Get source jar files attached to Eclipse for Maven-managed dependencies - eclipse

I am using Maven (and the Maven Eclipse Integration) to manage the dependencies for my Java projects in Eclipse. The automatic download feature for JAR files from the Maven repositories is a real time saver. Unfortunately, it does not include API documentation and source code.
How can I set up Maven to automatically also get the source and javadoc attachments and register them properly with Eclipse?

I am sure m2eclipse Maven plugin for Eclipse - the other way around - can do that. You can configure it to download both the source files and javadoc automatically for you.
This is achieved by going into Window > Preferences > Maven and checking the "Download Artifact Sources" and "Download Artifact JavaDoc" options.

mvn eclipse:eclipse -DdownloadSources=true
or
mvn eclipse:eclipse -DdownloadJavadocs=true
or you can add both flags, as Spencer K points out.
Additionally, the =true portion is not required, so you can use
mvn eclipse:eclipse -DdownloadSources -DdownloadJavadocs

The other answers on this work, but if you want to avoid having to remember command line arguments, you can also just add to the downloadSources and downloadJavadocs config to the maven-eclipse-plugin section of your pom.xml:
<project>
...
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
<downloadJavadocs>true</downloadJavadocs>
... other stuff ...
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
...
</project>

I prefer not to put source/Javadoc download settings into the project pom.xml file as I feel these are user preferences, not project properties. Instead, I place them in a profile in my settings.xml file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd">
<profiles>
<profile>
<id>sources-and-javadocs</id>
<properties>
<downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
<downloadJavadocs>true</downloadJavadocs>
</properties>
</profile>
</profiles>
<activeProfiles>
<activeProfile>sources-and-javadocs</activeProfile>
</activeProfiles>
</settings>

Right click on project -> maven -> download sources

If the source jars are in the local repository and you are using Eclipses maven support the sources are getting automatically attached. You can run mvn dependency:sources to download all source jars for a given project. Not sure how to do the same with the documentation though.

If you are using meclipse do
window --> maven --> Download Artifact Sources (select check)
(If you still get attach source window, then click on attach file button and close the attach source window. The next time you try to see the source it will open the correct source)

There is also a similiar question that answers this and includes example pom settings.

I tried windows->pref..->Maven But it was not working out. Hence I created a new class path with command mvn eclipse:eclipse -DdownloadSources=true and refreshed the workspace once. voila.. Sources were attached.
Source jar's entry is available in class path. Hence new build solved the problem...

in my version of Eclipse helios with m2Eclipse there is no
window --> maven --> Download Artifact Sources (select check)
Under window is only "new window", "new editor" "open perspective" etc.
If you right click on your project, then chose maven--> download sources
Nothing happens. no sources get downloaded, no pom files get updated, no window pops up asking which sources.
Doing mvn xxx outside of eclipse is dangerous - some commands dont work with m2ecilpse - I did that once and lost the entire project, had to reinstall eclipse and start from scratch.
Im still looking for a way to get ecilpse and maven to find and use the source of external jars like servlet-api.

Changing pom for maven-eclipse-plugin to include source/javadoc just apply for new dependencies being added to pom. If we need to apply for existing dependencies, we must run mvn dependency:sources. I checked this.

Checking download source/javadoc in Eclipse-Maven preference, sometimes is not enough. In the event maven failed to download them for some reason (a network blackout?), maven creates some *.lastUpdated files, then will never download again. My empirical solution was to delete the artifact directory from .m2/repository, and restart the eclipse workspace with download source/javadoc checked and update projects at startup checked as well.
After the workspace has been restarted, maybe some projects can be marked in error, while eclipse progress is downloading, then any error will be cleared.
Maybe this procedure is not so "scientific", but for me did succeded.

