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(no subject) [message #676211 is a reply to message #675893] |
Fri, 03 June 2011 04:00  |
Eclipse User |
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Hallo
Thanks for the reply.
But that is not quite the plan. We use Nexus as repository proxy and for
eclipselink we added about 5 mirrors as they come and go.
I want to mirror the eclipse(link) master so I dont rely on 'luck' if
mirrors are available.
Of course I can do that manually in our nexus but that means work on
every release.
regards
werner
Am 01.06.2011 22:09, schrieb tbee:
> Basically a Maven is just a predefined directory structure that is
> accessible through HTTP. So setting up a web server and copying files
> into place suffices to create your own Maven repository.
>
> Better though is to download the free version of Sonatype's Nexus server
> and install that. It creates a managed Maven repository, so it'll take
> care of all the conventions for you and has a good GUI.
> You can then upload artifacts that are not in other repositories, or
> create mirrors of other repositories, so any artifacts are automatically
> copied to your local repo.
>
> Tom
>
>
> On 1-6-2011 18:17, news.eclipse.org wrote:
>> Hallo
>>
>> Are there instructions on how I can create an own Mirror for
>> Eclipselink Maven2 Artifacts? (would be located in germany)
>>
>> We frequently run into trouble with the mirror link provided at
>> http://wiki.eclipse.org/EclipseLink/Maven
>> It sometimes redirects to a broken mirror and then does that for days.
>>
>> Or are there any plans to add eclipselink artifacts into central? See
>> http://maven.apache.org/guides/mini/guide-central-repository-upload.html
>>
>>
>> Thanks!
>> regards
>>
>> ossi
>>
>
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