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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IVYDE-237?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12932463#action_12932463
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Eric Sirianni commented on IVYDE-237:
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Nicolas - thanks for digging a little deeper on this.
To answer your second question regarding the use case...
You are correct in that normally this would not be an issue -- since Ivy
transitively resolves the dependencies of project A any source JAR dependencies
from project B (and the source of project B itself) should automatically be
available to the eclipse debugger.
Our use case is more nuanced. We are developing a web application using an
embedded Jetty server. Project A is the "container" and includes the jetty
JARs and some other dependencies (apache-commons, slf4j, etc., etc.). Project
B is a "webapp" and includes dependencies like hibernate, spring, etc.
To debug this application I want a launch configuration that has the following
source path:
- Project A deps (jetty, apache-commons, slf4j, etc.)
- Project B deps (hibernate, spring, etc.)
This is a case where the *source* path is different from the classpath.
Specifically, the classpath for Project A should *not* have hibernate on it,
etc. as this needs to live "inside" the webapp (WEB-INF/libs) for Project B.
So Project A does *not* depend on Project B from an ivy perspective. However,
I'd like the "source" configurations of both Project A's ivy.xml and Project
B's ivy.xml on the eclipse launch config. This is where we're hitting this bug.
Make sense?
> Multiple eclipse projects with similar ivy library definitions results in
> launch config source path collisions
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: IVYDE-237
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IVYDE-237
> Project: IvyDE
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: launch configuration
> Affects Versions: 2.0.0.final
> Environment: Ubuntu 8.10, Eclipse 3.5.2, IvyDE 2.0.0.final
> Reporter: Phil Clay
> Attachments: ivyde_source_lookup_1.png, ivyde_source_lookup_2.png,
> ivyde_source_lookup_3.png, ivyde_source_lookup_4.png,
> ivyde_source_lookup_5.png
>
>
> I have multiple eclipse projects with very similar project structures.
> Each eclipse project has an one ivy library pointing to an ivy.xml file at
> the root of each the project. (i.e. one ivy.xml file per project)
> The projects have various dependencies on each other, going three or four
> deep. (e.g. A depends on B, B depends on C, C depends on D, etc). The ivy
> library is exported from each project.
> I have "resolve dependencies in workspace" turned on. It works great, the
> build time project dependencies are resolved properly. Love this! But, I
> think the same thing applies if I have this turned off.
> The problem happens when creating a launch configuration. I noticed this
> when debugging. I created a launch configuration pointing at project A.
> When stepping through a debug session, eclipse could not find the sources for
> project D. After some further investigation, this is what I found...
> Using the default source lookup path does not include the project D. More on
> that later.
> So, I decided to manually configure the source path. Here's the process I
> followed:
> 1. I started by adding project A.
> 2. Upon adding A, I noticed that two entries appeared in the source lookup
> path
> - the project A itself
> - the ivy library of the project
> 3. Now I add project B
> 4. Upon adding B, I noticed that only one additional entry appeared in the
> source lookup path
> - the project B itself
> The ivy library of project B did not appear (even though it is exported)
> Similarly, if I add all the projects in one step, only one ivy library
> appears.
> So, I believe that since each of the ivy libraries are configured the same
> way (Essentially pointing to an identically named file in each project), that
> eclipse or IvyDE is getting confused and only adding one of them to the
> source lookup path.
> I believe the same is true if I use the default source lookup path (rather
> than adding projects manually). When looking at the default source lookup
> path, I can only see a subset of the depend-on projects. Usually, they only
> include the dependencies of one project, and nothing transitive.
> I tried to test this theory by renaming the ivy.xml files to
> ivy-${projectname}.xml. This makes all of the ivy libraries unique, since
> the ivy xml file name is included as part of the library definition.
> However, now if I add multiple projects to the source lookup path, multiple
> ivy libraries get added, BUT if you try to expand them, you get an error
> message saying that the ivy-${projectname}.xml file doesn't exist (because it
> is looking for that xml file in the root of the launch config project, rather
> than the project from which the library is coming from.
> I can easily reproduce this behavior, so let me know if you need further
> information
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