I've added the pom configuration to the maven-eclipse plugin to download source and javadocs, but I figure/hope that will happen for new dependencies, not existing ones.
For existing dependencies, I browsed in package explorer down to the "Maven Dependencies" and right-clicked on commons-lang-2.5.jar, selected Maven | Download Sources and... nothing appeared to happen (no progress bar or indication that it was doing anything). It did, however, download as I'm able to jump to source in commons-lang now.

overthink suggested using the setup in the pom:
<project>
...
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
<downloadJavadocs>true</downloadJavadocs>
... other stuff ...
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plgins>
</build>
...
First i thought this still won't attach the javadoc and sources (as i tried unsuccessfully with that -DdownloadSources option before).
But surprise - the .classpath file IS getting its sources and javadoc attached when using the POM variant!

For Indigo (and probably Helios) the checkboxes mentioned above are located here:
Window -> Preferences -> Maven

I had a similar problem, and the solution that worked best for me was to include the source in the same jar as the compiled code (so a given directory in the jar would include both Foo.java and Foo.class). Eclipse automatically associates the source with the compiled code, and automatically provides the JavaDoc from the source. Obviously, that's only helpful if you control the artifact.

After Setting the Properties either at Project Level or User Properties level,
Please do a Maven -> Update Project (Force Update). It downloads the sources

A Small addition to the answer, if your project is not a maven project still you can get the source code of the jars, by using this plugin provided in eclipse
Java Source Attacher

Related

Creating second customized POM in eclipse

Within a maven project under eclipse, I want to have a second(or customized) pom.xml in which I can use plugings like the assembly-plugin.
The problem with this plugin is that it requieres an outputh path which is only interesting for me.
Since I'm using git to push to a remote repository, I don't want to pollute the version controlled pom.xml with my private paths and other stuff.
I read about inheritance and multi-mode possibilities, but I only need two poms:
1) One for the public with general settings
2) One only for me with cusotimzed build options
I tried to create a second pom file and wanted to build the project with a new run configuration, but I don't know how to pass the -f parameter(which should call a different pom) in that dialog.
Thanks for hints or best practices.
Example of what I want to put in the custom pom:
<plugin>
<artifactId>maven-assembly-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.1</version>
<configuration>
<outputDirectory>some\private\path</outputDirectory>
<finalName>SomeName</finalName>
<descriptorRefs>
<descriptorRef>jar-with-dependencies</descriptorRef>
</descriptorRefs>
<appendAssemblyId>true</appendAssemblyId>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Select the second POM in the Package Explorer, right click -> Run As -> Maven Build...
That should run Maven with the custom POM.
If you don't get the Maven options in the "Run As" menu, go to the "Content Types" preferences page -> Text -> XML -> Maven POM XML.
Add the name of your custom POM so Eclipse understands that this is also a POM (I'm not 100% sure it will look inside a file to determine the type).
If that also fails, you can use a trick: Write a small tool that takes the unmodified POM, adds the XML which you need and then runs Maven. On Linux, you can use shell scripts for that. On Windows, a small Java program might be easier. Or have a look at PowerShell.

