110
votes

Im' getting an error when deploying an artifact in my own repository in a Nexus server: "Failed to deploy artifacts: Could not transfer artifact" "Failed to transfer file http:///my_artifact. Return code is: 400"

I have Nexus running with one custom repository my_repo with the next maven local configuration:

settings.xml

<server>
    <id>my_repo</id>
    <username>user</username>
    <password>pass</password>
 </server>
 ...
 <mirror>
    <id>my_repo</id>
    <name>Repo Mirror</name>
    <url><my_url_to_my_repo></url>
    <mirrorOf>*</mirrorOf>
  </mirror>
  • user has permissions to create/read/write into my_repo -

pom.xml

<distributionManagement>
        <repository>
            <id>my_repo</id>
            <name>my_repo</name>
            <url><my_url_to_my_repo></url>
            <layout>default</layout>
        </repository>
        <snapshotRepository>
            <id>snapshots</id>
            <name>Snapshots</name>
            <url><my_url_to_my_snapshot_repo></url>
        </snapshotRepository>
    </distributionManagement>

and then I execute

mvn deploy

and get the error. Any idea?

14
HTTP 400 means "bad request". I'm guessing one of URLs is incorrect.Mark O'Connor
for me the problem was that it was not a snapshot version.maveroid

14 Answers

168
votes

A couple things I can think of:

  • user credentials are wrong
  • url to server is wrong
  • user does not have access to the deployment repository
  • user does not have access to the specific repository target
  • artifact is already deployed with that version if it is a release (not -SNAPSHOT version)
  • the repository is not suitable for deployment of the respective artifact (e.g. release repo for snapshot version, proxy repo or group instead of a hosted repository)

Check those and if you still run into trouble provide more details here.

35
votes

Just to create a separate answer. The answer is actually found in a comment for the accepted answer.

Try changing the version of your artefact to end with -SNAPSHOT.

20
votes

400 Bad Request will be returned if you attempt to:

  1. Deploy a snapshot artifact (or version) ending in -SNAPSHOT to a release repository
  2. Deploy a release artifact (version not ending in -SNAPSHOT) to a snapshot repository
  3. Deploy the same version of a release artifact more than once to a release repository
13
votes

Cause of problem for me was -source.jars was getting uploaded twice (with maven-source-plugin) as mentioned as one of the cause in accepted answer. Redirecting to answer that I referred: Maven release plugin fails : source artifacts getting deployed twice

7
votes

I had this exact problem today and the problem was that the version I was trying to release:perform was already in the Nexus repo.

In my case this was likely due to a network disconnect during an earlier invocation of release:perform. Even though I lost my connection, it appears the release succeeded.

7
votes

In the rare event that you need to redeploy the SAME STABLE artifact to Nexus, it will fail by default. If you then delete the artifact from Nexus (via the web interface) for the purpose of deploying it again, the deploy will still fail, since just removing the e.g. jar or pom does not clear other files still laying around in the directory. You need to log onto the box and delete the directory in its entirety.

3
votes

I had the same problem today with the addition "Return code is: 400, ReasonPhrase: Bad Request." which turned out to be the "artifact is already deployed with that version if it is a release" problem from answer above enter link description here

One solution not mentioned yet is to configure Nexus to allow redeployment into a Release repository. Maybe not a best practice, because this is set for a reason, you nevertheless could go to "Access Settings" in your Nexus repositories´ "Configuration"-Tab and set the "Deployment Policy" to "Allow Redeploy".

3
votes
  • in the parent pom application==> Version put the tag as follows: x.x.x-SNAPSHOT

example :0.0.1-SNAPSHOT

  • "-SNAPSHOT" : is very important
2
votes

Ensure that not exists already (artifact and version) in nexus (as release). In that case return Bad Request.

2
votes

For 400 error, check the repository "Deployment policy" usually its "Disable redeploy". Most of the time your library version is already there that is why you received a message "Could not PUT put 'https://yoururl/some.jar'. Received status code 400 from server: Repository does not allow updating assets: "your repository name"

So, you have a few options to resolve this. 1- allow redeploy 2- delete the version from your repository which you are trying to upload 3- change the version number

1
votes

If any of the above answers worked out, You can create new artifact directly from the admin side of (NEXUS Screen shot attached below).

  1. Login to nexus UI http://YOUR_URL:8081/nexus( username: admin default password: admin123 )
  2. Click repositories on the left side then click the repo, For eg: click release.
  3. Choose artifact Upload (last tab).
  4. Choose GAV definition as GAV Param- Then enter your groupid , artifact id and version .
  5. Choose Jar file.
  6. Click upload artifact. Thats it !

Now you will be able to add the corrsponding in your project.(screenshot below)

enter image description here

1
votes

This can also happen if you have a naming policy around version, prohibiting the version# you are trying to deploy. In my case I was trying to upload a version (to release repo) 2.0.1 but later found out that our nexus configuration doesn't allow anything other than whole number for releases.

I tried later with version 2 and deployed it successfully.

The error message definitely dosen't help:

Return code is: 400, ReasonPhrase: Repository does not allow updating assets: maven-releases-xxx. -> [Help 1]

A better message could have been version 2.0.1 violates naming policy

0
votes

Server id should match with the repository id of maven settings.xml

0
votes

It's too late of an answer, but this worked for me: Changing "Deployment Policy" to "Allow redeploy"