Hmmm.  This works for me.

Are you connected to the internet? Maven expects you to be, at least the first time. It needs to downloads boatloads of stuff.

After that you can use '-o' for offline.


On Sep 17, 2007, at 8:51 AM, pjackson wrote:


I tried compiling the ActiveMQ 4.1.1 source with Maven 2.0.4 and 2.0.7 and get this error. Can't figure out how to fix maven to get past this. Any
help appreciated.

Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600]
(C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp.

C:\_tools\ActiveMq\apache-activemq-4.1.1>mvn clean install
[INFO] Scanning for projects...
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------
[INFO] Building Maven Default Project
[INFO]    task-segment: [clean, install]
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --
[ERROR] BUILD ERROR
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- -- [INFO] The plugin 'org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-clean-plugin' does not
exist or no valid version could be found
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --
[INFO] For more information, run Maven with the -e switch
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --
[INFO] Total time: < 1 second
[INFO] Finished at: Mon Sep 17 07:45:43 CDT 2007
[INFO] Final Memory: 1M/3M
[INFO]
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --

C:\_tools\ActiveMq\apache-activemq-4.1.1>mvn --version
Maven version: 2.0.7
Java version: 1.5.0_11
OS name: "windows xp" version: "5.1" arch: "x86"

C:\_tools\ActiveMq\apache-activemq-4.1.1>
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--
Daryl
http://itsallsemantics.com

"I see this as coming down to mutual respect. I want to respect the others I communicate with enough to tell them my truth without reservation and I want to respect them enough to listen to their truth. I want to respect their good intentions enough to believe that we can work past our disagreements."

    -- Kent Beck, 2006

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