I have a complex of projects that I want to manage. Essentially, it
consists of a number of master projects, each of which in turn
consists of a number of builds. A rule that I need to follow is that if
any two builds refer to the same artifact, they must use the same
version - even if they do
Alan D. Salewski wrote:
Sure, maven can do this. In fact, any project that contains multiple
subprojects (which would include any project that produces more than a
single artifact) is probably organized to take advantage of the feature.
Basically, you declare your common dependencies
Does anybody have a working example of custom annotation processing in Maven
that they could share? I'm finding the documentation on this to be
frustratingly sparse. I can find a page claiming to describe a plugin for
annotation processing, but it doesn't actually give examples of what it's
Mostly, I'm trying to figure out why my implementation - which conforms to the
documentation I'd found - does not appear to be detected by the compiler. I get
that I'm doing something wrong; I just don't know what. I'll examine the code
Curtis pointed out and see if it gives me clues.
On Apr
I see that the maven lifecycle includes separate phases for unit tests and
functional tests, but I don't see how to take advantage of that. The failsafe
plugin, as far as I can tell, uses the exact same directories as the surefire
one. Is there a standard maven way to define a set of unit tests
That wrote:
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 2:06 PM, Russell Gold russell.g...@oracle.comwrote:
I see that the maven lifecycle includes separate phases for unit tests and
functional tests, but I don't see how to take advantage of that. The
failsafe plugin, as far as I can tell, uses the exact same
The current POM documentation says of the pluginManagement tag that it will
apply to the inheriting poms in a way that simply using the plugins tag will
not. Is this the current functionality? Plan for something new? I've been using
the plugins tag in my parent pom and the child poms have been
Hmm. I guess the mailing list doesn't like embedded links... I was referring to
http://maven.apache.org/pom.html - the section referring to the
pluginmanagement tag.
That's a useful distinction, but I don't think that's what the documentation
says. It says, If we added these specifications to
I am converting a convoluted ant build to maven. It has a large number of
functional tests, mostly built on either TestNG or the now-deceased author's
private framework, but some on junit. I am running the tests via the antrun
plugin, but it when it hits a junit task, it fails with:
Could not
Aha! Thank you! I searched the antrun plugin docs for info, but it's not there.
What would it take for this to be added as a FAQ? It seems other people have
been running into the same problem.
On Apr 11, 2012, at 10:37 PM, Wayne Fay wrote:
Could not load class
If you're just testing servlets, ServletUnit is another reasonable choice. It
runs unit tests w/o a web container.
On Apr 13, 2012, at 11:03 AM, Lucas Persson wrote:
Hi
I am about to migrate some Ant build system to Maven and have run into the
JUnitEE ant task. I can not really find any
,
The Mojo team.
Russell Gold
-
Come read my webnovel, Take a Lemon http://www.takealemon.com,
and listen to the Misfile radio play
http://www.gold-family.us/audio/misfile.html!
groupIdorg.codehaus.mojo/groupId
artifactIdidlj-maven-plugin/artifactId
version1.2.1/version
/plugin
Release Notes:
The following bugs have been fixed:
[MIDLJ-17] - plugin fails when a warning is issued (created by just-released
fix for MIDLJ-15)
Enjoy,
The Mojo team.
Russell Gold
Hi Benson,
Javac compiles not only the files you specify, but also any classes that they
reference. The only way to keep the dependencies from compiling is to remove
them from the directory (and get a compile error) or modify the source code so
that they are no longer referenced.
On Aug 28,
This is my first time releasing this project via maven, and I am presumably doing something wrong.The release:prepare step seems to work just fine, ending with: [INFO] Building jar: /Users/rgold/projects/httpunit/httpunit/target/httpunit-1.7.2-javadoc.jar [INFO] [INFO] ---
The Mojo team is pleased to announce the release of the RMIC maven plugin,
version 1.2.1
This plugin allows the generation of CORBA stubs from Java classes
http://mojo.codehaus.org/rmic-maven-plugin/
To get this update, simply specify the version in your project's plugin
configuration:
The Mojo team is pleased to announce the release of the RMIC maven plugin,
version 1.2.1
This plugin allows the generation of CORBA stubs from Java classes
http://mojo.codehaus.org/rmic-maven-plugin/
To get this update, simply specify the version in your project's plugin
configuration:
Hi,
I am developing an introductory course for Maven users. The publisher will
eventually provide technical reviewers, but I was hoping for some earlier
feedback. The full course is expected to be a bit over 2 hours long; I have 3/8
sections created so far (14 videos totaling a bit over 45
Hi,
How does one get a complete list of available Maven properties? I found a
sonatype doc which suggested looking at the Javadoc for the Model class in
Maven http://maven.apache.org/ref/3.0.3/maven-model/apidocs/ but I cannot find
any mention there of methods which would define
Hi,
By default, the maven-site-plugin generates a link in the upper right-hand
corner within the div class=wright tag. The link is, by default, the
project name and just points back to the project. How is this configured? I've
seen sites that had multiple such links.
