Thanks. I get it now. the documentation was just misleading on this... In my situation, it's like 30 JARs from a non-mavenized older build, so I have to import them into the repo manually... But I guess, I can import them as versions "1.0-SNAPSHOT" and be done with it
Thanks, Yaakov. On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 2:24 PM, Stephen Connolly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The *key* thing to understand is that once Maven downloads foo-1.0.jar and > has it in its local repository, it will *never* download it again. > > This is why you should always keep the version as -SNAPSHOT and use the > release plugin (or roll your own scripts if you're crazy) to roll a release. > > The result of using the release plugin is that developers will never > _normally_ build a non-SNAPSHOT version, and each build of a non-SNAPSHOT > will get deployed to your maven repo... and they should only be being built > once to ensure that there is only one release of the artifact for that > version number. > > On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 7:21 PM, Stephen Connolly < > [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> The update ppolicy for a remote repo will control how often maven looks for >> updates versions being available also... >> >> but the thing is this is only is Maven thinks it could use a newer >> version... >> >> so if your dependency is like >> >> <version>1.0</version> >> >> then that's a "no fixed version, but I'd suggest to use 1.0" and as long as >> Maven has a 1.0 downloaded, there's no need to check. >> >> Similarly if you have >> >> <version>[1.0]</version> >> >> However, if you have >> >> <version>[1.0,2.0-!)</version> >> >> Then Maven _can_ use a newer one if available. If no other project is >> forcing or strongly suggesting a specific version within the range, then >> Maven will use the update policy to decide how often to check for other >> versions that match the range(s) that apply for the version. >> >> At least that's my understanding (and results of some quick experiments) >> >> -Stephen >> >> >> On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 7:00 PM, Yaakov Chaikin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote: >> >>> Hmm... Is that REALLY true? The documentation for the 'updatePolicy' >>> certainly seems to disagree since it exists for both <snapshots> and >>> <releases>: >>> "updatePolicy: This element specifies how often updates should attempt >>> to occur. Maven will compare the local POM's timestamp (stored in a >>> repository's maven-metadata file) to the remote. The choices are: >>> always, daily (default), interval:X (where X is an integer in minutes) >>> or never." >>> >>> The documentation for mvn --help also says this for '-U': >>> -U,--update-snapshots Forces a check for updated releases and >>> snapshots on remote repositories >>> >>> So, how do you explain these then? What do they do? >>> >>> >>> On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 1:53 PM, Wayne Fay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> > Maven NEVER updates jars that have a non-snapshot version associated >>> with them. >>> > >>> > If you are "updating" jars then they MUST be called a.b.c-SNAPSHOT for >>> > Maven to notice the changes. >>> > >>> > Wayne >>> > >>> > On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 10:47 AM, Yaakov Chaikin >>> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> >> Hi, >>> >> >>> >> I am using Maven 2.0.8. >>> >> >>> >> I have a custom remote maven repo with some JARs imported there. I >>> >> recently updated one of the JARs there, but noticed that when I built >>> >> on the client, no update was pulled from the remote repo and my local >>> >> repo still has the old one. Only after I erased the actual JAR from >>> >> the local repo, did it pull the file from the remote repo. >>> >> >>> >> I checked and all the files in the directory under (version) 1.0 of >>> >> that JAR file have new timestamps, so it's definitely new. >>> >> >>> >> I then tried to force by doing this: >>> >> mvn -U clean install >>> >> >>> >> That didn't bring in the new JAR. >>> >> >>> >> I then tried to edit the update policy and explicitely says "always": >>> >> <repositories> >>> >> <repository> >>> >> <id>central</id> >>> >> <name>FES Unclass Maven Repository</name> >>> >> <url>https://xxx</url> >>> >> <snapshots> >>> >> <updatePolicy>always</updatePolicy> >>> >> <enabled>true</enabled> >>> >> </snapshots> >>> >> <releases> >>> >> <enabled>true</enabled> >>> >> <updatePolicy>always</updatePolicy> >>> >> </releases> >>> >> </repository> >>> >> </repositories> >>> >> <pluginRepositories> >>> >> <pluginRepository> >>> >> <id>central</id> >>> >> <name>FES Unclass Maven Repository</name> >>> >> <url>https://xxx</url> >>> >> </pluginRepository> >>> >> </pluginRepositories> >>> >> >>> >> However, that didn't work either. >>> >> >>> >> Am I doing something wrong here? >>> >> >>> >> Thanks, >>> >> Yaakov. >>> >> >>> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> >> 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] >>> > >>> > >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> 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]
