Yes - if you are trying to install a snapshot version of a plugin, or
your own custom plugin, then you'll need to have the plugin available in
your local .m2 directory.
However, apiman does try to find the plugin in any remote maven
repositories you might have configured. By default only Central and
JBoss Nexus are configured. But you can add more via apiman.properties.
-Eric
On 6/14/2015 10:05 PM, Alexandre Kieling wrote:
Hi Marc,
The problem was caused by not having the artifact in my local maven
repository. I did a 'mvn clean package' instead of a 'mvn clean
install'. My bad.
It looks like this scenario isn't expected by the app.
Thanks for the quick reply,
Alexandre
On Sun, Jun 14, 2015 at 3:32 PM, Marc Savy <msavy(a)redhat.com
<mailto:msavy@redhat.com>> wrote:
Hi Alexandre,
Which version of apiman (1.1.3.Final or HEAD?) are you using and
which plugin are you attempting to install? Are you using the
quick-start setup?
Regards,
Marc
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alexandre Kieling" <alex.kieling(a)gmail.com
<mailto:alex.kieling@gmail.com>>
To: apiman-user(a)lists.jboss.org <mailto:apiman-user@lists.jboss.org>
Sent: Sunday, 14 June, 2015 3:19:49 PM
Subject: [Apiman-user] 404 error when trying to add a plugin
Guys,
I'm getting a 404 error when trying to add a plugin.
Could please someone try the same thing and confirm there is an issue?
Thanks,
Alexandre Kieling
_______________________________________________
Apiman-user mailing list
Apiman-user(a)lists.jboss.org <mailto:Apiman-user@lists.jboss.org>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/apiman-user
_______________________________________________
Apiman-user mailing list
Apiman-user(a)lists.jboss.org
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/apiman-user