Thanks,
Russ Gold
Through a bit of experimentation, I found the answer. It's a link element.
On Mar 14, 2013, at 4:30 PM, Russell Gold russell.g...@oracle.com wrote:
Hi,
By default, the maven-site-plugin generates a link in the upper right-hand
corner within the div class=wright tag. The link
Could somebody please try this?
I have a project defined at
http://russgold.github.com/russgold/maven-video/sample6.zip. I believe that
this should not compile. If I compile the one source file with javac, it fails,
as expected. But when I run with mvn compile, it passes! Any ideas what I
the version of the compiler-plugin.
Robert
Op Sun, 17 Mar 2013 19:29:32 +0100 schreef Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us:
Could somebody please try this?
I have a project defined at
http://russgold.github.com/russgold/maven-video/sample6.zip. I believe
that this should not compile. If I
Hi Martin,
I don't understand your question. I am not claiming any documentation says
anything of the kind.
Regards,
Russ
On Mar 17, 2013, at 6:57 PM, Martin Gainty mgaint...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Russ
Hi,
I started using the javadoc reporting plugin and noticed that by default it
generates test javadocs as well as regular ones. I know that I can configure it
only to produce the regular ones, but I was wondering if somebody could explain
why the defaults are as they are. Do most projects
example project somewhere that
demonstrates the behavior you are seeing?
Regards,
Curtis
On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 7:53 AM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Hi,
I started using the javadoc reporting plugin and noticed that by default
it generates test javadocs as well
It doesn't do what I need - which is to be able to have a compile program (not
Maven itself) invoke the java compiler.
On Mar 20, 2013, at 12:36 PM, Martin Gainty mgai...@hotmail.com wrote:
then your ok implementing the new compiler
org.apache.maven:maven-compiler-plugin:2.0.X (instead of
#getSystemJavaCompiler()
Since JDK 1.6 (but as with com.sun.tools.javac, you need to run your
program with a JDK, a JRE won't be enough)
On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 6:03 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
It doesn't do what I need - which is to be able to have a compile program
(not Maven
Hi,
Why does the normal release process require both release:prepare and then
release:perform? Under what conditions would you choose not to do the perform
step after a successful prepare step? Why do both generate source and javadoc
jars and prompt for the PGP pass phrase?
Thanks,
Russ
I'd think this would be better suited for the maven developers list…
But it seems to me that in the case where modules are not supposed to know
where their parents are located, the working assumption is that the parent is
already in the repo and built separately.
That is, there are two cases:
OK, never mind - I found it. I needed to add the maven-plugin-plugin.
Thanks,
Russ
On May 23, 2013, at 12:10 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Hi,
I saw a previous discussion of this that seemed to be debian-specific. I am
building now on MacOS X and deliberately trying
[I'm posting to the users list to avoid disturbing the dev
list in case I've missed something obvious]
Russell Gold wrote:
I'd think this would be better suited for the maven developers list.
But it seems to me that in the case where modules are not
supposed to know where their parents
By default, as I understand it, Maven 3 compiles with the source and target
options set to 1.5. This guarantees that later language features (such as
diamond notation) will result in compile errors, and the generated classes will
run in a JDK 1.5 JVM. But what about API calls? Does the compile
I believe this is quite reasonable. Developers would like to be able to see a
lot of reports on the code internals. The ability to generate those is one of
Maven's strengths; however, users (which I assume is meant by production)
should generally not be given all that information, especially if
the parent repo.
Best regards
Mike
Russell Gold wrote:
Only the developers could say for sure, but I would guess
that it was done as part of code cleanup - that it's not so
much that they wanted to remove the feature as it was that
cleaning up the code might have made it hard to support
.
