What's the current storage requirements for the central repository at this
time?
Per Jarvana, Central is around 100gb, as of mid October 2009:
http://www.jarvana.com/jarvana/info/repository_statistics
Wayne
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To
Ok, so, from the EBS web page...we can speculate...
As an example, a medium sized website database might be 100 GB in size and
expect to average 100 I/Os per second over the course of a month. This would
translate to $10 per month in storage costs (100 GB x $0.10/month), and
approximately $26
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 12:09 AM, Mark Diggory mdigg...@gmail.com wrote:
I imagine there have to be a number of projects/companies out there
using Maven artifacts and incurring bandwidth costs to build systems.
Atlassian seems to be recommending the practice to its Bamboo users...
They should
you can set s3 buckets where requester pays
http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/message.jspa?messageID=123715
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 9:30 AM, Brian Fox bri...@infinity.nu wrote:
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 12:09 AM, Mark Diggory mdigg...@gmail.com wrote:
I imagine there have to be a
FYI
Initiating a thread here to see its effect.
http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/thread.jspa?messageID=158762#158762
Cheers,
Mark
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 10:19 AM, Carlos Sanchez car...@apache.org wrote:
you can set s3 buckets where requester pays
the problem for a public dataset it's that AFAIK they are static while
the repo keeps changing
On Mon, Dec 21, 2009 at 12:55 PM, Mark Diggory mdigg...@gmail.com wrote:
FYI
Initiating a thread here to see its effect.
Cheers,
After experimenting a bit with EC2, It seems it would be ideal if
there were an EBS volume that had all the Maven central repository
within it. Does anyone know of such a thing?
thanks,
Mark
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I imagine there have to be a number of projects/companies out there
using Maven artifacts and incurring bandwidth costs to build systems.
Atlassian seems to be recommending the practice to its Bamboo users...