I have a couple of dependent java projects.
The problem is even though the build fails and the files contain obvious compile time errors, Intellij does not give any suggestions about the files that contain compilation errors.
In eclipse, it is too easy. You see the compilation errors right away.
I explored the problems tab, but honestly I don't find it helpful. It only tells that the project has some errors, that is it.
Seriously thinking about switching back to Eclipse if Intellij does not have such a basic feature.
When I first ran eclipsify on my Project I noticed that Eclipse complained about the:
return ok(index.render("Your new application is ready."));
Line. It did not recognize the index method. The application still ran so I ignored it for the time being. Now, however, I am getting a new error. I think I just added a few dependencies to Mongo, attached some Model files and rebuilt but I am now getting this error:
compile: sbt.InvalidComponent: Could not find required component 'compiler-interface-src'
I'm not sure why this is happening, especially because I'm a bit of a sbt idiot. As a side note, Eclipse is reporting that my "classes_managed" build path entry is missing, but I think that is due to my inability to compile after doing a clean. (Clean and update are working).
1) Templates are compiled by Play, not by eclipse. After the "eclipsify", you need to run play compile (or play run) and refresh your eclipse project. See How to make Eclipse see the changes in Play! compiled templates?
2) After adding dependencies, launch a new time the play eclipsify command.
But i think it's not the problem. What is the dependency you add ? And what is your Play2 version? (I suspect an incompatibility with a Play2.1 library)
And for your information, a general rule: Play doesn't depend on Eclipse to compile files. Do not try to clean in eclipse, but run play clean (and refresh eclipse).
Happen to run into this issue few times, tried above, also following
Clean up Play-framework based project
But nothing worked.
What it turned out to be was a IntelliJ Idea cache corruption issue, and invalidate and restart Idea worked fine.
So I have a maven module (module-A) in IntelliJ. I recently moved some classes from it into another new maven module (module-B) and added a dependency to it. Once I had done this I also modified the signature of a method of one of the moved classes (now in module-B).
I re-imported the poms so that IntelliJ would pick up the dependency changes and ensured all Java imports for the affected files were correct again. Now when I attempt to run my webapp (which depends on the two modules) I get a compile error in a class in module-A calling the modified method of the class in module-B.
The error message is basically saying that that method doesn't exist but believes the old method still exists! I click on the 'make' error and it takes me to the line in a class in module-A calling the modified method...the weird thing is, IntelliJ knows it is fine in the file. i.e. The method is not underlined in red like a compile error would normally be, but the class file name is :(
I compiled it from the command line using 'mvn install' (having also installed module-B) and it is all successful. I have deleted the classes directory in the target of both module-A and module-B and also invalidated IntelliJ's caches and restarted...still happening...any ideas?
I found out that this might help:
File -> Invalidate Caches
Maven Projects -> Reimport should help.
I spent a few hours on this same issue. All of the cleans in the world didn't help.
I deleted my out and target directory in my project and recompiled - that cleared it.
Edit: There is also a magic feature under the file menu: "Invalidate Caches / Restart" This fixes a bunch of "intellij is confused" problems.
Change "Java Compiler" setting in IDEA (User compiler javac in-process) to fix the problem.
Try to mvn clean your projects and mvn install your project B.
The maven integration with intelliJ is kind of buggy when you use the make command directly provided by Intellij. You should directly use the mvn commands, or start them from the maven panel.
I ran across a very similar problem that was driving me insane.
My code would compile fine with the ant task I normally run, but it would not build in IntelliJ, complaining about "Cannot Find Symbol blah blah"
Turns out, you can add "Excluded" files for the compiler. My file somehow got added to that list.
This list is located in File > Settings > Compiler > Excludes (IntelliJ 13)
Following steps should fix this problem :
delete .IntelliJIdea12 / .IdeaIC12 older under c:/user/.../
Invalidate Intelli's cache: File > Invalidate Caches.
This re-indexes your workspace on start-up and also clears your local history. Before you do this, commit or back up all your uncommitted changes.
Once your workspace is back after indexing, do a maven clean install.
when the build is successful, click on Maven Re-imports
This worked for me, I think it should work for others too with a similar problem.
So just stated it up this morning and it's all working!
Last night what I did do was open a new project (intelliJ project) from module-A's and module-B's parent pom and successfully got it to build, possibly doing that and then opening my original project again fixed it somehow...very annoying though
The behavior I see is similar to the one described by the original author.
