I've forked a Github project, used Eclipse to clone it locally, and imported that as a general project into Eclipse. The accompanying .project file is an Eclipse .project file with the proper "nature" and "buildCommand" xml tags. So it seems like a valid Eclipse project. However, I'm unable to specify a run configuration or configure the build path. When I select the Build Path popup menu item, it says "no actions available" in grayed out text. When I select "Run/Run As" from the main menu, it shows (none applicable). I'm wondering if the problem is that the project imported completely as source folders:
There are no packages to speak of. I created another project from scratch, and created the proper source folders and packages as needed to match the package statements in the source code. After manually importing the source from the git repo, I can build and run that project.
If the lack of packages is indeed the problem, is there a quick way in Eclipse to convert source folders to packages?
If this is a project meant to be built by Maven that contains a
pom.xml
file, install M2E before importing the project from your local cloned repository. It will handle this.What you did is you have probably cloned the repo in Eclipse and then Imported this project through a
New Project Wizard
, because in GitHub there is no existing.project
(and no.classpath
) files.The "New Project Wizard" will create a set of defaults for a java project (I suspect that you selected just that), but is anaware of Maven structure, so all source folders will not be recognized and you will end up having to define them on your own. Worse, you will be unaware of any special parts of the Maven build that might be configured within
pom.xml
.Because this project uses Maven for building, it would be better to use M2Eclipse while importing it. Install it using
Help->Install new software
.Then there are a couple of steps required to make it use all Eclipse features.
Keep your cloned copy of the repository or clone again if you want to start from scratch. Then use
File->Import
feature to import a maven project into the workspace. SelectExisiting Maven Projects
and point to the directory containing pom.xml file in the cloned repo. This will use Maven integration in Eclipse to generate.project
and.classpath
files based onpom.xml
contents, so you will be able to more closely mimic Maven build in Eclipse. All source folders should be properly discovered this way. Eclipse might want to install some additional integrations for Maven features that this particular project uses. Let it, if that is the case.Now, you will have the project operational and compiling in Eclipse, but it will not be aware that it is managed by Git... This is because M2Eclipse and Git Team provider are not integrated (at least they weren't when I last checked). In order to be able to commit to the repository in Eclipse, remove the project from workspace, but without deleting contents. Then, import from Repository view using
Import Projects/Import exsisting Eclipse projects
. Since necessary.project
file is already generated, Eclipse will autodiscover the project and will use the right configuration prepared earlier by M2Eclipse.In the end you will have a properly configured Maven project with Git as a team provider for it.
Right click at root of project select properties, in the sources tab add the folder "src/main/java" as source folder
Other way is to configure facet as java