Your case (3) is not following any accepted pattern that Maven supports. It is
often said, if you fight with Maven, you will lose.
On May 27, 2013, at 12:01 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
I'm having trouble understanding your use case still, I think - and you are
disregarding
Hi,
I'm looking for an example of a plugin that runs in the pre-site phase.
I used to generate web pages dynamically from data stored in xml, using java
classes to format various xml files, and I'm looking for a way to do that in
maven. I presume that I want something analogous to the way code
Hi Jade,
Where are you placing the ftp.properties file and how does your program attempt
to find it?
- Russ
On Jun 2, 2013, at 12:07 AM, Jade evokeraluc...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello everyone :
I'm a beginner of maven.
In my project, I have an file ftp.proterties only use for ftp
3, 2013 at 2:19 AM, Russell Gold [via Maven]
ml-node+s40175n5757956...@n5.nabble.com wrote:
Hi Jade,
Where are you placing the ftp.properties file and how does your program
attempt to find it?
- Russ
On Jun 2, 2013, at 12:07 AM, Jade [hidden
email]http://user/SendEmail.jtp?type
Hi,
I really like the ability to use this plugin to generate and deploy project
sites, but I am having some problems making some things work:
1) I had ONCE gotten the breadcrumbs to show up. Now they don't. I am using the
default version (3.0).
2) Most of the project info pages (developers,
Hi,
I see that the cobertura-maven-plugin has a parameter named, aggregate which
I had hoped was similar to the aggregate report supported by the jar and
javadoc plugins; however, when I enable it and disable inheritance, the report
it generates is a blank page, so presumably I am not using it
If I enable manifest class path creation, the jar or assembly or shade plugin
will create a manifest class path that lists all of my dependencies in the same
directory. But what if I need them in different directories? Our current
requirements place certain jars in specific directories so that
for the
maven-shade-plugin.
Robert
Op Tue, 04 Jun 2013 20:11:21 +0200 schreef Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us:
If I enable manifest class path creation, the jar or assembly or shade
plugin will create a manifest class path that lists all of my dependencies
in the same directory. But what
Hi Markos,
You need to release your dependencies first (to create the non-snapshot
versions) and then update your project POMs to refer to the released versions.
Then you can release your main project. It is only when the dependencies are
themselves modules in your project and will be released
How are you running the release process?
On Jun 7, 2013, at 8:29 AM, Timothy I. McGinnis tmcgin...@glatfelters.com
wrote:
I am using MyEclipse Bling 10.6 with Maven 3.0.3. When I run the release
process it does not create the sources and javadoc jars. Does anyone have a
clue as to why?
release:prepare and one for release:
perform. I have the Maven Runtime specified as the external Maven 3.0.3
runtime.
Tim McGinnis
Sr. Programmer/Analyst
Glatfelter Insurance Group
(800) 233-1957 Ext. 7856
(717) 741-7856
-Original Message-
From: Russell Gold [mailto:r...@gold
If you look closely, you will see that your first error is:
[WARNING] Could not transfer metadata
org.apache.maven.plugins/maven-metadata.xml from/to central
(http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2): Connection to
http://repo.maven.apache.org refused
Given your corporate policy, I suspect
You only need to remove it from the name. The descriptor is perfectly fine.
On Jun 12, 2013, at 5:32 AM, Philippe Tjon-A-Hen wrote:
I have the following pom.xml
project xmlns=http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0; xmlns:xsi=
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance; xsi:schemaLocation=
Hi Raja,
Having done this several times, with projects of varying complexity, I am sorry
to say that AFAIK there is no automated way to do it. The problem is that ant
is a very free form scripting language that allows you to describe builds - but
ant writers cannot be guaranteed to do
Your profile is not active, so maven ignores it. You need to add something like:
activeProfiles
activeProfilebroada-nexus/activeProfile
/activeProfiles
after your profile to make it usable.
On Jun 17, 2013, at 6:48 AM, 吴靖 qhwj2...@126.com wrote:
hi,everyone
i use the maven ,but here
I am using the site-maven-plugin (version 3.3) and cannot seem to get it to
work. Using the exact same site.xml and additional files (faq, apt and xhtml
types) that worked fine in a single project site, I am not getting breadcrumbs
or custom menu items. I do get the submodules with their own
correctly, one problem is, when the name/directory of the
module does not equal the artifactId of the module.
