Adrian, This link may help you. This java program allows you to manually accept the cert and place the generated file in your JDK or JRE. Then the java keeps it as an accept cert. I have not tried this with Maven but it worked with another application where the cert didn't match the server name. Down side is that it would have to be on every user's machine.
Thanks, David On 10/10/07, Adrian Herscu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I am hosting my project sources and binaries with some external > provider. He cannot set up an SSL certificate for my domain name... > Meanwhile, the only alternative is accept those SSL warnings about > domain name mismatch. I am getting them in my browser and also in my SVN > client. > Now I am trying to set up Maven to build and deploy my project to this > provider. The problem is that I am getting these messages from Maven: > > <snip> > [WARNING] repository metadata for: 'snapshot > org.wirexn.build.extensions:wirexn- > build-extensions:1.0-alpha-4-SNAPSHOT' could not be retrieved from > repository: s > [EMAIL PROTECTED] due to an error: Error transferring file > [INFO] Repository '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' will be blacklisted > </snip> > > ...and the artifacts cannot be resolved (of course). > > I tried to see if this is a JRE specific problem. Downloaded a > Java-based WebDAV client (DAVExplorer), and it fails to connect with > this error message: > > javax.net.ssl.SSLException: Name in certificate "his.domain.name" does > not match host name "my.domain.name" > > Anyone knows about a hidden switch/option/configuration file to make the > JRE accept the SSL connection even if the host name doesn't match to > that on the certificate? > > Please help, > Adrian. > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >
