IntelliJ does not compile my project when I update jar in my local maven repository - maven

I created a maven project with lots of external dependencies. I was able to build it fine. Then I installed new SNAPSHOT of dependency into my local maven repository.
First maven itself was not picking up latest SNAPSHOT. I deleted the old SNAPSHOT. This caused maven to pick up the new SNAPSHOT and I was able to compile against new jar from mvn command line but now IntelliJ is not recognizing any of my imports and I cannot build from IntelliJ (although mvn package works).
How to fix this? If I create a brand new project from same sources in a new folder then IntelliJ works.

In the upper left corner, right-click on your project and re-import Maven. That sometimes works for me. In some cases even that fails, and honestly I've just gone into the M2 repository (~/.m2), and deleted all copies of that particular library. That forces a rebuild as well and seems to work.
I'll be curious to see if someone has a better answer ...

Related

Maven ignoring repository defined in pom.xml

I have a maven project which has a repository defined in its pom.xml. However when I run mvn -U clean compile on the project, maven tries to fetch artifacts from https://repo.maven.apache.org repository called Central.
I don't understand why maven is ignoring the repository defined in pom.xml
I also ran mvn help:effective-pom, and that too showed just one repository, which is https://repo.maven.apache.org.
Some more background:
I highly suspect this is a maven setup issue or something. I say this because the project I'm trying to compile is coming from a git source which is compiling fine for others, just not me. So pom.xml is defined correctly. It was working for me too on my old laptop. I just switched to a new MacBook and pulled the project and tried compiling it, and it's not compiling on this new MacBook. Don't know why. So I think I need to configure maven on my new laptop somehow, but I don't know what exactly is needed.

Is there a way to force intellij to mvn reimport before I build everytime

I am trying to refer to the versions using ranges in my pom
e.g.
[13.1.0-betatest101,13.1.0-betatest110]
When I upload a new version of jar to the nexus hosted within our company maven seems to pick it up and download it to local repository. But intellij is still referring to old version of the jar. The only way to fix is to mvn reimport but is there a way to force this behavior before every build so I am always working with latest version?

IntelliJ uses snapshots with timestamps instead of -SNAPSHOT to build artifact

I have a project with snapshot dependencies. For simplification let's say that there is an project A which depends on library B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.
A depends on B
B resides within Nexus repository as a snapshot. I can see that it is stored with timestamp so the actual name in Nexus is something like: B-0.1-20141126.171716-67.jar
After executing:
mvn clean install -U
on project A, dependency B is downloaded from Nexus to my local repository. There I can find two jars of library B:
B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar
B-0.1-20141126.171716-67.jar
So far so good.
After maven build is complete I can see that B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar was taken to build A artifact (.war file)
I also have project A imported to IntelliJ as a maven project. There I run it on Tomcat. Project is build by IntelliJ and B-0.1-20141126.171716-67.jar is added to .war file.
At the end I have .war with both B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar and B-0.1-20141126.171716-67.jar within WEB-INF/lib directory.
For me is seems like a bug in IntelliJ because B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar should be taken from local maven repository... not the timespamped version. Is there any way to force IntelliJ to act propeply?
Maven version is 3.2.3, IntelliJ 14.0.1 (but the same behavior was on 13).
I was faced to the same problem today, and I found how to disable this feature.
F4 on your module, and go to artifacts then select the name of your artifact webapp:exploded and check the show contents radio at the bottom of the frame.
Go to WEB-INF/lib and search for your dependecy B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar and expand the line you will see a compile output folder in it, just remove it, then repackage and run, you will now only have the B-0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar and the one with the timestamp should be gone.
The downside of this is that you will have to make sure to mvn install your B module before running the A module within IntelliJ, because IntelliJ won't package your dependency and bundle it with the code you've just edited but not installed in your local maven repository.

IntelliJ Maven is correctly generating maven local repository but not adding the dependencies

Hi I am trying to port a mid sized Maven project to IntelliJ Idea 12 (from Eclipse).
There are around 30 different modules in the project.
I am running an MVN install on each module via IntelliJ lifecycle management.
The jars are being correctly generated, and deposited into my local repository directory. It is also correctly picking up the third party libraries.
However IntelliJ is sometimes requiring me to then add the generated jars to my classpath as a dependency. (It is not enough to simply say "Add Maven Dependency", I have to physically add the generated jar as a library.)
In other cases it works correctly. Not sure why it is not consistent.
Have you tried updating the local Maven repository in IntelliJ IDEA? You can do so by opening Preferences->Maven->Repositories, than select your local repository and click on 'Update'.

