Blog
Resources
Support
CLM
Overview
Why CLM
How it Works
The Component Revolution
Product Tour
Services
Nexus
Free Trial
Purchase
Training
Why Nexus
Features
Take a Tour
About
Open Source Contributions
Community Contributions
Press
Sonatype in the News
Press Releases
Awards
Careers
Leadership
Investors
Customers
Success Stories
Contact
General Inquiry
Report a Security Issue
Repository Management with Nexus
Chapter 24. Evaluating Nexus Step by Step
Prev : 23.4. Redirecting Non-SSL Connections to SSL
TOC
Next : 24.1. Prerequisites And Preparation
Chapter 24. Evaluating Nexus Step by Step
24.1. Prerequisites And Preparation
24.1.1. A Note About The Operating System
24.1.2. Java Runtime
24.1.3. Apache Maven
24.1.4. Gradle
24.1.5. Apache Ant And Apache Ivy
24.1.6. Microsoft Visual Studio And NuGet
24.2. Getting Started
24.2.1. Activating Your Nexus Trial
24.2.2. Logging Into Nexus As An Administrator
24.2.3. Getting Started With Your Nexus Professional Evaluation
24.3. The Basics: Proxying And Publishing
24.3.1. Proxying Components
24.3.2. Publishing Components
24.4. Governance
24.4.1. Identify Insecure OSS Components In Nexus
24.4.2. Track Your Exposure To OSS Licenses
24.4.3. Component Procurement
24.5. Process Improvements
24.5.1. Grouping Repositories
24.5.2. Staging A Release With Nexus
24.5.3. Hosting Project Web Sites
24.5.4. Process and Security Improvements With Maven Settings Management And User Token
24.6. .NET Integration
24.6.1. Consume .NET Components From NuGet Gallery
24.6.2. Publish And Share .NET Components With NuGet
24.7. Security
24.7.1. Integration With Enterprise LDAP Solutions
24.7.2. Single Sign On (SSO) Support With Atlassian Crowd
24.8. Enterprise Deployments
24.8.1. Scaling Nexus Deployments For Distributed Development
Prev : 23.4. Redirecting Non-SSL Connections to SSL
TOC
Next : 24.1. Prerequisites And Preparation