Regards Mirko
--
Sent from my mobile
On Jun 20, 2013 1:04 AM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
I am using the site-maven-plugin (version 3.3) and cannot seem to get it
to work
should be inherited as long as the parent defines some:
http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-site-plugin/examples/sitedescriptor.html#Breadcrumbs
HTH,
-Lukas
Russell Gold wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion; all of the sub-modules are indeed in properly
named directories, as far as I
This sounds a bit obscure, but I think it's a reasonable scenario.
I have a large multi-module project with custom plugins. If I add a new mojo to
a plugin, use that mojo in a later modules, and commit the changes to CM,
anybody who checks out the source will be unable to do a mvn clean on the
That seems odd, since you're showing the ant task as bound to the package phase
- and from what you're saying, it shouldn't reach that phase.
How are you invoking maven? Why don't you try:
mvn test
That should not even try to get to the package phase and the ant plugin.
- Russ
On Jun 20,
is in the project's root directory, it should be in
src/site/
HTH,
Lukas
Russell Gold wrote:
Hi Lukas,
My problem is that the custom menus don't even show up in the parent, nor do
the breadcrumbs. The docs suggest that the site descriptors are not
attached automatically in maven 3
Thanks, Eric.
Hi Nayana,
If you're interesting in trying the course-in-progress and giving me some
feedback, I'd be happy to give you access. Email me directly.
- Russ
On Jun 27, 2013, at 10:40 AM, Eric Kolotyluk eric.koloty...@gmail.com wrote:
Russell Gold is working on a great
iirc MAVEN_HOME was the convention for Maven 1; I don't believe it should
matter. I used a standard installer (MacPorts) and I have no such variable.
OTOH, if you are going to be working with somebody else, it would probably be
best to stick with the conventional names.
On Jun 27, 2013, at
I don't suppose you're open to the solution: use linux or mac?
I think what you're running into a general cygwin problem: other than those
built it, the tools are mostly windows tools and expect path names to refer to
the windows file system, but cygwin uses its own paths and they don't always
Hi Mirko,
Have you looked at the Cargo plugin?
http://cargo.codehaus.org/Functional+testing
- Russ
On Jul 5, 2013, at 4:29 PM, Mirko Friedenhagen mfriedenha...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
now after some trial and error with custom packaging and lifecycles I
ask myself whether I should
Hi Mirko. If you want the compile class path for the pom executing a plugin,
you can do this:
1. Configure the plugin to require compile and runtime dependency resolution:
@Mojo( ... requiresDependencyResolution = ResolutionScope.COMPILE_PLUS_RUNTIME)
2. Specify a parameter configured to
You are creating the site and THEN running the check style mojo independently.
You should be specifying the check style plugin in your reports section.
On Jul 10, 2013, at 3:26 PM, Spammer Juliano s...@danandlaurajuliano.com
wrote:
There is a beautiful example of the fluido skin used for site
Hi,
If you are running the failsafe plugin for integration tests, and you bind only
the integration-test goal and not the verify goal, you can have test failures
in your build. Is there a way to report them on the project website?
Thanks,
Russ
-
Come read my webnovel, Take a
report names. Can you do that with this plugin?
Thanks,
Russ
On Jul 10, 2013, at 9:14 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Hi,
If you are running the failsafe plugin for integration tests, and you bind
only the integration-test goal and not the verify goal, you can have test
failures
Hi,
Do you have a repository configured? You're trying to read artifacts from
maven.glassfish.org, which is generally intended for glassfish development. You
should be able to get most of what you want from maven central.
- Russ
On Jul 10, 2013, at 9:46 PM, 邹志勇 zouzhiyong0...@163.com wrote:
It could be configured either in your POM or your settings.xml.
On Jul 11, 2013, at 6:04 AM, 邹志勇 zouzhiyong0...@163.com wrote:
I don't config repository and where can i see the repository configured?
Thanks.
At 2013-07-11 09:46:57,邹志勇 zouzhiyong0...@163.com wrote:
Hi,
After i run
Hi Richard,
You can use the property${basedir} to refer to root of the project, so
the directory in question would be ${basedir}/src/main/config
- Russ
On Jul 11, 2013, at 1:24 AM, Richard Sand rs...@idfconnect.com wrote:
I've several projects that were created before we began using
Are those the actual pom and settings.xml files you are using? They look like
unedited samples.