Maven fails to find local artifact

Occasionally maven complains that a particular dependency, which is built and packaged locally, cannot be found in the local repository while building another project that has it as a dependency. We get an error like:
Failed to execute goal on project X: Could not resolve dependencies for project X: Failure to find Y in [archiva repository] was cached in the local repository, resolution will not be reattempted until the update interval of internal has elapsed or updates are forced ->
Where X is the project being built, and Y is the supposedly missing artifact. If you look in the local repository, the artifact is there. This artifact is never installed in our archiva repository, so the problem is purely based in the local repository.
We have tried various profiles in settings.xml, and of course "mvn -U". Neither do any good, nor should they because this artifact never goes any further than the local repository.
The only two things that seem to work are to wait a very long time until maven smartens up, or to completely delete the local repository. Presumably the waiting option is related to the aforementioned update interval.
We have experienced this problem with maven 3.0.2 and 3.0.3. We are using Archiva 1.0.3 (but again this shouldn't be a factor). Any help would be greatly appreciated.
The local Maven repo tracks where artifacts originally came from using a file named "_maven.repositories" in the artifact directory. After removing it, the build worked. This answer fixed the problem for me.
As the options here didn't work for me, I'm sharing how I solved it:
My project has a parent project (with its own pom.xml) that has many children modules, one of which (A) has a dependency to another child (B). When I tried mvn package in A, it didn't work because B could not be resolved.
Executing mvn install in the parent directory did the job. After that, I could do mvn package inside of A and only then it could find B.
Even in offline mode, maven will check remote repositories if there is a _remote.repositories marker for the dependency. If you need to operate in offline mode, you may need to delete these files.
The simple shell command below deletes these marker files. This is safe to do if you only use offline mode for the machine. I would NOT do this on a machine that needs to pull files down from the web.
I have used this strategy on a build server that is disconnected from the web. We have to transfer the repository to it, delete the marker files and then run in offline mode.
On Linux / Unix you can delete the remote repository marker files this way:
cd ~/.m2
find . -name "_remote.repositories" -type f -delete
Maven remembers when it didn't find something. The key is "resolution will not be reattempted until the update interval of internal has elapsed or updates are forced ->"
The quick solution is to delete your local "repository" subdirectory for the problem artifact - assuming you have fixed the problem with it. :)
mvn -U will force update from remote repository - again, assuming you have now populated remote with said artifact.
When this happened to me, it was because I'd blindly copied my settings.xml from a template and it still had the blank <localRepository/> element. This means that there's no local repository used when resolving dependencies (though your installed artifacts do still get put in the default location). When I'd replaced that with <localRepository>${user.home}\.m2\repository</localRepository> it started working.
For *nix, that would be <localRepository>${user.home}/.m2/repository</localRepository>, I suppose.
If you have <repositories/> defined in your pom.xml apparently your local repository is ignored.
Catch all. When solutions mentioned here don't work(happend in my case), simply delete all contents from '.m2' folder/directory, and do mvn clean install.
Even I faced this issue and solved it with 2 ways:
1) In your IDE select project and clean all projects then install all the maven dependencies by right clicking on project -> go to maven and Update project dependencies select all projects at once to install the same. Once this is done run the particular project
2) Else What you can do is check in the pom.xml for the dependencies for which you are getting error and "mvn clean install" those dependent project first and the install maven dependencies of the current project in which you facing issue. By this the dependencies of the local project will be build and jars will be created.
I run to the similar problem when my new project depend on oracle jdbc jar(which I have installed in my local repository and work well for other projects). I tried -U option ,deleting .lastupdate file or the whole directory and downlaod again,but it did not work. finally,I deleted the directory and installed it locally again,it works.
One of the errors I found around Maven is when I put my settings.xml file in the wrong directory. It has to be in .m2 folder under your user home dir. Check to make sure that is in the right place (along with settings-security.xml if you are using that).
I had DependencyResolutionException in Ubuntu Linux when I've installed local artifacts via a shell script. The solution was to delete the local artifacts and install them again "manually" - calling mvn install:install-file via terminal.
