ya, until the developers decide to go the route of most other apache projects and use maven and deploy artifacts into maven central your best bet is to manage it yourself and install into a repository manager and like archiva and nexus
then you can reference things as normal, just a minor bit of managing the install of new versions jesse -- jesse mcconnell jesse.mcconn...@gmail.com On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 07:05, Jools <jool...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I'm currently using apache archiva instance as a private caching maven > repository. I've manually added the nonpublic artifacts to the cache which > makes life a great deal simpler. See http://archiva.apache.org/ > Regards, > --Jools > > On 24 June 2010 07:36, Ran Tavory <ran...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Hector has a pom.xml which and deals with its dependencies as gracefully >> as it can, but the problem is that hector's dependencies such as cassandra >> and libthrift aren't in public maven repos. Any suggestions how to deal with >> that? >> >> >> On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 6:00 AM, Kenneth Bartholet >> <kennethbartho...@hotmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> Agreed, but at what cost? >>> It's my understanding that the big deterrent is the lack of 3rd party >>> dependencies in maven public repos (e.g. Thrift itself). >>> >>> The option would be to publish a public maven repo containing all >>> dependencies, which ends up being more responsibility then the client >>> developers want to accept. >>> Any volunteers? >>> >>> -Ken >>> >>> > To: user@cassandra.apache.org >>> > From: bbo...@gmail.com >>> > Subject: Re: Hector vs cassandra-java-client >>> > Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2010 17:14:53 +0200 >>> > >>> > "Dop Sun" <su...@dopsun.com> writes: >>> > >>> > > Updated. >>> > >>> > the first Cassandra client lib to make it into the Maven repositories >>> > will probably end up with a big audience. :-) >>> > >>> > -Bjørn >>> > >>> >>> ________________________________ >>> Hotmail has tools for the New Busy. Search, chat and e-mail from your >>> inbox. Learn more. > >