I am trying to download the source of an IntelliJ IDEA Plugin (for JBehave integration) from a github repo, and basically build it into a jar, which I can distribute to my team (which they can then drop into their plugin directory for installation).
What I have done so far:
configured the IDEA SDK (I downloaded the source for latest version of the community edition and built it)
Downloaded the source from the repo via zip, as well as git clone
Created the project from scratch, as well as trying to "Import"
Ran mvn install in the command line, ran "Make Project"
Then I looked for the command (according to this tutorial) to
Build | Prepare Plugin Module for Deployment.
As you can see, the command is not there.
What am I doing wrong? I have tried fiddling with the project/module settings ad nauseum and I feel like I'm getting nowhere.
It seems like I was using an outdated version of IntelliJ (10.5). I ran IntelliJ Idea 12, and I created the project IntelliJ Platform Plugin (as #CrazyCoder suggested). From there I was able to build it.
Related
Maven project (project name: english) [vaadin, jetty] runs in Eclipse without any problem. How to run/configure exactly the same project in Intellij? Run/Apply options are not available after below configuration. In Eclipse I set, Base directory [${workspace_loc:/english}], Goals [jetty:run], JRE, Source (english project). How to set it in Intellij?
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First things first, you need to add jetty plugin for maven as a dependency, if you don't have it already in your pom.xml. More about jetty maven plugin can be found here
If you were running the project via embedded jetty plugin in eclipse, same pom.xml configuration should run successfully run when you issue same command in intellij IDE.
If there are any issues on your build, try with a "clean rebuild" before you start doing anything else. You can do that via the following command in your terminal:
mvn clean install jetty:run
You will need access your console (terminal), i.e. via Alt + F12 keys. You also need to be in the same directory that you have the pom.xml in your project.
The command will basically clean up (i.e. delete) previously build project and do a fresh rebuild of your project, then run it via embedded jetty plugin.
Be sure to read a brief introduction to maven commands: Maven in 5 minutes if needed.
After you successfully issued this command for the first time, I think you can can also issue jetty:run via View -> Tool windows -> maven project.
You can usually access it also on your right side of intellij IDE (the "m" icon, maven projects).
PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS NOT A DUPLICATE. I want Gradle's IDEA plugin to correctly configure my IntelliJ IDEA CE project for me. I am not interested in any solution that involves manually tuning IntelliJ to find my JDK. This is a Gradle IDEA plugin feature that can and should work.
If you can find another question that involves correctly getting the Gradle IDEA plugin to configure IntelliJ (running on a Mac) so that it can find JDK 8+, then please by all means, mark this as a dupe and provide a link to that question. Otherwise, do not vote this as a dupe (it's not!).
Mac 10.9.5 here. Java 8 is my default JRE/JDK, and I just installed Groovy 2.4.6 and Gradle 2.13 via sdkman. I then installed IntelliJ IDEA CE.
On my terminal, I created a test-proj directory, and then inside that directory I issued the following Gradle command:
gradle init --type groovy-library
Gradle executed successfully, giving me a Groovy project skeleton. I then edited the generated build.gradle to contain the IDEA plugin:
apply plugin: 'idea'
And then I ran:
gradle wrapper
./gradlew clean idea
This generated the Gradle Wrapper for me, and I then used the IDEA plugin to generate IntelliJ project files for me. I then opened my brand-spanking-new IntelliJ IDE and went to Open my test-proj.
The project opened and everything appeared to be OK. But then I started coding and noticed that JRE classes such as String were not showing up as resolvable. So I went to File >> Project Structure and see this:
So it appears that IntelliJ can't find my default Java 8 JDK. I know the OS can find both the JRE and the JDK, based on the console ouput of java -version and javac -version. But something, between sdkman, Gradle or IntelliJ is preventing the IDE from finding Java. Any ideas?
I had the same problem, although i got it running by removing the .idea folder and reimporting the project by pointing to my build.gradle file. In the import dialog i selected the .ipr structure instead of using the idea "folder based structure" (default)
When executing gradle idea it will then generate an .ipr file in your project root configuring your project.
In my case the jdk was set properly and my modules were initialized correctly.
The reason behind using the .ipr files is, that the gradle idea plugin can't work with the directory based structure. See also:
directory based idea project with gradle
https://issues.gradle.org/browse/GRADLE-1041 (open for 6 years now)
Since i figured this out today i'm not sure how good this is working. Or what are the differences between directory based and .ipr based (.ipr based seems older?).