Error markers show up on the right side of the editor in Intellij 14 and less so in 13.
This happens also if using Scala instead of Java and using SBT instead of Maven.
Also noticed this occurs after the second project is loaded. The first is always fine.
(After much trial and error) Figured it might be caused by Intellij's internal caches becoming somehow corrupt. "Invalidate caches" worked sometime and sometimes did not.
I work with a number of projects using Play! Framework and they use different versions of Scala and lots of dependencies.
I hypothesized the caches become corrupt because the internal key Intellij uses is not good enough to handle situations when the same class, loaded multiple times in different jars, has different signatures, and this results in the editor errors while external builds work fine.
Then the "Changing Ivy Cache Location for sbt projects in IntelliJ IDEA?" post gave the idea to segregate the ivy cache SBT and Intellij use in the hope that the ivy path is part of the internal cache key.
Paul Phillips of TypeSafe provide the "SBT extras" tooling and here I found a way to instruct SBT to use a project based ivy home, cache and SBT boot:
https: //raw.githubusercontent.com/paulp/sbt-extras/master/sbt
declare -r noshare_opts="-Dsbt.global.base=project/.sbtboot -Dsbt.boot.directory=project/.boot -Dsbt.ivy.home=project/.ivy"
How to configure Intellij
: see http://content.screencast.com/users/SemanticBeeng/folders/Snagit/media/ec8ec491-6d0c-4691-9598-916a63ba65ef/12.02.2014-08.59.png
Then did the same for the external SBT build to work in sync
: see http://content.screencast.com/users/SemanticBeeng/folders/Snagit/media/dcb287c4-200f-47f3-a937-42865675a22b/12.02.2014-09.01.png
Finally got rid of the user home based .ivy2 and all the contents.
To be sure Intellij does not use this folder I made it readonly.
This was a mistake. Intellij seems to silently fail resolve dependencies if you do this.
This solved the errors and believe they will not come back. :-)
If Intellij guys hear this: please test your releases (Scala, SBT, editor) with all the Play Framework templates from TypeSafe. The problem becomes apparent quickly this way.
I just had a similar issue that was driving me insane. I had done all the other things mentioned in the answers above because I have used Intellij forever, but none worked. In the end I found out that in the maven projects portion of Intellij, one of my modules had been marked "ignore" a simple unignore command from the context menu did the trick.
In my case, I had manually marked a directory as "Test Sources Root" but IDEA marked it on a parent Maven project. Unmarking it in File->Project structure...->Modules fixed the problem.
This could happen if you are using different version of java while building outside IntelljJ. My IntelliJ had java10 and I was using java8 while building at terminal. Changing java version to IntelliJ fixed this issue for me.
I had a very similar behavior. Running (Scala-)tests would always fail due to errors in unrelated java classes during the 'make' step.
It turned out, I had included a 'global' SDK library that collided with one of the dependencies from the project. A proper helpful error message only showed up after I deleted the 'make' step from the test.
I then deleted the duplicate library, re-added the make step to the test and everything is now working fine.
I ran into this problem today after upgrading from 12 to 13.
Later I fixed issue as I used the same name for Project and Module and looks Intellij allows this but cannot handle it correctly.
No idea why setting will impact the compilation, although there is no error in java editor. Should be a bug in version 13.
I was facing a similar issue after upgrading from IntelliJ 12 to 13. After multiple uninstalls and re-installs (of multiple intelliJ versions), numerous cleans and .m2 repository clearing, I finally figured out what my issue was.
In my intelliJ settings, the repositories mentioned in my main POM file could not be connected to. this was in turn due and alternate repository that was mentioned as a part of my pom file.
Once the POM was made to point to the correct repository, all my classes had their compilation issues resolved.
To check if your repositories are being connected to, go to File -> Settings -> Maven -> Repositories
Here, your indexed maven repositories should be connected to successfully. If they are not, then intelliJ will not be able to resolve most 3rd party and module dependencies.
I'm embarrassed to say, but we also had this problem, but it was due to a mistake in our package name.
When creating the packages for a new project I accidentally created a package called "org.package".
My project then had a directory structure like:
/src/main/java/org.package/
Which caused all sorts of havoc with IntilliJ.
Once the correct folder structure was created on the file system, IntelliJ worked great.
