Dependency Tree
In order to figure out which jars your project needs you can do:
$ lein deps :tree
Which will show you something that is called a "dependency tree". It will look similar to:
[clj-time "0.5.0"]
[joda-time "2.2"]
[clojure-complete "0.2.3"]
[org.myproject/some-proto "0.0.1-20130523.145830-9"]
[org.flatland/protobuf "0.7.2"]
[ordered-collections "0.4.0"]
[org.flatland/schematic "0.1.0"]
[org.flatland/useful "0.9.0"]
[com.datomic/datomic-free "0.8.3862"]
...
Installing Jars with Lein
One simple way to install manually downloaded jars would be to use "lein-localrepo":
$ lein localrepo install [-r repo-path]
[-p pom-file]
<filename>
<[groupId/]artifactId>
<version>
Here are a couple of examples (given that you have downloaded the jars):
$ lein localrepo install foo-1.0.6.jar com.example/foo 1.0.6
$ lein localrepo install foomatic-1.3.9.jar foomatic 1.3.9
Take a look at the documentation for more features and examples.
Installing lein-localrepo
You can install lein-localrepo
as a plugin by adding the following to your ~/.lein/profiles.clj
:
{:user {:plugins [[lein-localrepo "0.5.2"]]}}
Lein Behind a Proxy Server
In case it is "ok" to use a proxy server, you can add it to ~/.lein/profiles.clj
under jvm-opts
{:user {:jvm-opts ["-Dhttp.proxyHost=168.1.1.104" "-Dhttp.proxyPort=8080"]}}
where user
is a profile name to use.
Or you can export http_proxy
environment variable before launching lein.
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