On Jul 12, 2013, at 12:01 AM, 邹志勇 zouzhiyong0...@163.com wrote:
From my observation, in POM file and settings.xml don't do any config about
repository, the following are two files content :
In
HI Richard,
What do you want to do? If all you want is the compile dependencies:
1. Configure the plugin to require compile and runtime dependency resolution:
@Mojo( ... requiresDependencyResolution = ResolutionScope.COMPILE_PLUS_RUNTIME)
2. Specify a parameter configured to receive
inputArtifact
/inputArtifacts
Best regards,
Richard
-Original Message-
From: Russell Gold [mailto:r...@gold-family.us]
Sent: Saturday, July 13, 2013 10:28 PM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Re: input artifacts to plugin
HI Richard,
What do you want to do
Hi Tommy,
I've run into some problems along these lines, but in my case, it only happens
when I build first using Maven and then try to recompile in the IDE. The
problem appears to be that the two disagree on where the generated classes go
(there was a change in one of the JDK releases, I
produces new versions of the same classes they are compiled again
and produces exactly the same class file targets as already produced before
during the build. This causes the duplicate class exception. That is at least
my theory.
/Tommy
19 jul 2013 kl. 17:28 skrev Russell Gold r
Hi Richard,
Can you be more specific? What exactly is your goal?
- Russ
On Jul 20, 2013, at 11:02 PM, Richard Sand rs...@idfconnect.com wrote:
Can someone please share the secret of how to do dependency resolution in
Maven3? And specifically in 3.1?
-Richard
-Original Message-
Well this is rather strange. What happens when you invoke:
ls -al /home/zouzy/.m2
On Jul 19, 2013, at 11:13 PM, 邹志勇 zouzhiyong0...@163.com wrote:
I think the POM and setting are used during execute process, you can check
all the debug information in the attachment.
For the debug , it
What would validation consist of? How would you determine that interpreting the
file as UTF-8 would produce the correct view?
It seems to me that if you can actually decide what the rules are that you
could write a test for it. But I cannot imagine any general automatic way to do
it, as a
think I need to find some
time to sit with each of the principle author of maven3 and publish what I
learn.
-Richard
-Original Message-
From: Russell Gold [mailto:r...@gold-family.us]
Sent: Sunday, July 21, 2013 7:52 AM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Re: API to resolve
Hi Richard,
I would probably use a multi-module project, here, with the war module
depending on the others it needs to include.
- Russ
On Jul 22, 2013, at 1:55 AM, Richard Sand rs...@idfconnect.com wrote:
Hoping someone in the know will work with me to get this answered. Its an
important
The example you mention updates the build artifacts only.
When you release code, you would of course assign a version number to the
release, and you can specify what snapshot version you want to use next. That
makes the release consistent with all of the tests. It's simple labeling what
is
Hi Markus,
I think we're all a bit confused about what you are trying to do. Can you
create a very simple project that recreates the problem or describe what you
are doing in a different way?
Maybe just letting us know the relationship among the modules in your project
would suffice. Or
Hi,
Maybe somebody else has run into this. I'm converting a really messy
200-ant-script build to maven, and some steps seems to run a lot slower, now.
The case I'm wondering about now is one where we have over 10,000 source files
in a directory, and compile them bit-by-bit. One step specifies
I wish I could break it up. Among the problems with this code is the extreme
bit of coupling. The scripts list 300 files to compile because that's all that
we would have wanted, but they pull in other files, which pull in yet others.
Trying to compile this fairly small subsystem winds up
ago, shortly
after putting it in place over the objections of most of the senior staff, and
we haven't been able to remove it.
Russ
On Jul 24, 2013, at 3:28 PM, Ron Wheeler rwhee...@artifact-software.com wrote:
On 24/07/2013 12:35 PM, Russell Gold wrote:
I wish I could break it up. Among
On Jul 24, 2013, at 8:36 PM, Ron Wheeler rwhee...@artifact-software.com wrote:
On 24/07/2013 4:40 PM, Russell Gold wrote:
Oh, you underestimate the coupling of this code. Yes, there are packages,
but the classes in those packages reference one another willy-nilly. It's
not a problem
Or let me rephrase that. In simple terms, I have dependency graphs like this:
A B C
^ |
\--- D /
How do I put these classes into separate modules?
