in my project there are classes containing #Transactional(rollbackfor=Exception.class). When compiling and packaging my project, a jar file is created. However, looking at the #Transactional(roolbackfor=Exception.class) classes, I saw #Transactional(rollbackfor={null}). What is the reason of that _? And What is the solution ?
Thank you
I downloaded the project, but I don't see any problem. When I import the jar in a different project I still see the correct rollback for.
I issued mvn clean install on command line to generate the jar. I had a look at your committed jar. Yours looks similar to mine, no problem even with it. I even decompiled it and I can see the rollbackFor={Exception.class} in AzerAuthorityDaoImpl.
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I've recently come with the need to create for a Java project a build.xml file in which is meant to be run using the terminal.
The issue is that until now we've used Eclipse as the utility to run the build.xml while depending on Eclipse UI to let the Ant package manager to create our jars, but not putting the external jars in each jar we create.
That way, the memory in which the jar libraries take(~40MB) isn't replicated to each Jar we make.
I'm pretty a beginner in Ant so what I'm trying to do is create a build.xml in which take a folder of Jar libraries, and for the project which is a Jar library itself, create the Jar while knowing the libraries but not include them in the end Jar.
I alternatively tried understanding how eclipse teels the build.xml for ant but the classpath of the project, how to access the jars and other configurations, so if there's a possibility for that then it will be much better.
If possible, it would be great to help with that.
I've tried of course seeing other questions on Stackoverflow but didn't saw something similar to this.
If there's one of course I'll be happy to see it :)
Thanks heads up! :)
I have imported a java project into a new eclipse workspace and it gave me a lot of errors:
It says "Project 'myProject' is missing required library: /User/linus/.m2/..." (The directory is longer but not of interest for you)
Now, I have looked inside my Finder to see what is in ".m2" but there is no such directory where it should be. Additionally I let it show all the hidden files but no success. Lastly I tried to get into the folder with the terminal (using cd and then the directory eclipse gave me) but that did not work either.
I saw this post but it did not help me.
I reinstalled Maven to make sure it can be used, this is the output if I type mvn --version and mvn in the terminal:
Does anyone have an idea?
Thanks in advance
EDIT:
I reinstalled Maven and now there is a /.m2 folder. It contains /.m2/repository/ but there is nothing in it...
May I suggest you read a Maven tutorial like http://maven.apache.org/guides/getting-started/maven-in-five-minutes.html
IMHO it's a wonderful build tool because it gets required jar files per the specification in the project object model ("pom") file which your Maven-ized project should have, and you don't have to keep track of jars on your own.
Look in your project for pom.xml, you might even post it here.
To check the sanity of the project and maven on your computer (ignoring Eclipse for a moment), be sure you have a good Internet connection, open a Terminal window, change directory ("cd") over to the project directory, and type "mvn install".
This should trigger the usual Maven build cycle. One of the first things it should do is download all the jars as identified in the pom.xml and store them deeply nested within your /Users/linus/.m2/ directory. Then it should compile all your java classes. Eventually it will probably build a jar file and copy it to somewhere.
If all this works, visit http://eclipse.org/m2e/ for directions to add the Maven plugin (m2e) to your Eclipse. Then your Eclipse should understand how to download jars and build the project per the pom.xml file.
Eventually this all should fix the original "Project is missing required library" problem.
I am trying to build a web application based on the project library CitySDK, but i don't know how to import it properly into my own project.
I have created a Maven Web Application and added the CitySDK library as a Dependency, and then Selected the Project, right-clicked and Selected Build with Dependencies. No errors appeared, and in the image below you can see it appeared as a dependency.
However, whenever i try to use some of the classes specific to it, in my own Web Application(called TourismApplication's TestClass.java), the compiler displays an error, that the package is unknown. Could anyone suggest ideas as to what i have missed? I have followed a few Maven tutorials, but without any effects.
The dependencies are as follows:
Ok I did some digging and I think I figured out your problem. Their POM file is incorrect based on the structure of project.
First off, I'll paraphrase what I think the steps you took to get it built in your project were, to ensure I followed the same steps to get it working. These are the steps I took:
Cloned/downloaded the sources from the link you placed in the OP
Built the project into a jar file by running the command they said to use: mvn clean package assembly:single
Installed the artifact in your local Maven repo using mvn install
Added a dependency in your project POM
I tried the same thing you did, using the library in a test source file, to no avail. I looked at the .jar file that was built using their instructions and didn't find any .class files archived into it... it was essentially empty.
