![]() Evgeny Goldin, Software Developer, Thomson Reuters |
![]() We have been using Artifactory in Thomson Reuters (ClearForest) for more than a year now. My first Maven repository manager was Nexus – we were using it in my previous workplace. When I came to Thomson Reuters and started working on new CM infrastructures – I decided to switch to Artifactory, though. Mostly due to its richness of features and for supporting an efficient checksum-based storage model for binaries, which was the biggest difference for me between the two products... The Pro Power-Pack, Whether you have it or don’t – Artifactory surely delivers! |
![]() Stephen Chin, Director of SW Engineering |
The modern Artifactory UI is a breath of fresh air in the artifact repository market. We use Artifactory as the crux of our build and test platform at Inovis, and have received world class support from the JFrog team. |
![]() JavaLobby |
![]() It’s seems that Artifactory development and roadmap are driven from user and community needs, and many features (though some of those are small) were developed from getting repeated feedback and requirements from the community. Maven Repository Manager: Nexus Vs. Artifactory Ori Dar, Java Consultant and Architect |
![]() Peter A. Pilgrim, JUG Leader, Founder & President |
![]() I went to over the road to download Artifactory. It was a case of once bitten, twice shy. What a breath of fresh air! Artifactory is also a Maven 2 repository container, but you can search for artifacts and also upload them. It is written with an AJAX framework and you physically browse the artifacts in a tree. This is a Web 2.0 application, not just another Search facade like the Maven Repository (mvnrepository.com ). A unique selling point of Artifactory is that it can support several repositories and even aggregate a set of repositories together into a so-called "virtual repository". Building an Enterprise Repository with Apache Ivy and Artifactory |
![]() Oren Sadeh, Mgr, Software Development, Cisco |
![]() Artifactory is designed to meet our demanding needs in the software development department. Built by developers and for developers it provides us management with reliability, security and manageability. For me the most important feature one can find in a tool - it simply works for us Oren Sadeh, Mgr, Software Development, Cisco
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![]() Yoav Hakman, Manager, Software Engineering, CA |
![]() We have found that Artifactory is simple and powerful tool to manage and store our libraries. It helps us simplify the build process and allows us to easily distribute the development effort Yoav Hakman, Manager, Software Engineering, CA |
![]() Haiko Van Der Schaaf, Senior Developer, NS |
![]() The simple yet effective layout is still there and that is for me the big difference... The application is showcase for building Web 2.0 web-applications. |
![]() TheServerSide.com |
![]() Amongst the 4 common Maven repositories available, Artifactory seems to be the better product. Artifactory makes it easy to set up a Maven repository. It provides all the features which a good Maven repository should implement. The organization will not be locked into this tool as it is easy to migrate the repository contents to another implementation. A Web UI makes the repository easy to use even for people who don’t know how the repository works… |
![]() Java Power Tools, O'Reilly |
![]() Artifactory is a powerful, well-polished Open Source tool that provides a number of cool features |
![]() Ivaylo Mihov, Software and Release Engineer, LinkedIn |
When an organization is faced with scaling its internal processes and practices all of the tools involved along the way need to fit that goal. Artifactory's support for various build and continuous integration systems, ease of configuration and administration, REST API and user-driven roadmap, is what made it a very compelling product for us at LinkedIn. It plays and integral part of the solution as the interface between different phases of the Software Development Lifecycle and organizational units. |