Failed to resolve version for org.apache.maven.archetypes

I have configured maven3.0.3 in my local machine. Have installed m2e eclipse plugin.
But when i try to create a new maven project using maven-archetype-webapp, i get the following exception.
Could not resolve archetype org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype-webapp:RELEASE from any of the configured repositories.
Could not resolve artifact org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp:pom:RELEASE
Failed to resolve version for org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp:pom:RELEASE: Could not find metadata org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp/maven-metadata.xml in local ([HOME]/.m2/repository)
Failed to resolve version for org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp:pom:RELEASE: Could not find metadata org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp/maven-metadata.xml in local ([HOME]/.m2/repository)
I do some processing behind a proxy and the proxy configurations are updated in {HOME}/.m2/settings.xml and M2_HOME/conf/settings.xml.
The archetype generate command works fine in command line. It downloaded the dependencies through proxy.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Edit 05-10-2012
While creating a new Maven Web project in eclipse, the archetype "maven-archetype-webapp" version is displayed as RELEASE. Is this in anyway linked?
I had the same problem. I fixed it by adding the maven archetype catalog to eclipse. Steps are provided below:
Open Window > Preferences
Open Maven > Archetypes
Click 'Add Remote Catalog' and add the following:
Catalog File: https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/archetype-catalog.xml
Description: maven catalog
I found the following tutorial very useful.
Step1: The maven command used to create the web app:
mvn archetype:generate -DgroupId=test.aasweb -DartifactId=TestWebApp -DarchetypeArtifactId=maven-archetype-webapp
Step2: The following entry was added onto the project's pom.xml.
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.0.2</version>
<configuration>
<source>1.6</source>
<target>1.6</target>
</configuration>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<wtpapplicationxml>true</wtpapplicationxml>
<wtpversion>1.5</wtpversion>
<downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
<downloadJavadocs>true</downloadJavadocs>
<classpathContainers>
<classpathContainer>
org.eclipse.jst.j2ee.internal.web.container
</classpathContainer>
<classpathContainer>
org.eclipse.jst.j2ee.internal.module.container
</classpathContainer>
/classpathContainers>
<additionalProjectFacets>
<jst.web>2.5</jst.web>
<jst.jsf>1.2</jst.jsf>
</additionalProjectFacets>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Step3: Run the maven command to convert into eclipse project format.
mvn eclipse:clean eclipse:eclipse
Step4: Import the project onto eclipse as Existing Maven project.
If you are using eclipse, you can follow the steps here (maven in 5 min not working) for getting your proxy information. Once done follow the steps below:
Go to Maven installation folder C:\apache-maven-3.1.0\conf\
Copy settings.xml to C:\Users\[UserFolder]\.m2
Modify the proxy in settings.xml based on the info that you get from the above link.
<proxy>
<active>true</active>
<protocol>http</protocol>
<host>your proxy</host>
<port>your port</port>
</proxy>
Open eclipse
Go to: Windows > Preferences > Maven > User Settings
Browse the settings.xml from .m2 folder
Click Update Settings
Click Reindex
Apply the changes and Click OK
You can now try to create Maven Project in Eclipse
Read carefully about the reason.
"Failed to resolve version for org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp:pom:RELEASE: Could not find metadata org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype- webapp/maven-metadata.xml in local"
So all you need to do is download the maven-metadata.xml
to your {HOME}.m2\repository
That's it.
You do need to have a settings.xml linked under user settings (Located in preferences under maven)
But, if that doesn't fix it, like it didn't for many of you. You also have to delete the directory:
.m2/repository/org/apache/maven/archetypes/maven-archetype-quickstart
then quit eclipse and try again.
This is what solved my problem.
Go to Windows-> Preference-> Maven -> User settings
Select settings.xml of Maven
Restart Eclipse
