To whom may concern, A general consideration on this topic: that I believe to be a general problem. Any of us which have for whatever reason done an investment in Maven 1.0.2, pretty heavy as in our case , are at moment in a kind of Limbo.
We found inherent bugs in the Maven 1.0.2, that is not know where and if will be solved : namely memory leak due to buggy version of Jelly libraries http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MAVEN-1294. That for small project is not visible but when you start using multiprojects of more then 20 components and run reports and use the dashboard for aggregating the results than you hit the upper physical memory management of the JDKs ... On the other side that bug is claimed to be solved since Maven 1.1-Beta and as Maven 1.1 claims to be backward compatible that would be the natural next try .... But there you find that the Entities are no longer supported ..... show stopper :-( I understand the new concept implemented in Maven 2.x ... and it makes definitely sense ... but we need a sort of continuous support to maintain our investment ... and on the other side a big bang migration is not in scope when in your landscape you have more than 50 application to mantain. A simple solution would be to allow those which have such a need to move to Maven 1.1 and still using entities ... knowing anyway that if a restructuring is needed Maven 2 is there ....another solution could be to fix the Jelly problem directly in the 1.0.x stream ? Any help to clarify those points will be greatly accepted ... Best Regards Michele This e-mail, including attachments, is intended for the person(s) or company named and may contain confidential and/or legally privileged information. Unauthorized disclosure, copying or use of this information may be unlawful and is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete this message and notify the sender --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]