/src/main/java/org/package/
Note the difference in /org.package/ vs /org/package/
The fix was i made it javac instead of Ajc and i put 1.8 of course according to your jdk version.
for some reason when i invalidate and restart intellij it was set to be the default !
my version is
This happened to me...what fixed it was realising there was an extra main.iml file in the source directory. Deleting that instantly made the compile errors go away.
None of the above answers worked for me.
In my case, I had to finally create an explicit Maven Run Configuration for the module (with Command Line as "clean install") and then run it.
It is in Run > Edit Configurations
close the project
go-to the project folder and delete idea project file and .iws file
run mvn idea:idea
restart the project.
seems idea keeping the old project dependencies without cleaning even though we run file -> invalidate caches
Setting the proper Java SDK solves the issue
Right click on the project and select "Open Module Settings"
Check if you have the right Java SDK under platform settings
Check the SDK under Modules
Rebuild the project from "Build" menu
Delete the installation directory.
Remove the following directories:
~/.config/JetBrains/
~/.cache/JetBrains/
~/.local/share/JetBrains/
This will remove each and every configuration plus installation of jetbrains tools, be it IDEA, goland,etc.
Now install everything from scratch.
That's the only way it worked for me
I've run accorss a really weird issue, in eclipse I've got a codebase I've been working on for a couple of weeks and it's working fine. I did an svn update and all of a sudden one of my classes doesn't compile because it can't resolve an enum which is in the same namespace to a type.
I've checked the Java version and I'm running under Java 6 so enums should be supported.
Also it worked up till yesterday and now it doesn't.
Has anyone else seen this kind of behaviour? I've reloaded eclipse but beyond that I dont know where to start diagnosing it.
If it does say "Step cannot be resolved to a type", just try and clean the project (Project -> Clean). Eclipse gets confused sometimes, and a clean usually helps.
I had this recently. Turned out that someone had committed some jars that conflicted (had a previous build in) and put on the build path. Check recent commits to see if that's the problem, or to see what could have caused it.
However I would definitely do a build clean first within Eclipse, and see if ANT/Maven is affected (you do have such build scripts I assume).
Weird idea, but could it be that eclipse is trying to compile your class using a 1.4.2 compiler and isn't recognizing the enum?
I unloaded the project and reloaded it and it just works... No idea what the origianl issue was...
I am new to Hudson, perhaps someone knows the solution:
I am trying to checkout the parent pom from the VSS in Hudson (vss plugin installed) and now I get class cast exception:
FATAL: hudson.maven.MavenModuleSetBuild cannot be cast to hudson.model.Build
java.lang.ClassCastException: hudson.maven.MavenModuleSetBuild cannot be cast to hudson.model.Build
at scm.vss.VSSSCM.checkout(VSSSCM.java:227)
at hudson.model.AbstractProject.checkout(AbstractProject.java:664)
at hudson.model.AbstractBuild$AbstractRunner.checkout(AbstractBuild.java:260)
at hudson.model.AbstractBuild$AbstractRunner.run(AbstractBuild.java:234)
at hudson.model.Run.run(Run.java:793)
at hudson.maven.MavenModuleSetBuild.run(MavenModuleSetBuild.java:205)
at hudson.model.ResourceController.execute(ResourceController.java:70)
at hudson.model.Executor.run(Executor.java:88)
The line in question is here:
Build lastBuild = (Build)build.getPreviousBuild();
Has the interface changed? Anyone knows the solution?
Looks like Shashi filed this as Hudson issue 2665 which remains open.
Looks like it's a bug in that version of Hudson. Have you tried a slightly older or newer version? IIRC they provide very frequent stable builds, almost nightly...
I've never faced that situation, but I have faced other problems when using maven projects in hudson like infinite loops upon builds and so (that I think Hudson itself should evaluate and avoid). By this I mean that this feature is quitely young and error-prone.
Regarding at your exception, I can advise you to configure the project as a freestyle software project. If you set up the "Execute maven top-level targets" option on the build steps, the project will be built using Maven and probably the exception will dissapear.
The other thing that Hudson does automatically when a project is configured as a maven project is triggering builds for dependent project on successfull build, but, you also can configure it manually by using the "Build other projects" feature.
As you see, it's a little configuration price to pay and I strongly think that your exception will dissapear.
Hope it helps.
Carlos