« Return to Thread: Choice of Maven Repository Manager and NMaven

Re: Choice of Maven Repository Manager and NMaven

by Jason van Zyl-2 :: Rate this Message:

Reply to Author | View in Thread

Nexus is by far the easiest to setup, has the best UI, and is the most  
well maintained (look at the release history) and released most often.  
You can compare some of the features here:

http://docs.codehaus.org/display/MAVENUSER/Maven+Repository+Manager+Feature+Matrix

My advice is try to install them and you'll probably decide after 10  
minutes.

The other advantage that Nexus has (which is a point that the Nexus  
team will take advantage of) is that Shane Isbell, the creator of  
NMaven, works for Sonatype who are the folks that make Nexus and  
specific .NET support is definitely on our roadmap. Nexus is also an  
extension of Proximity and if you've used that in the past we can  
easily migrate from Proximity to Nexus. We also have full-time  
developers working on Nexus which include QA and documentation staff.

Try installing Nexus (http://nexus.sonatype.org), look at the  
documentation we have (which is substantial) and do your comparison.

On 24-Sep-08, at 1:27 AM, James Carpenter wrote:

> When using NMaven for .NET builds is there any NMaven specific  
> reason to use one repository manager over another?
>
> Flame bait:
> I have used Artifactory and Proximity in the past.  From looking at http://docs.codehaus.org/display/MAVENUSER/Maven+Repository+Manager+Feature+Matrix 
>  it seems Archiva, Artifactory, and Nexus are very close in  
> functionality and all actively maintained.
>
> Is there some killer feature I'm overlooking that makes one  
> implementation far superior to the others?

Thanks,

Jason

----------------------------------------------------------
Jason van Zyl
Founder,  Apache Maven
jason at sonatype dot com
----------------------------------------------------------

Our achievements speak for themselves. What we have to keep track
of are our failures, discouragements and doubts. We tend to forget
the past difficulties, the many false starts, and the painful
groping. We see our past achievements as the end result of a
clean forward thrust, and our present difficulties as
signs of decline and decay.

-- Eric Hoffer, Reflections on the Human Condition

 « Return to Thread: Choice of Maven Repository Manager and NMaven