On Jul 24, 2013, at 10:28 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
On Jul 24, 2013, at 8:36 PM, Ron
api that won't have these problems, but even if I get that approved, we have to
support this for several releases.
If there's an alternative, I'm all ears.
On Jul 24, 2013, at 10:38 PM, Barrie Treloar baerr...@gmail.com wrote:
On 25 July 2013 12:06, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Or let
, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Or let me rephrase that. In simple terms, I have dependency graphs like
this:
A B C
^ |
\--- D /
How do I put these classes into separate modules?
Short answer is:
Break the graph
, 2013, at 12:34 AM, Ron Wheeler rwhee...@artifact-software.com
wrote:
On 24/07/2013 10:56 PM, Russell Gold wrote:
Exactly. Which I cannot do because these classes are public and our
customers rely on them. If I break the graph, that means changing a behavior
that a customer might be using
Maven has a fair number of conventions that are respected by a lot of its code.
Trying to work against those conventions is likely to cause problems for you.
Maybe if you explain what your goal is, we can suggest a more Maven-like way of
accomplishing the same thing.
On Jul 25, 2013, at 8:58
Hi Mark,
Can you explain this requirement a bit more? Where is the version number coming
from, and why? Are you trying to create the file that lists the versions? My
initial reaction is that it sounds like a normal thing to want to do; maybe I'm
missing something.
Regards,
Russ
On Sep 29,
Before I write this myself…
I am converting an ant build to maven. One of the steps processes a template
file, using properties from a properties file to replace tokens and produce a
java source file, which is then compiled. Is there an existing plugin which
does this? The resource plugin can
/language folder,
and do a replace function, pointing to that src/main/language folder.
Thanks,
Roy Lyons
On 9/30/13 9:44 AM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Before I write this myselfŠ
I am converting an ant build to maven. One of the steps processes a
template file, using
You would think so, but a co-worker of mine ran into the same issue without
putting anything in his POM. He had installed it using apt-get on ubuntu, but
when he replaced that with 3.0.4 from the maven website, it worked fine. I
never delved into the issue, but I wonder if apt-get is somehow
I'd like to mention the release of my video course, Getting Started with Apache
Maven, now available from PackT publications. It's a bit over two hours long
and takes the viewer from installation of the tool through development of
multi-module projects and websites. Check it out!
Yes, that's the one.
On Oct 2, 2013, at 5:55 PM, Jose Manuel Garcia Maciel/Mexico/IBM
jos...@mx1.ibm.com wrote:
is it this one?
http://www.packtpub.com/getting-started-with-apache-maven/video
Manuel Garcia,
regards
-
Author, Getting Started with Apache Maven
Hi,
We have some unit tests that were always forked per-test in ant, and are now
converting to maven. The forkmode = always setting works, but without it, a
number of the tests fail (there are issues with the way they are written, and
we don't have time to rewrite them right now). The forkmode
Hi Irfan,
The behavior you describe sounds surprising. Can you attach a full listing of
the run when you do mvn compile:compile?
Thanks,
Russ
On Oct 9, 2013, at 11:42 PM, Irfan Sayed irfu.sa...@gmail.com wrote:
hi,
i am using maven compiler plugin. i havent mentioned anything related to
The simplest way to do this is actually to run it in your IDE directly.
IntellijIDEA community edition can import your maven project and thus get all
of the dependencies. Then you just run the program in the debugger. I presume
Eclipse can do something similar.
On Oct 10, 2013, at 10:52 AM,
, 2013 11:04 AM
To: Maven Users List
Subject: Re: Is there a Maven plugin for the Java debugger (jdb)?
I could also use an IDE for package management, but I'd rather use plain
Maven and an arbitrary text editor instead.
On Thu, Oct 10, 2013 at 11:21 AM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us
wrote
Yes, very interesting - but where is the Maven source found? The site is a bit
confusing on that score, and it is rather difficult to construct a patch when
you cannot see the CM system.
On Oct 11, 2013, at 2:42 AM, Barrie Treloar baerr...@gmail.com wrote:
We still want more people to get up
, but the text editor of our choice. This is best
accomplished by Maven tasks which interact with the command line jdb tool.
On Thu, Oct 10, 2013 at 5:27 PM, Russell Gold r...@gold-family.us wrote:
Why do you want to do that? I suspect we are not getting at your actual
requirement.
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