Please see below.
On 2011-05-09 1:55 AM, Lars Corneliussen wrote:
Am
09.05.11 05:00, schrieb Eric Kolotyluk:
OK, I added
<dependency>
<groupId>log4net</groupId>
<artifactId>log4net</artifactId>
<version>1.2.10.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<name>Log for .Net</name>
</dependency>
Just interested: Where is this dependency located? Do we have it
uploaded somewhere? Did you build and upload it somewhere?
I have no idea where this is located - I thought the point of Maven
and having a central repository was I should not have to care.
I took the XML from some place I found on a Google search, hoping
that if someone else had used it, then it might work for me.
to my POM, but if I try to do a build I get
Error in Starting Maven Process: Value cannot be null.
Parameter name: path1
Could you provide a stack trace?
Where would I find the stack trace?
By the way, whenever I start Visual Studio I keep getting the
following message

I still cannot believe how hard this is to get working.
Does anyone have any ideas on what I should try next.
Cheers, Eric
On 2011-05-08 7:32 PM, Eric Kolotyluk wrote:
Please see below...
On 2011-05-08 7:22 PM, Adelita Padilla wrote:
Hi Eric,
On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 10:00 AM, Eric Kolotyluk
<[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
OK, there was no settings.xml in my ~/.m2 so I added the
default one.
I have been using Maven and m2e for months never needing
to do
that, so I don't understand why NPanday needs it there?
I would
consider that a bug.
Now when I try to add an artifact it complains
How am I supposed to know where that is?
You can add that dependency by configuring the remote
repository. Here's the documentation for that ->
http://incubator.apache.org/npanday/docs/1.4.0-incubating/guide/vs/configureRepository.html
Yes, I found that page already, but it does not give me a URL
for any remote repositories. How am I supposed to know where
they are?
For example, how am I supposed to know how to find log4net?
I've been struggling with NPanday for hours just because
I want
to try to add a dependency to log4net, and I still
cannot see any
light at the end of the tunnel.
It is so much easier to use the Sonatype plugin for
Eclipse.
By the way, the file
npanday-repository-builder-1.4.0-incubating-bin.tar.gz
had no
npanday directory in it, so I'm using the one from the
1.3.1 release.
The npanday directory is located in
/repository/releases/org/apache/npanday.
Ahhhh, that's different than 1.3.1. Thanks.
Cheers, Eric
On 2011-05-08 6:37 PM, Deng Ching wrote:
Hi Eric,
The message from the pop-up was just a warning, so you
should
still be able to add an artifact. What happens
afterwards when
you click OK?
The settings.xml file btw, is a configuration file
used by Maven
where you can set the repositories that you want Maven
to look
for artifacts/dependencies of your project when you
build it. It
is also used by NPanday in a similar way during
project import,
artifact re-sync and when building your project.
Thanks,
Deng
On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Eric Kolotyluk
<[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I used
*
npanday-repository-builder-1.4.0-incubating-bin.tar.gz
* npanday-installer-1.4.0-incubating.msi
to set up NPanday, and I was able to set up my
POMs ok.
I'm trying to get NPanday to work with Visual
Studio 2010,
but when I try to add and artifact I get
Does anyone have any ideas on how to fix this?
Cheers, Eric
Thanks,
--
liit
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