There's this project that has been discontinued that I want to have in my Eclipse workspace so that I can maintain it for my own personal use (the author of the project is fine with this). I have the repository from GitHub downloaded and am trying to import it into Eclipse using this tutorial: https://github.com/collab-uniba/socialcde4eclipse/wiki/How-to-import-a-GitHub-project-into-Eclipse.
After defining the directory of the local repository and clicking "Next", I'm presented with this: Error message
Any ideas on what I could be doing wrong?
the title says most of it. I also checked the "Import all existing Eclipse projects after clone finishes". I am starting to learn github. Please help me and make this a pleasent start so I actually keep using it. The repo folder that I had to choose for the repo is not in my eclipse workspace. I thought I don't need to manually import the projects in the repo if I check that checkbox. I use eclipse Mars and EGit.
Edit: I created a new repository before on GitHub. I imported a test project into my repository to play around with it and test stuff. Thats all whats in the repository.
Thats what my GitHub repo looks like on the website:
Apprecciate your help.
Eclipse will only import Eclipse projects. So if you have some plain Java projects (without Eclipse specific meta data) or even just plain folders in your repository, those will not be imported. However, you can import all such non Eclipse artifacts into Eclipse projects by using the "Import -> General" wizard category.
And in case your projects are Eclipse projects, you can re-try the import from the locally cloned repository into your workspace by using the "Import projects" menu on the repository in the repository view of Eclipse.
just created project on github from my office and when then i came home and was trying to import the project on my home machine but I am not able to do it.
Following is the detail.
Both home and office machine has eclipse Juno and Egit plugin installed. I am able to do check-in from office. but at home I am not even able to import the project.
my workspace directory - c:\gaurang
git local directory - d:\Gaurang\Webdriver-Data-Driven-Framework
Now if i choose "Import existing projects" it says No project found
if i choose "Use the new Project Wizard" - it creates empty project
if i choose "Import as general project" - it creates the project but not a java project so not able to compile or run.
My git repository - https://github.com/Gaurang033/Webdriver-Data-Driven-Framework.git
I struggled in a similar fashion when checking out https://github.com/angular/angular-seed.git
The problem was that I expected to happen in a single step. The Github project does not contain eclipse files, so of course you can not import existing projects - the other options should work, however and they don't
The solution for me was to:
Clone the github repository locally e.g. /home/name/git/angular-seed (import.../Projects from Git/URI)
Obtain a working copy as a plain project (import.../Projects from Git/local)
I think it's a bug
The result is that I have the cloned repository in /home/name/git/angular-seed and a skeleton project with a ".project" file that points to that place
You have to push your .project and .classpath files to the repository if you want to be able to import the project using the "Import existing projects" wizard. If those are not present, eclipse cannot detect an existing java project.
I have a number of projects using git for version control. Some are python modules others are C++ projects developed using Xcode4. However, I seemed to be struggling to import the project via git. I can easily import the actual source directories.
I tried doing the following:
1)I add my git repositories to the Egit repository browser.
2) Right click on the repository and click import project ...
3) Create the appropriate project
At this stage there is no source code in the project. I feel like I am missing a step somewhere.
Eclipse has a git plugin: http://eclipse.org/egit/
Just install EGit and import the actual source code directories. Then you can edit the source code in Eclipse, and use the Eclipse team provider interface to access version control facilities, and you're operating out of the same git repositories as you always were.
How can I get the effect of choosing to import from both Maven and Git and have Eclipse properly generate my project?
To get my project into Eclipse I can choose File->import->maven and then I get all the Maven projects imported and can build fine, or I can choose File->import->git and make a new project that ignores the pom.xml and does not generate the project properly.
It seems I can do one or the other but not combine both so I get a correctly generated project.
Eclipse Indigo + M2Eclipse 1.0 makes it very easy.
If you don't already have the Git connector for M2Eclipse install it. M2Eclipse will help you along by prompting you on the Import menu.
Select the "Import..." context menu from the Package Explorer view
Select "Check out Maven projects from SCM" option under the Maven category
On the window that is presented choose the link "Find more SCM connectors in the m2e Marketplace
Find connector for Git...install...restart
Note that in the search box you may have to enter "EGit" instead of "Git" to find the right connector.
With that done, simply go to the EGit repository, bring up the context menu for the Working directory and select "Import Maven projects...".
Done!
I would perform a git clone via the command line (outside Eclipse) then use File -> Import... -> Existing Maven Projects.
Your projects will be understood as using Git and Maven. It's the fastest and most reliable way to import IMO.
Step 1 : Setting Up Eclipse
First of all you'll need to have a few Eclipse plug-ins installed. So use eclipse IDE software install feature in the help dropdown menu → Install new software, and add link to Available Software Site, then install it.
GIT plugin (EGIT)- http://download.eclipse.org/egit/updates
Eclipse Maven plugin (M2Eclipse) - http://download.eclipse.org/technology/m2e/releases
Maven SCM Handler for EGit (m2e-egit)
Install from the M2E Marketplace (Settings → Maven → Discovery → Open Catalog and search for " m2e-egit")
Step 2 : Clone the repository
Clone(download) your Maven Projects from Git
Check out non-eclipse Maven Projects from Git (File → Import.. → Maven → Check out Maven Projects from SCM)
Now add your git repository link to SCM URI field.Then click next & finish.
