Hello, I opened the project with netbeans, specifically pom.xml - and it imported the project. (Netbeans 7.0) - then right clicked in the dependencies, and downloaded dependencies.
When I make a mvn compile, it will start testing. During testing, it wont find plugin.folders - and I believe, this is because I could not add the /conf to classpath. However, I have disabled the tests from pom.xml, and now nutch builds with netbeans 7.0 - and it will compile. The reason I want to use an IDE is that when I do editing, I want to be able to run the code, without compiling zillions of classes again. An ant build takes 17s, and that is far too long. I was told that nutch was built with ivy. is there a better way to compile ant then ant? I have tried every major ide, various ivy plugins, and I still could not get a development environment up, which makes my progress slow. My current netbeans setup, needs to be little more configured, since it wont show plugins folder as source. Is it a common practice, if I make a different project from the plugin I am working on? Best Regards, C.B. On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 12:19 AM, lewis john mcgibbney <[email protected]> wrote: > hi C.B., > > At what stage are these tests failing? Have you built the project? If you > could provide more info it would be great. What ant command are you running > etc > > On Tue, Jul 19, 2011 at 9:11 PM, Cam Bazz <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I am getting this error: >> >> Tests run: 7, Failures: 7, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 0.72 >> sec <<< FAILURE! >> testPluginConfiguration(org.apache.nutch.plugin.TestPluginSystem) >> Time elapsed: 0.479 sec <<< FAILURE! >> junit.framework.AssertionFailedError: no plugin directory setuped.. >> at junit.framework.Assert.fail(Assert.java:47) >> >> Of course it is because I dont have the plugin.folders setup. But >> where? I have tried to put it in nutch-default.xml and also >> nutch-site.xml under test, but still get the same error. >> >> Any hints? >> >> Best >> > > > > -- > *Lewis* >

