On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 12:23 PM, Thomas Mortagne
<[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 4:26 AM, Gary Kopp <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hello devs,
>>
>> I just finished porting my XWiki development environment from Windows 7 to
>> Ubuntu 12.04. I am now able to build all projects from the command line
>> without errors. I'm working with the master branch from Git. I have Eclipse
>> Juno installed with plugins that include m2eclipse (the version from the
>> Eclipse update site) and AJDT. I am now trying to import the entire
>> xwiki-commons Maven project into Eclipse. Just as happened under Windows
>> (which I never asked about, since I was still trying to get command line
>> builds to work), there are three Maven goals (plugins) in the xwiki-commons
>> projects that fail to map to Eclipse plugins -- aspectJ-maven-plugin,
>> maven-antrun-plugin, and maven-remote-resources-plugin. Can anyone give me
>> some hints on how to resolve these mapping problems? Googling for answers
>> about this hasn't yielded anything that I can understand :-)
>
> I usually only open what I'm working on in Eclipse because otherwise
> with commons/rendering/platform it's a lot of projects and it's
> slowing down everything for things you probably don't care.
>
> As for the missing mapping between Maven plugins and m2e handlers:
> * aspectJ-maven-plugin: could not find any either, there used to be
> one but it does not work anymore on 4.x. There is no official version
> of AJDT for 4.x so that's probably why it's not yet fixed but it

Actually there is one now since 4.2 (there was not not very long ago)
so I guess (hope) the handler is probably going to be fixed in not too
long.

> should be quickly fixed as soon as there is an official AJDT for 4.x.
> In that case it's not very hard to setup AJDT yourself properly for
> the project, basically it's just about enabling it for the project and
> adding the right folder in the list of source folders if I remember
> well. But aspectj is used only in some legacy projects to produce
> retro-compatibility APIs so you are probably not going to need it very
> often.
> * maven-antrun-plugin: used for a hack in one of the legacy projects
> so for now it should not be a big deal for you
> * maven-remote-resources-plugin: not sure why you have issue with this
> one, m2e ignore it by default and just indicate it in a warning
>
>>
>> --Gary
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Thomas Mortagne



-- 
Thomas Mortagne
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