication info to allow Maven to tunnel through the proxy. Is there a way to get an install of Maven which contains the latest artifact snapshots by default? Looking for a quick fix. Thanks in advance. Ed - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] This e-mail transmission, and any documents, files or previous e-mail messages attached to it may contain confidential information that is legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of any of the information contained in or attached to this transmission is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify me by reply e-mail and destroy the original transmission and its attachments without reading or saving in any manner. Thank you. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
Well, for the record, this is the same with a default Archiva installation. Each to their own :) On 08/04/2008, Brian E. Fox [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Use Nexus as a local proxy/cache. You can download and run it out of the box with no config so it's the easiest and lightest instance to run on a local machine. Just hook up your Maven to it with a mirrorOf central (or *) and run your build ahead of time. This will populate Nexus with all the artifacts you need. You can then clear your local repository to show how Maven downloads the artifacts from central From: Edward Song [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 3:53 PM To: users@maven.apache.org Subject: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround For demo purposes, I wanted to show the benefits of Apache Maven to a few others. There is a firewall and proxy over here that will not allow Maven to go get artifacts from the central maven repository and the networking guy will not provide the necessary authentication info to allow Maven to tunnel through the proxy. Is there a way to get an install of Maven which contains the latest artifact snapshots by default? Looking for a quick fix. Thanks in advance. Ed -- Brett Porter Blog: http://blogs.exist.com/bporter/ - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
Since you mentioned it, and I wasn't aware that there was a standalone archiva, I decided to check it out. Firing it up with no config, just adding an admin user uses up ~130MB of ram. A standalone default Nexus config is using only ~28. Artifactory is using about ~50mb. On a server this might not be important, but on a developer machine that could be significant. In fact I never thought much about it, but we are running the public nexus instance[1] that is hosting the proxy and repositories for our two CI systems and the M2eclipse build, with the JDK default of 64mb of ram. [1]http://repository.sonatype.org -Original Message- From: Brett Porter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2008 10:02 AM To: Maven Users List Subject: Re: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround Well, for the record, this is the same with a default Archiva installation. Each to their own :) On 08/04/2008, Brian E. Fox [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Use Nexus as a local proxy/cache. You can download and run it out of the box with no config so it's the easiest and lightest instance to run on a local machine. Just hook up your Maven to it with a mirrorOf central (or *) and run your build ahead of time. This will populate Nexus with all the artifacts you need. You can then clear your local repository to show how Maven downloads the artifacts from central From: Edward Song [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 3:53 PM To: users@maven.apache.org Subject: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround For demo purposes, I wanted to show the benefits of Apache Maven to a few others. There is a firewall and proxy over here that will not allow Maven to go get artifacts from the central maven repository and the networking guy will not provide the necessary authentication info to allow Maven to tunnel through the proxy. Is there a way to get an install of Maven which contains the latest artifact snapshots by default? Looking for a quick fix. Thanks in advance. Ed -- Brett Porter Blog: http://blogs.exist.com/bporter/ - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
On 09/04/2008, Brian E. Fox [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Since you mentioned it, and I wasn't aware that there was a standalone archiva, I decided to check it out. Firing it up with no config, just adding an admin user uses up ~130MB of ram. A standalone default Nexus config is using only ~28. Artifactory is using about ~50mb. On a server this might not be important, but on a developer machine that could be significant. In fact I never thought much about it, but we are running the public nexus instance[1] that is hosting the proxy and repositories for our two CI systems and the M2eclipse build, with the JDK default of 64mb of ram. Not really the right forum to debate such a thing, but I question your results since I run with -Xmx64m in the wrapper also, continuously on my macbook. It's true that the use of JSP and the default of Derby incurs some overhead which is why I expect that Archiva's figures are closer to that of Artifactory's. - Brett - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Downloading Apache Maven Repositories : Proxy Workaround
Just connect to the Maven repo before your demo and let it update. You may want to run with -o for offline so it doesn't try to update again during the demo. Or perhaps consider running Archiva locally (on the same laptop that you're demo'ing Maven with). That sounds easiest to me. You'll want to update Archiva before the demo, of course, but then you can delete ~/.m2/repository and show Maven auto-downloading from the Archiva repo etc. Wayne On 4/7/08, Edward Song [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: For demo purposes, I wanted to show the benefits of Apache Maven to a few others. There is a firewall and proxy over here that will not allow Maven to go get artifacts from the central maven repository and the networking guy will not provide the necessary authentication info to allow Maven to tunnel through the proxy. Is there a way to get an install of Maven which contains the latest artifact snapshots by default? Looking for a quick fix. Thanks in advance. Ed - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]