On 9/26/12 10:11 AM, "christofer.d...@c-ware.de" <christofer.d...@c-ware.de>
wrote:
> Hi Alex,
>
> Well in general it would be enough if Adobe simply published the airglobal,
> playerglobal and osmf swcs along with their language resources to a public
> repo ... only these 3 artifacts would be enough to make us all really really
> happy and Apache could start officially deploying Flex FDKs using maven
> without any legal issues.
>
Are there alternatives? Getting Adobe to agree to deploy to a public repo
is probably much harder than having a separate public Adobe repo on an Adobe
server, which is probably much harder than trying to make the current Adobe
download pages work with Maven.
I thought someone else once posted some code on this list with a pom.xml
next to it. Isn't that the minimum requirement or is there more?
What is involved in creating a "repo"?
> I could even send you the prepared artifacts (Files with the correct naming
> convention as well as the maven poms).
>
> Chris
>
>
>
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: Alex Harui [mailto:aha...@adobe.com]
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 26. September 2012 18:22
> An: flex-dev@incubator.apache.org
> Betreff: Re: Flex Maven FDK Generator RC1
>
>
>
>
> On 9/26/12 12:18 AM, "Frédéric THOMAS" <webdoubl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>>
>>
>>> If we
>>> wanted to create maven artifacts for the official maven repo, we
>>> certainly can't bundle in Adobe stuff, so wouldn't that require that
>>> Adobe either publishes to the official maven repo or at minimum puts
>>> up its own pom.xmls on its site so maven can pull the Adobe stuff from
>>> there?
>>
>>
>>
>> Not sure of what you're talking about, OSMF, Textlayout, or something else ?
>>
> Apache Flex has TextLayout now. But OSMF, PlayerGlobal, FlashPlayer, and AIR
> SDK will have to be downloaded from Adobe. Should Adobe be doing something to
> make it easier for Maven to download those things?
>
> --
> Alex Harui
> Flex SDK Team
> Adobe Systems, Inc.
> http://blogs.adobe.com/aharui
>
--
Alex Harui
Flex SDK Team
Adobe Systems, Inc.
http://blogs.adobe.com/aharui