I had a similar problem building from just command line Maven. I eventually got past that error by adding -U to the maven arguments.
Depending on how you have your source repository configuration set up in your settings.xml, sometimes Maven fails to download a particular artifact, so it assumes that the artifact can't be downloaded, even if you change some settings that would give Maven visibility to the artifact if it just tried. -U forces Maven to look again.
Now you need to make sure that the artifact Maven is looking for is in at least one of the repositories that is referenced by your settings.xml. To know for sure, run
mvn help:effective-settings
from the directory of the module you are trying to build. That should give you, among other things, a complete list of the repositories you Maven is using to look for the artifact.
I too had same problem but after searching solved this. go to menu --> window-->preferences-->maven-->Installations-->add--> in place of installation home add path to the directory in which you installed maven-->finish-->check the box of newly added content-->apply-->ok. now create new maven project but remember try with different group id and artifact id.
The right way to solve my problem are as followed. Hope to be helpful to others.
the errors informations.
Could not resolve archetype org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype-webapp:1.0 from any of the configured repositories. Could not resolve artifact org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype-webapp:pom:1.0 Failure to transfer org.apache.maven.archetypes:maven-archetype-webapp:pom:1.0
Delete the maven-archetype-webapp:1.0 in the directory ~/.m2/repository/org/Apache/maven/archetypes
Download the maven-archetype-webapp:1.0 and the maven-archetype-webapp-1.0.pom from
http://maven.ibiblio.org/maven2/org/apache/maven/archetypes/maven-archetype-webapp/1.0/
execute mvn install:install-file -DgroupId=org.apache.maven.archetypes -DartifactId=maven-archetype-quickstart -Dversion=1.1 -Dpackaging=jar -Dfile=此处填maven-archetype-webapp-1.0的路径.
try to establish a maven project of webapp to test whether the problem has solved.
Create New User Environment Variables:
MAVEN_HOME=D:\apache-maven-3.5.3
MAVEN=D:\apache-maven-3.5.3\bin
MAVEN_OPTS=-Xms256m -Xmx512m
Appened below in Path variable (System Variable):
;D:\apache-maven-3.5.3\bin;
This worked for me:- navigate to windows-> preferences-> maven
and check the "download artifacts sources" and click apply.
No need to do all above lengthy steps.
Simply delete c:\Users\.m2\Repository\org folder
Maven will automatically downloads what it needs
I simple use below steps:
Create Maven project -> check checkobox -> "Create a simple project (skip archetype selection)"
It works for me
I downloaded the jar and pom from:
here
and put them here:
\.m2\repository\org\apache\maven\archetypes\maven-archetype-quickstart\1.1\
I also got same error ....And i found that my internet connection is closed so eclipse is unable to download repositories for webapps archetypes and when i got internet connection i just created again maven project with webapps archetypes and my eclipse downloaded repositories and its done...
This is 100% working:
Delete the .m2 folder which is present in your Desktop>User
connect your pc to the Internet
Create your maven project again
Thats it, hope it helps
Try , It worked for = I just removed "archetypes" folder from below location
C:\Users\Lenovo.m2\repository\org\apache\maven
But you may change following for experiment - download latest binary zip of Maven, add to you C:\ drive and change following....
Change Proxy
<proxy>
<id>optional</id>
<active>true</active>
<protocol>http</protocol>
<username></username>
<password></password>
<host>10.23.73.253</host>
<port>8080</port>
<nonProxyHosts>local.net|some.host.com</nonProxyHosts>
</proxy>
I had the same problem i solved it by only adding remote catalog
in eclipse go to Window -> Preferences ->Maven ->Archetypes ->click on add remote Catalog then a window will open in that paste
http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/archetype-catalog.xml
in that catalog file then hit ok restart eclipse now all working fine
The problem may also come from that you haven't set MAVEN_HOME environment variable. So the Maven embedded in Eclipse can't do its job to download the archetype.Check if that variable is set upfront.

