when anonymous access removed from artifactory hosting a bower package, unable to do “bower install” with credentials in .bowerrc
My javascript project has a bower.json with a dependency like this:
...
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
...
with this "bower install" fails with EHTTP Status code 401 (Unauthorized)
Changing the above to include credentials allows "bower install" to succeed:
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://<username>:<password>@artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
However, bower.json is part of git tracked files and also every developer will have individual credentials. Hence, ideal place for credentials will be ~/.bowerrc file (it will be outside the project folder and therefore not tracked by git and will be developer specific).
Problem is, I do not know how to get this done.
Referred to following links with no luck:
jFrog documentation
sonatype documentation
I do not wish to host private registry.
bower artifactory credentials unauthorized
add a comment |
My javascript project has a bower.json with a dependency like this:
...
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
...
with this "bower install" fails with EHTTP Status code 401 (Unauthorized)
Changing the above to include credentials allows "bower install" to succeed:
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://<username>:<password>@artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
However, bower.json is part of git tracked files and also every developer will have individual credentials. Hence, ideal place for credentials will be ~/.bowerrc file (it will be outside the project folder and therefore not tracked by git and will be developer specific).
Problem is, I do not know how to get this done.
Referred to following links with no luck:
jFrog documentation
sonatype documentation
I do not wish to host private registry.
bower artifactory credentials unauthorized
The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the.bowerrc
file
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32
add a comment |
My javascript project has a bower.json with a dependency like this:
...
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
...
with this "bower install" fails with EHTTP Status code 401 (Unauthorized)
Changing the above to include credentials allows "bower install" to succeed:
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://<username>:<password>@artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
However, bower.json is part of git tracked files and also every developer will have individual credentials. Hence, ideal place for credentials will be ~/.bowerrc file (it will be outside the project folder and therefore not tracked by git and will be developer specific).
Problem is, I do not know how to get this done.
Referred to following links with no luck:
jFrog documentation
sonatype documentation
I do not wish to host private registry.
bower artifactory credentials unauthorized
My javascript project has a bower.json with a dependency like this:
...
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
...
with this "bower install" fails with EHTTP Status code 401 (Unauthorized)
Changing the above to include credentials allows "bower install" to succeed:
"dependencies":
...
"dep_name":"https://<username>:<password>@artifactory.corp.company.com/artifactory/path/to/bower/package.tar.gz",
...
However, bower.json is part of git tracked files and also every developer will have individual credentials. Hence, ideal place for credentials will be ~/.bowerrc file (it will be outside the project folder and therefore not tracked by git and will be developer specific).
Problem is, I do not know how to get this done.
Referred to following links with no luck:
jFrog documentation
sonatype documentation
I do not wish to host private registry.
bower artifactory credentials unauthorized
bower artifactory credentials unauthorized
asked Nov 12 '18 at 13:50
dieHarddieHard
112
112
The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the.bowerrc
file
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32
add a comment |
The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the.bowerrc
file
– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32
The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the
.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the
.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the
.bowerrc
file– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the
.bowerrc
file– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32
add a comment |
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The documentation exactly specifies how to achieve this - are you missing some details..?
– danf
Nov 21 '18 at 22:21
@danf Thanks for trying to help. I believe I have added a link to the same (similar) JFrog documentation in my question and mentioned that solution in the documentation works (i.e embedding username and password in the dependency url in bower.json). I have also mentioned why this is not suitable for my scenario. Does the documentation talk about how to solve by doing something outside of bower.json (for example, in ~/.bowerrc file)? I could not find that.
– dieHard
Nov 28 '18 at 6:48
I'm not sure I follow... the doc I linked to deals with the
.bowerrc
file which is the standard way to do registry auth (at least as far as I know), I also use it myself...– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:30
Also, if you simply use the Set Me Up feature its gonna give you the exact snippet you should paste in the
.bowerrc
file– danf
Nov 29 '18 at 13:32