问题
I\'m trying to access a Nexus repository manager which requires some basic authentication. Everything works fine from Maven2 but when I try to configure things in SBT it can\'t find the artifacts. It is using a custom repository pattern (see this related question) but I don\'t think that should matter. In any case the relevant configuration is here.
Project.scala:
val snapshotsName = \"Repository Snapshots\"
val snapshotsUrl = new java.net.URL(\"http://nexusHostIp:8081/nexus/content/repositories/snapshots\")
val snapshotsPattern = \"[organisation]/[module]/[revision]-SNAPSHOT/[artifact]-[revision](-[timestamp]).[ext]\"
val snapshots = Resolver.url(snapshotsName, snapshotsUrl)(Patterns(snapshotsPattern))
Credentials(Path.userHome / \".ivy2\" / \".credentials\", log)
val dep = \"group\" % \"artifact\" % \"0.0.1\" extra(\"timestamp\" -> \"20101202.195418-3\")
~/.ivy2/.credentials:
realm=Snapshots Nexus
host=nexusHostIp:8081
user=nexususername
password=nexuspassword
According to a similar discussion in the SBT user group this should work fine but I am getting the following when I try to build.
==== Repository Snapshots: tried
[warn] -- artifact group#artifact;0.0.1!artifact.jar:
[warn] http://nexusHostIp:8081/nexus/content/repositories/snapshots/group/artifact/0.0.1-SNAPSHOT/artifact-0.0.1-20101202.195418-3.jar
I\'m fairly certain this is a credentials problem and not something else because I can hit the URL it says it is trying directly and download the jar (after authenticating).
I have also tried declaring the credentials inline (even though it is less than ideal) like so:
Credentials.add(\"Repository Snapshots\", \"nexusHostIp\", \"nexususername\", \"nexuspassword\")
回答1:
Here's what I did (sbt 0.13 + artifactory - setup should be similar for nexus):
1) Edited the file ~/.sbt/repositories as specified here: http://www.scala-sbt.org/0.13.0/docs/Detailed-Topics/Proxy-Repositories.html
[repositories]
local
my-ivy-proxy-releases: http://repo.company.com/ivy-releases/, [organization]/[module]/(scala_[scalaVersion]/)(sbt_[sbtVersion]/)[revision]/[type]s/[artifact](-[classifier]).[ext]
my-maven-proxy-releases: http://repo.company.com/maven-releases/
2) Locked down my artifactory to disable anonymous access.
3) Created a credentials file in ~/.sbt/.credentials
realm=Artifactory Realm
host=artifactory.mycompany.com
user=username
password=password
4) Created a file under ~/.sbt/0.13/plugins/credentials.sbt that wires up the default credentials
credentials += Credentials(Path.userHome / ".sbt" / ".credentials")
Now when my project loads sbt hits artifactory like normal.
The reason I did it this way is to keep the repository definitions, etc, out of the project files to enable teams to have flexibility (they can set up an internal server to serve in-progress artifacts, etc).
-Austen
回答2:
UPDATE: This answer does not work in recent sbt versions - see Austen's answer instead.
Alright I finally got this sorted out.
snapshotsName
can be anything. realm
in .credentials must be the HTTP Authentication realm that shows up when trying to hit the URL of the repository (nexus in my case). realm
is also the first parameter of Credentials.add
. So that line should have been
Credentials.add("Sonatype Nexus Repository Manager", "nexusHostIp", "nexususername", "nexuspassword")
The host name is just the ip or DNS name. So in .credentials host
is just nexusHostIp
without the port number.
So the working Project configuration is:
val snapshotsName = "Repository Snapshots"
val snapshotsUrl = new java.net.URL("http://nexusHostIp:8081/nexus/content/repositories/snapshots")
val snapshotsPattern = "[organisation]/[module]/[revision]-SNAPSHOT/[artifact]-[revision](-[timestamp]).[ext]"
val snapshots = Resolver.url(snapshotsName, snapshotsUrl)(Patterns(snapshotsPattern))
Credentials(Path.userHome / ".ivy2" / ".credentials", log)
val dep = "group" % "artifact" % "0.0.1" extra("timestamp" -> "20101202.195418-3")
With a .credentials file that looks like:
realm=Sonatype Nexus Repository Manager
host=nexusHostIp
user=nexususername
password=nexuspassword
Where "Sonatype Nexus Repository Manager" is the HTTP Authentication realm.
回答3:
If SBT launcher is failing to download a new version of SBT from your proxy, and that ~/.sbt/boot/update.log
is showing that you're getting 401 authentication errors, you can use the environment variable SBT_CREDENTIALS to specify where the ivy credential file is.
Either of these should work and download the new sbt version:
SBT_CREDENTIALS='/home/YOUR_USER_NAME/.ivy2/.credentials' sbt
- Putting
export SBT_CREDENTIALS="/home/YOUR_USER_NAME/.ivy2/.credentials"
in your.bashrc
(or.zshrc
), start a new shell session and then runsbt
(You'll need have the ~/.ivy2/.credentials
file setup like other answers here has shown)
Source: https://github.com/sbt/sbt/commit/96e5a7957c830430f85b6b89d7bbe07824ebfc4b
回答4:
Following the SBT Documetation:
There are two ways to specify credentials for such a repository:
Inline
credentials += Credentials("Some Nexus Repository Manager", "my.artifact.repo.net", "admin", "password123")
External File
credentials += Credentials(Path.userHome / ".ivy2" / ".credentials")
The credentials file is a properties file with keys realm, host, user, and password. For example:
realm=Some Nexus Repository Manager
host=my.artifact.repo.net
user=admin
password=password123
回答5:
This worked for me. I'm using SBT version 0.13.15:
~/.ivy2/.my-credentials
(host without port):
realm=Sonatype Nexus Repository Manager
host=mynexus.mycompany.com
user=my_user
password=my_password
build.sbt
(nexus url with port):
import sbt.Credentials
...
credentials += Credentials(Path.userHome / ".ivy2" / ".my-credentials")
...
resolvers in ThisBuild ++= Seq(
MavenRepository("my-company-nexus", "https://mynexus.mycompany.com:8081/repository/maven-releases/")
)
回答6:
Check for all files containing credentials.
For me I had a new project in sbt 1.0 (instead of good old 0.13), where I had a ~/.sbt/1.0/global.sbt
file containing my credentials, which I forgot about. So after a mandatory password change, the artifactory downloads was broken and locking my account.
Would be nice if the chain of credentials and files filling them can be easily inspected. Would also be nice if SBT was a bit more careful and first checking if authentication/authorization is correct, before starting tot download X files and locking my account after 3 misauthenticated attempts.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4348805/how-to-access-a-secured-nexus-with-sbt