Eclipse/Maven: JUnit tests not compiled when running them

I am working on a project using Maven and Eclipse (m2eclipse plugin). I've got problems with the JUnit tests:
Sometimes, when running them within Eclipse, they wont be compiled, but the old class files are used instead. When I delete the class files, I get ClassNotFoundExceptions in Eclipse. I then have to manually recompile them by using mvn test-compile or other goals.
I also noticed that the class files of the tests sometimes are put into the classes subdirectory instead of test-classes.
I really can't figure out what is wrong.
The JUnit java files are within src/main/java and are correctly named (*Test.java).
Do I have to compile and run them always via Maven? Why doesn't Eclipse compile the files when I want to run them? (Interestingly, sometimes it does. Sometimes everything works perfectly.)
I had the same problem with STS Eclipse (Spring development variant), m2e and JUnit. The solution was to set the output folder for src/test/java to target/test-classes:
Right click the src/test/java folder in the Package Explorer
Select Build Path -> Configure Output Folder
Enter target/test-classes, click OK
Now the changes in test classes are compiled correctly and you should be able to run JUnit tests in Eclipse.
The problem is that Eclipse compiles the unit tests to the default output folder target/classes while JUnit plugin correctly tries to run them from test-classes.
There are a few duplicates to this question:
ClassNotFoundException when running JUnit unit tests within Eclipse (using Maven)
Eclipse doesn't see my new junit test
junit not using the newest file
In addition to the answer below
Right click the src/test/java folder
Select Build Path -> Configure Output Folder
Enter target/test-classes, click OK
you should check to ensure that your builder is setup correctly by right clicking your project and going to Properties -> Builder. If you see that your builder is missing, you need to install one. In my case, the maven project had an AspectJ dependency and when I used the Maven Eclipse plugin to build my Eclipse project, it was looking for an AspectJ builder by default. I installed the AspectJ development tools and it solved the problem.
Hope this helps!
The most likely explanations for the problem you are facing is that the output folder of src/test/java is not correctly configured.
Instead of fixing this configuration manually, you can have m2eclipse fix this for you: Just right-click on the project and choose Maven > Update Project.
And another point: JUnit test classes should be in src/test/java, not src/main/java, otherwise they aren't detected correctly by Maven as test classes and they would be included in the packaged jar and not in the test jar.
I faced same issue. Tried above suggestions of configuring output folder & Maven>Update Project but neither worked. Finally changed my testOutputDirectory to "build/classes" as well and now Unit Tests are getting picked up and executed.
Finally found the reason for the issue. In my pom we had also configured maven compiler plugin as below
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.3.2</version>
<configuration>
<source>1.6</source>
<target>1.6</target>
<outputDirectory>build/classes</outputDirectory>
</configuration>
</plugin>
outputDirectory configuration is not needed and was the cause of above issue. After removing this tag, junits are getting compiled to build>testclasses folder and are being run during maven build as well. Yippee :)
Please check "testSourceDirectory" path which can be configured in your
pom.xml. And then, Add the folder (configured in "testSourceDirectory" path) to the eclipse build path.
Please find the sample "testSourceDirectory" in pom.xml below:
<build>
<testSourceDirectory>src/test/java</testSourceDirectory>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<source>1.8</source>
<target>1.8</target>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
Make sure that is there any exclamation mark on your project icon! In my case, i ignored that there is a exclamation point like:
exclamation point on project icon
Open the "Markers" perspective, then troubleshoot the problems according to the tips.
what the "Markers" perspective show
The junit test classes can be execute successfully after i called "mvn clean test" because they are not refer the unreadable jar which be warned in "Markers" perspective.Therefor, it's easily to ignore it..
For someone working on java-scala mix project, this is something to note.
Even after doing the configuration in the manner shown below,
<build>
<testOutputDirectory>${basedir}/target/test-classes</testOutputDirectory>
<plugins>
...
<plugin>
<groupId>net.alchim31.maven</groupId>
<artifactId>scala-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.3.2</version>
<configuration>
<testSourceDir>${basedir}/src/test/scala</testSourceDir>
<testOutputDir>${basedir}/target/test-classes</testOutputDir>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
and doing a Maven > Update Project, eclipse honours the output directory of the src/test/java folder in the project, however, not for the src/test/scala folder. (You can figure this out by right-clicking on the specific source folder and choosing Build Path > Configure Output Folder... which should display the location as specified in the pom for the former case, however, not for the later case.
This is already a known bug for using scala with m2e as mentioned here: http://scala-ide.org/docs/tutorials/m2eclipse/
Warning
As of March 2013, a bug causes both src/main/scala and src/test/scala to use the default output folder (target/classes). This may be confusing >when building tests, since their class files will not end in target/test-classes, as they would when building on the command line. You can work around this by manually changing the output folder for src/test/scala.
Eclipse is not expecting anything else to be mucking with the class files. It assumes that if you haven't editted the file in eclipse it hasn't changed and doesn't need compiling. I think the issue stems from eclipse and maven sharing an output directory. I've often seen this if my mvn build fails, it will have deleted the class files as part of the clean but not compiled new ones. I think the best solution would be to have seperate build dirs for mvn and eclipse, but I've never look into this.
My problem wasn't the JUnit plugin but rather the configuration in my pom.xml.
After reviewing all the answers to this question, #Gulats's answer implied to me that I should try setting a testOutputDirectory in my maven-compiler-plugin section, and that did the trick:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<source>1.8</source>
<target>1.8</target>
<testOutputDir>${basedir}/target/test-classes</testOutputDir>
</configuration>
</plugin>