As of this (updated) writing, a working setup is the following:
Eclipse 3.8 (Eclipse Indigo update site)
EGit 1.3.0 (Eclipse Indigo update site)
m2e 1.0.200 (Eclipse Indigo update site)
m2e-egit 0.14.0 (m2e marketplace when adding a connector)
Tested on Ubuntu Raring.
You can certainly "Import" -> "Maven" -> "Check out Maven Projects from SCM", and this is the quickest way. However, such direct import currently does not give you control over the cloned repository folder name. You may be better off working from the "Git Repository" View and perform either a "Clone from a Git Repository and add the clone to this view", followed by an "Import Maven Projects" from such clone; the longest way would be to do your manual cloning and then "Add an existing local Git Repository to this view", followed again by an "Import Maven Projects". Either case you have full control on the cloned folder.
A final comment on a side issue that made me cry in frustration. As far as I know, if the cloned repository lies on the root of your Eclipse workspace, and your Maven project file hierarchy has a POM on its root, then importing such root project will rename the cloned folder (with the template you chose, defaults to [artifactId]). Without changing your project structure and without keeping files outside your workspace, you can easily work around this issue by cloning on a subsubfolder of the workspace folder.
I have been testing this out for my project.
Eclispe Indigo
"Help > Install New Software" Enable/Install official Git plug-ins at "Eclipse Git Plugin .." and install the lot.
Enable the Maven/EGit connector with these instructions How do you get git integration working with m2eclipse?
Switch to the Git Repository perspective. Right click paste the project git url. The defaults should all work. You may want to change the install folder it guesses.
Expand the cloned repository and right click on "Working Tree" and pick "Import Maven Projects...".
Switch to the Java perspective. Right click on the project and choose "Team > Share Project". Select "Git" and be sure to tick the box "Use or create repository in parent folder of project".
Here's my workaround, this is a solution to these issues:
You can't install m2e-egit (I get an error in Juno)
Converting a general project (connected to your Git repository) to a Maven project isn't working for you (The Import Maven Projects step seems essential)
Importing Maven Projects from your repository on the filesystem isn't showing the project connected to Git.
Setup your Git repository in the Git Repository Exploring perspective.
Switch to the Java perspective, Import > Existing Maven Projects
Browse to your Git checkout in the filesystem, select the directory containing the pom.xml file. Finish the import;
you'll notice these projects aren't connected to Git. :-(
Delete these projects, but DO NOT DELETE FROM FILESYSTEM.
We don't want our clone deleted; this task also leaves the .project file behind so that we can import in the next step.
Go back to the Git Repository Exploring perspective.
Right-click your repository, Import Projects...
Select Import existing projects
In the explorer below, browse to and select the directory containing the pom.xml (and .project file) , then click next.
Continue through the wizard.
Import without installing any additional connectors for Mylyn:
Open Git Repositories view (Window->Show view->Git Repositories)
Press Clone a Git Repository button and proceed with all steps
In newly created repository expand Working Directory, right click on folder with your project and select Import Projects. Then either choose Import existing projects, or select Import as general project. If needed after importing right click on your project and select Configure->Convert to Maven Project (and Maven->Update Project).
You should note that putting generated metadata under version control (let it be git or any other scm), is not a very good idea if there are more than one developer working on the codebase. Two developers may have a totally different project or classpath setup. Just as a heads up in case you intends to share the code at some time...
I have a maven project with three submodules that is managed in git. I set them up in eclipse as follows:
I registered the git repository with eclipse using EGit
I imported the projects as existing Maven Projects
For each project, I went Team | Share Project.
Direct answer: Go to Files>>Import>>Git>>Project From Git (you should have GIT installed on Eclips)
I would prefer to import projects into Eclipse as maven projects rather than git project. Doing this will still allow the project contents to be recognized as git contents. You can continue to perform git operations from Eclipse. As you have mentioned the reverse is not true.
The nature of a project in Eclipse is not based on the SCM which holds the project, but on the type of project - whether war or jar, etc. - which is automagically determined when the project is imported as maven project.
I would be hesitant to check-in to SCM IDE-specific metadata. Doing so assumes a lot of things - all developers are using the same IDE or version of the IDE, perhaps same version of JDK/JRE, that they continue to use the same version throughout the project lifecycle and so on.
Can't you import it as a git project and then (if you have the m2eclipse installed) right click on the project in the Package Explorer > Maven > Enable Dependency Management?
After checking out my branch in Egit, I switched to the Java View, then used File-->Import, Git-->Projects from Git, then selected the top level maven directory. This was with Eclipse Kepler.
Instead of constantly generating project metadata via import->maven command, you can generate your project metadata once and the place it in your git repository along with the rest of your source code. After than, using import->git command will import a proper maven-enabled project, assuming you have maven tools installed.
Make sure to place into the source control system all files in project dir that start with '.' such as .classpath and .project along with the entire contents of the .settings directory.