Hi Anders,
thank you for your reply. Do you mean I can do the conversion as a
repository user? I need to access 3rd party repositories, I cannot
change them. By the way, this also means that "The 5 years is up" is not
a message for me :-) Maybe I could stop using java.net, but I have other
dependencies in the same situation that are not so easy to be moved out
or upgraded (I should trace all of them, check if there is a more recent
version in M2 repos, transitively check all the dependency tree, it was
becoming a nightmare when I decided that for the moment I won't migrate
to M3, unless I can arrange M1 support in that version too).
Marco.
On 24/10/2010 20:25, Anders Hammar wrote:
And by the way, you should really try to stop using the java.net repo. I'll
quote Stephen Connolly, "friends don't let friends use the java.net maven
repositories". :-)
/Anders
On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 21:22, Anders Hammar<[email protected]> wrote:
You need to get a repo manager like Nexus set up, which is able to convert
from Maven 1 to Maven 2 repo format.
/Anders
On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 20:35, Zak Mc Kracken<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi all,
sorry if the question has already been asked, I cannot find anything on
the mailing list archive.
Subject should be clear enough, I have a project with many dependencies on
Maven 1 3rd-party repositories that I cannot migrate (e.g.: java.net).
Isn't there a way to continue to use them? Like a plug-in to be declared in
my POM? If yes, please, could someone provide a usage example?
I really need that, otherwise I will need to stay with Maven 2, until more
people migrate to the 3.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Marco.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
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]