I cloned one of the open source git repositories and was trying to import it as maven project in eclipse. After I imported everything as a maven project, whole package is getting messed up. See the below error:
How can I fix this issue so that I can build it on my local box? I cloned the same git repository locally on my desktop.
I am using eclipse version:
Eclipse IDE for Java Developers
Version: Luna Service Release 1a (4.4.1)
Build id: 20150109-0600
Steps I have tried already:
I have already tried maven->update project.
I have also tried removing and adding it again.
I tried mvn clean install both on command line and eclipse, they are successful as well.
Can anyone help me with this? If needed, you can also clone it and try importing it to see whether it works for you or not.
The root of your problem is that the build section of the pom.xml for that project specifies:
<sourceDirectory>./src</sourceDirectory>
Eclipse uses the sourceDirectory tag to tell it where the root of the main sources are. If you change that to ./src/main/java, then right-click on the project > Maven > Update Project... and click Ok (I had to do this twice) it will fix the Eclipse classpath so Eclipse can build the project. You can then revert the pom back to the head revision and so long as you don't run Update Project again it should continue to build.
I'm unclear on why that project specifies a non-standard source directory but uses the standard Maven layout, but this should at least get you into a working state within Eclipse.
I'm learning how to build Jmeter with Eclipse.
I followed some online steps and downloaded Jmeter binary and source files, unzipped them into the same directory, created a java project in eclipse and used ant build but when i build i got the following error
\workspace\apache-jmeter-2.11\build.xml:801: Class not found: javac1.8
I'm using JRE8, JDK1.8 and ant 1.9.4.
Saw some similar post with answers saying that this is an issue with ant version < 1.9 but i'm already using ant 1.9.4.
Help please.
As that is a problem encountered with versions of Ant which are not compliant with Java 8, I suggest you check your Ant configuration. Go to your Eclipse settings and check it. Then, check your project settings, maybe you have project-specific settings which override your general Eclipse settings.
In the settings, you can choose which Ant install you want to use. By default, Eclipse is using it's own, which is probably not the last available. If you have installed Ant 1.9.4, you should select "External installation" or something, with the version of Ant you installed.
More infos here: http://help.eclipse.org/juno/index.jsp?topic=%2Forg.eclipse.platform.doc.user%2Ftasks%2Ftasks-ant-version.htm
I am totally new to working with Maven in Eclipse. I am using the latest verion of Eclipse (Kepler). According other posts, as well as Eclipse's help page http://help.eclipse.org/kepler/index.jsp?topic=//org.eclipse.platform.doc.user/tasks/tasks-127.htm , I am supposed to try to install new software within Eclipse IDE.
However, when I try to Add Eclipse's recommended m2e release, Eclipse gives me an error:
Unable to read repository at http://download.eclipse.org/technology/m2e/releases.
download.eclipse[...]releases is not a valid repository location.
Essentially I run into the same problem no matter which approach I take outlined on the Eclipse help page. Is there some other/better way to integrate Maven with Eclipse? Are there steps I should have taken before this? All I have done so far is install Eclipse. How can I successfully get Maven running?
EDIT: Now I am using Java EE and still run into problems when making a Maven project. I get a "Could not resolve archetype error" could this be because I'm behind a proxy?
Most convenient option:
The reason you're getting that error is because that repo is deprecated, and it has been moved. Example of how the new repo looks:
http://download.eclipse.org/technology/m2e/releases/1.0/1.0.0.20110607-2117
Copy that in the Install New Software view, and you will see that it works.
Other options:
Install the Maven Integration from Eclipse Marketplace (Help -> Eclipse Marketplace)
Download the EE version of Kepler (comes with m2e)
Choose your own release (bottom of the page) and use the Install New Software view.
I had the same issue here and the above answer didnt work for me. Although Maven is installed I cane update my dependencies on my folder the way I used to be able to do on Juno. What I did was used the pom.xml from my current project and pasted it into the pom of my new project I created specifically in Eclipse using new project->Maven.
This was eclipse knows its a Maven project and allows my all the benefits of being one.
To install maven properly for eclipse you should set the correct repos as follow:
Help=>install=>
then work with
http://download.eclipse.org/releases/
example of eclipse version : mars or kepler ..