This happened because I had http instead of https in this:
<repository>
<id>jcenter</id>
<name>jcenter-bintray</name>
<url>https://jcenter.bintray.com</url>
</repository>
check if if your artifact Y have packaging set to "jar". If you have defined it as "war" by error or copy paste, it will show this strange "was cached in the local repository, resolution will not be reattempted until the update interval of internal has elapsed or updates are forced". I would expect something like "artifact Y is war, jar type expected".
In my case I needed project Y to be a WAR to be deployed through Tomcat, as well as it needed to be a JAR to be able to add it as a dependency in project X.
So in project Y's pom.xml, I added this plugin to create a JAR along with the WAR:
<plugin>
<artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.2.2</version>
<configuration>
<attachClasses>true</attachClasses>
<classesClassifier>classes</classesClassifier>
</configuration>
</plugin>
And while adding the dependency of project Y in project X's pom.xml, I had to add a classifier:
<dependency>
<groupId>groupId.of.project.Y</groupId>
<artifactId>project.Y</artifactId>
<version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<classifier>classes</classifier>
</dependency>
Note: when you build project Y, you will see 2 packagings in the target folder: project-Y.war and project-Y-classes.jar, so that's why while importing you are specifying the classes classifier to import the JAR and not the WAR.
Here is the long Solution to the problem
(Not Quick fix but will work if no other solution)
You're going to hate me for saying this but this is the truth about open source projects like eclipse. Because Open source is modular and allows you to build and develop a project in many ways with many tools such as maven, spring boot, options for xml or groovy, different eclipse updates & Etc. The problem is that eclipse allows you to run the project with missing maven builds because the IDE is smart enough to resolve dependencies using a remote_repository where it stores and catches the jar files that is not properly built on the project.
Because of this feature, You may actually have local build issues but just like DNS servers; if the solution is not found in the local directory, Eclipse will look for a solution in it's remote cached repository. When you delete the remote_repository and let Maven rebuild it a second time, The project may end up creating more errors and not build a second time or may possibly rebuild a cache that was missing. But that is unlikely.
So the long answer to fix your solution.
This is a project architecture issue!
SOLUTION:
What you need to do is look in to all your dependant project's pom.xml file and the maven dependencies folder in your local project and try to resolve all the missing dependency jars in your maven dependency folder. If you have a referenced library, I suggest moving those jars into your local project's maven dependency folder.
You have to work your way into solving every child project and then navigate into your root project and fix every single project by using Maven -> Build -> clean install (check off "skip tests" & "resolve workspace artifacts") until every project builds with a clean success.
most likely, when you force update your entire solution to all your projects, you will get a list of errors that you have the IDE auto-resolve. The auto-resolve will refer to a easy reference to fix the issue. But to deploy, you have to manually fix the project because Eclipse, Spring & Maven will work well together but there are maybe a few things they don't agree on. So, you have to play diplomat in those situations and figure it out.
That's the sad truth.
All said, I have a list of problems in my project. I have this issue. The war file generated has empty jar folders and the build is not clean without errors unless i force it. The WAR file generate will run a 404 error on tomcat server production and my angular application will throw a Cors-Error when executing the API.
All the errors on my front end project is artificial because the root of all issues is the WAR file generated. It did not generate with dependencies, the Main project did not execute in tomcat and tomcat server cannot run the spring initializer to deploy the cors-policy on the server to allow my angular application to communicate. But all in all, development environment works fine with no issues.
So that is my long ended solution for this thread.
I had the same error from a different cause: I'd created a starter POM containing our "good practice" dependencies, and built & installed it locally to test it. I could "see" it in the repo, but a project that used it got the above error. What I'd done was set the starter POM to pom, so there was no JAR. Maven was quite correct that it wasn't in Nexus -- but I wasn't expecting it to be, so the error was, ummm, unhelpful. Changing the starter POM to normal packaging & reinstalling fixed the issue.
In my case I had to add mavenLocal() in root level gradle dependency
mavenCentral()
mavenLocal()

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