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RE: [orbit-dev] Best way to get a binary copy of the latest Orbitbundles
|
Hi Jason,
DJ is working on it:
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=241427
Cheers,
--
Martin Oberhuber, Senior Member of Technical Staff, Wind River
Target Management Project Lead, DSDP PMC Member
http://www.eclipse.org/dsdp/tm
> -----Original Message-----
> From: orbit-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:orbit-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jason van Zyl
> Sent: Donnerstag, 12. März 2009 09:25
> To: Orbit Developer discussion
> Subject: [orbit-dev] Best way to get a binary copy of the
> latest Orbitbundles
>
> Hi,
>
> Would there be a nice way to get the latest release build of
> Orbit in
> an automated way?
>
> Nexus is an artifact repository manager that now has
> prototype support
> for proxied P2 repositories, hosted P2 repositories and arbitrary
> groupings of both types. P2 repositories in Nexus now have the same
> capabilities Maven repositories have so full RBAC access,
> staging and
> promotion, grouping, ordering, routing tables, RSS feeds, audit, the
> whole nine yards. What I'm trying to do is publish as many standard
> bundles as I can in a public instance of Nexus so that users
> who wish
> to try can provision bundles from Nexus in the same way a Maven user
> would provision normal JARs.
>
> Is there a P2 repository somewhere I can just consume what would be
> considered the latest release versions of all the bundles? Or even
> just the raw bundles are fine, Nexus can generate the necessary P2
> metadata as bundles are deployed into Nexus so I'll take anything
> really.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> Jason van Zyl
> Founder, Apache Maven
> http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
> ----------------------------------------------------------
>
> We all have problems. How we deal with them is a measure of our worth.
>
> -- Unknown
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jason
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> Jason van Zyl
> Founder, Apache Maven
> http://twitter.com/jvanzyl
> ----------------------------------------------------------
>
> You are never dedicated to something you have complete confidence in.
> No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow.
> They know it is going to rise tomorrow. When people are fanatically
> dedicated to political or religious faiths or any other kind of
> dogmas or goals, it's always because these dogmas or
> goals are in doubt.
>
> -- Robert Pirzig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
>
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