For a long time I wasn't very consistent with my open source code hosting. But the past couple years, all the rage is happening on github.com. That's where I put all my open source contribution past and present.
The most active one (ie the one I get the most support request) is the crowd nexus plugin which is a fork form the sonatype plugin they stopped supporting with nexus 1.8 for commercial reasons. And that's fair enough, if you pay for your authentication provider you should pay for the tools using it as well. In my case I got interested in this project to allow my colleagues to keep using Nexus OSS while using crowd. Nexus OSS usage was well established, but management was not yet ready to pay for the commercial version with a weird pricing model.
see nexus-crowd-plugin
The most active one (ie the one I get the most support request) is the crowd nexus plugin which is a fork form the sonatype plugin they stopped supporting with nexus 1.8 for commercial reasons. And that's fair enough, if you pay for your authentication provider you should pay for the tools using it as well. In my case I got interested in this project to allow my colleagues to keep using Nexus OSS while using crowd. Nexus OSS usage was well established, but management was not yet ready to pay for the commercial version with a weird pricing model.
see nexus-crowd-plugin
3 comments:
Explore my complete coding portfolio on GitHub. Engage with various projects, collaborate with others, and enhance your programming skills through shared knowledge.
Your blogs are really good and interesting. It is very great and informative. I just had an application security awarness training, and it was quite enlightening. Of course Owasp was mentioned, with the top ten list of vulnerabilities, along with the webGoat webapp divorce in new jersey laws.
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