I added a Student.jar
into my Build Path
in my eclipse like this-
Right click on the project->BuildPath->Configure Build Path->Libraries->Add External Jars
There is one class named StudentTest
in Student.jar
file. When I was debugging my code in eclipse, I stepped into that StudentTest
class in the Student.jar
.
And after that eclipse shows me like this-
The JAR file
S:\some_location\Student.jar
has no source attachment. You can attach the source by clicking Attach Source below
Now I am not sure how should I attach the source in my eclipse. And from where? Can anyone provide me step by step what I need to do.
Update:-
I tried unzipping the Student.jar
and I got Student folder
. And after that I tried pointing the source to Student folder
But still I am not able to see the class properly so that I can debug it properly, it shows the same above behavior.
This worked for me for Eclipse-Luna:
I Know it is pretty late but it will be helpful for the other user, as we can do Job using three ways... as below
1)1. Atttach your source code using
i.e, Right click on the project then properties --> Java build path--> attach your source in the source tab or you can remove jar file and attach the source in the libraries tab
2. Using eclipse source Analyzer
In the eclipse market you can download the plugin java source analyzer which is used to attach the open source jar file's source code. we can achieve it after installing the plugin, by right click on the open source jar and select the attach source option.
3. Using Jadclipse in eclipse you can do it
last not the least, you can achieve the decompile your code using this plugin. it is similar way you can download the plugin from the eclipse market place and install in your eclipse. in jadclipse view you can see your .class file to decomplile source format note here you cannot see the comment and hidden things
I think in your scenario you can use the option one and option three, I prefer option three only if i want to the source code not for the debug the code. else i ll code the option 1, as i have the source already available with.
Use Java Source Attacher !
It does what eclipse should do - a right click context menu that says "Attach Java Source.
It automatically downloads the source for you and attaches it. I've only hit a couple libraries it doesn't know about and when that happens it lets you contribute the url back to the community so no one else will have a problem with that library.
A .jar file usually only contains the .class files, not the .java files they were compiled from. That's why eclipse is telling you it doesn't know the source code of that class.
"Attaching" the source to a JAR means telling eclipse where the source code can be found. Of course, if you don't know yourself, that feature is of little help. Of course, you could try googling for the source code (or check wherever you got the JAR file from).
That said, you don't necessarily need the source to debug.
Go back in to where you added the jar. I believe its the libraries tab, I don't have Eclipse open but that sounds right. to the left of the jar file you added there should be an arrow pointing right, click that and 3 or 4 options expand, one of them being the source file of the library. Click on that and click edit(I think you can also double click it) then locate the file or folder on your hard disk, you probably have to click apply or okay and you're good to go, same with javadoc and i think the last one is native libraries. I don't pay much attention when I'm in there anymore if you couldn't tell. That's what you were asking, right?
Eclipse is showing no source found because there is no source available . Your jar only has the compiled classes.
You need to import the project from jar and add the Project as dependency .
Other option is to go to the
Go to Properties (for the Project) -> Java Build Path -> Libraries , select your jar file and click on the source , there will be option to attach the source and Javadocs.