Archiva is distributed under the Apache License, version 2.0.
JDK | 1.7 or above |
No minimum requirement | The Archiva application is in itself about 50MB but will use more disk space to store repository contents |
Operating System | Support for Linux, Mac OS, Solaris and Windows. Tested on Windows XP SP2, Ubuntu Linux, and Mac OS X. |
[if-any logo] [end] The currently selected mirror is [preferred]. If you encounter a problem with this mirror, please select another mirror. If all mirrors are failing, there are backup mirrors (at the end of the mirrors list) that should be available.
You may also consult the complete list of mirrors.
This is the currently recommended version of Archiva.
Archiva 2.2.3 | File-Type | MD5 Checksum | SHA1 Checksum | SHA256 Checksum | Signature |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Archiva 2.2.3 Standalone | tar.gz | md5 | sha1 | sha256 | asc |
zip | md5 | sha1 | sha256 | asc | |
Archiva 2.2.3 WAR | war | md5 | sha1 | sha256 | asc |
Archiva 2.2.3 Sources | source zip | md5 | sha1 | sha256 | asc |
More releases are available in the Apache Archiva Archives or prior to the graduation from Maven, in the Apache Maven Archives.
We recommend that you verify the integrity of the downloaded files using the PGP signatures and SHA, MD5 checksums.
The PGP signatures can be verified using PGP or GPG. First download the KEYS
as well as the asc signature file for the particular distribution. Make sure you get these files from
the main distribution directory,
rather than from a mirror.
Then verify the signatures using:
% pgpk -a KEYS % pgpv $filename.tar.gz.asc or % pgp -ka KEYS % pgp $filename.tar.gz.asc or % gpg --import KEYS % gpg --verify $filename.tar.gz.asc
Please use the SHA checksum for verification if available, use MD5 only for the older versions, that have no SHA checksum available. To verify the SHA signature on the files, you can use utilities for your platform. A Unix program called sha1sum or sha256sum (md5sum) is included in many Unix distributions. It is also available as part of GNU Coreutils. Windows users can get binary checksum utility e.g. from SlavaSoft.