Turns out, their src folder structure follows Maven standards, but their POM file indicates the sources are down a different chain of directories. If you examine the build log closely, you see "[INFO] No sources to compile"
The POM.xml file they provide specifies the source directory as
<sourceDirectory>src/citysdk/tourism/client</sourceDirectory>
However, the actual files are at
src\main\java\citysdk\tourism\client
After changing the line in the POM file from the above to (similarly for tests):
<sourceDirectory>src/main/java/citysdk/tourism/client</sourceDirectory>
<testSourceDirectory>src/test/java/citysdk/tourism/client/tests</testSourceDirectory>
rebuilt, and installed, it worked when I tried to use it in my project. Hope this helps.
FYI, I used IntelliJ as my IDE, but it should work the same with Eclipse.
I'm working on a GWT project with maven. Since I want to keep my workspace organized I'm putting all my resources on src/main/resources instead of src/main/java. The problem is that eclipse gives an compile error saying that the file is missing. On the other hand if I insist in proceding the project compiles and works properly (it does find supposedly missing resources). How can I correct this?
Thank you.
Remove the project from Eclipse and afterwards delete the Eclipse specific files (.settings, .classpath, .project) and import the project from scratch. The problem is based on the thing that the life-cycle is started from scratch in case of importing it. If a project is already important some parts seemed to be not executed.
So I've been pigeon-holed into writing some Jython code. I've been using the latest version of Eclipse IDE with the PyDev plugin for development. Up until now, things have been moderately tolerable. I've gotten all my Python scripts working and I'm successfully including a couple of JAR files and the class directory of another Java project as external dependencies. Everything seems to run fine through the Eclipse IDE.
Now I need to package everything up and deploy it. From what I can gather, the best way to do this would be to package everything up in a JAR file. The Jython documentation suggests starting out with the jython.jar file and adding to it. OK. So I modify my main python module and start adding all my python source to the JAR.
It executes but of course can't find all the external dependencies.
How is one supposed to add the external JAR files so that they are correctly seen by the Jython interpreter? How is one supposed to manage more complex dependencies in a setup like this?
Is there a plugin for Eclipse or maybe something like Ant or Maven that can handle all of these steps for me with the push of a button?
I can't be the first person that has needed to deploy Jython code with complex dependencies can I?
I've made some headway on getting this all working so I thought I would put some notes here in case they help anyone else out. I'd still like to hear from others on their experiences trying to put together something like this.
It turns out that Eclipse as of 3.5 has a project export option for Java -> Runnable JAR File. If you use this option, you can point to a Java main class in the export wizard. You also have the option to have it repackage all the JARs that you are dependent on in your new JAR file. Make sure to check the box to save the export as an ANT build so that you can repeat the process quickly. NOTE that the first time you do this through the interface, it may fail, but it will still have created a JAR file.
Now here's where it gets strange. To track all the dependencies, I am still using a mostly incomplete Maven build in my project. I create the Maven .POM file. And I told Maven what my external JAR dependency was. I then told Maven to do a dependency update for me. It pulled everything into my Maven repository as expected.
Now when I do my ANT build, it appears that it is getting its list of JARs to include in the final build from Maven. I'm not really sure if it is supposed to work that way. I'm also not 100% sure that it is working. I guess I'll find out when I have to add another external JAR to the project.
Anyways, if you follow this question you'll see that you can take the latest builds of Jython and pull the org.python.util.JarRunner.java file out and use it in your own project. This is you Java.main class that you will need to point your ANT build at. From there, convert your main Python/Jython script to be the run script that was talked about in that question.
Next, build up another copy of the Jython JAR file in your Jython directory. This one should have the /Lib directory pulled into the JAR. Save that off and then point your Eclipse IDE Jave Build option for your PyDev project at that JAR as an external dependency. Your JarRunner will now work and execute the run.py file under Jython.
If all that works, you should then be able to rerun the ANT exported build from earlier and you will end up with a single JAR file that you can execute on the command line as:
java -jar {yourjar} args
And distribute to your customers without any additional dependencies.
If that all seems a little bit convoluted, it is. If anyone has a better way of setting this all up using Eclipse, please let me know.
Make your life easier and just use Maven and the mavenjython compile plugin.
See my answer of this question: Using Jython with Maven
You get full automation of the build and deploy process, and the result is a jar that includes jython and all other dependencies.