Eclipse doesn't find source attachements

When opening a class included through a Maven dependency, Eclipse tells me that the containing .jar file has got no source attachment.
But in the directory in which the .jar file resides, there is also as corresponding -sources.jar file.
Do you have any hints regarding the solution of this problem?
Is there a way to tell Eclipse where it should automatically look for the source attachment?
Edit: In the Eclipse .classpath file, the sourcepath value is set for external archives, but not for ours. But both jars and sources file reside in the same repo.
The property -Declipse.useProjectReferences=false is also set.
The problem was that there were already sources.jar-not-available files for certain projects in my local repository.
I've deleted them and now the attachment of source files is working. Obviously Eclipse respectively the Maven Eclipse plugin doesn't look for source attachments as long as these marker files exist.
If it hadn't been for the comment from K. Claszen I'd have never came up with this solution.
Check that you have downloadSources in the maven-eclipse-plugin section of your pom.xml:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
<downloadJavadocs>true</downloadJavadocs>
...
</configuration>
</plugin>
If you are using m2eclipse plugin for integrating Maven projects in Eclipse, you might need to enable downloading sources and javadocs in m2eclipse preferences:
Window > Preferences > Maven > Download Artifact Sources
For me the file was in place in local repo and eclipse (4.5) kept complaining there is no associated source jar (sources.jar-not-available did not existed). I ended up removing the directory from local repo, letting eclipse to download the sources again repolulating the repo, running mvn eclipse:eclipse and refreshing the project.
For me all these steps was necessary to get this working.
For those who are still having trouble downloading sources for your Maven dependencies (like me), you can try this alternate method:
Find the particular Maven dependency you wished to inspect Java source code for. You need to have the Maven artifact name.
Next, navigate to the Maven repository server where you download the Maven dependency from. For example, I have spring-security-core-5.5.1.jar as my Maven dependency. The repository host site is from mvnrepository.com, in which the repository server is from https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/.
Navigate to mvnrepository.com and search for your Maven dependency artifact. In my case, it would be spring-security-core, and I located the artifact information page here.
On this page, in the table row labeled Files, you want to click on View All, on the right of the JAR link with how many kilobytes displayed to the side. (Underlined)
Once you're viewing the list of all JARs provided with the Maven dependency, click and download the one that says, [artifact name]-[artifact version]-sources.jar. In my case, it's spring-security-core-5.5.1-sources.jar.
Once downloaded, on your local machine, use your File Explorer to navigate to the folder containing the artifact JAR which you have trouble downloading the source codes for. In my case, it would be $MAVEN_HOME/repository/org/springframework/security/spring-security-core/5.5.1.
Move the [artifact name]-[artifact version]-sources.jar into this folder.
Go back into Eclipse, and try attaching the sources. You should be able to pick up the ...-sources.jar file upon attaching it.
After attaching it, you will then be able to see the source codes for your Maven dependency.
Right click at project, select Maven, select Download Sources.
I download a maven project from online,use mvn eclipse:eclipse converted to eclipse project then I occurred the problem.
solution is remove all external lib that start with 'M2_REPO',it's work for me.

Problems by import of a multiple modules maven 2 project into eclipse workspace

I was wondering if someone has experienced the same problem as me and can help me.
I have a maven project which contains 6 modules. Some of modules are depending on each other. The project is written in Java and builds to jars, wars and aar. I've been trying to import it to Eclipse with the m2eclipse plug-in. It seems to work fine until the project builds. During the build process I get hundreds of errors complaining about missing Java files which are generated. As I found out eclipse can't recognize that some of generated packages should be interpreted as source code. I don't realy know what to do with it as I spent a lot of time already trying to solve this issue. The project is building fine with command line. My target is to debug the whole project on Tomcat server that's why I want to use eclipse as it has a pretty good integration with Tomcat.
Every help would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you!
As documented in the Why generated source folders are not added to classpath entry of the FAQ:
Maven plugins used to generate source
code from resources or other sources
can register additional source folders
to Maven project during the build.
Usually such plugins are bound to
process-resources (or
process-test-resources) build phase
(for example jaxb, modello or xdoclet
plugins). This means that to get those
source folders for generated sources,
we have to run corresponding Maven
build phase.
Not all projects using generated
sources, so for performance reasons,
m2eclipse does not run any Maven goals
by default on project import. This can
be changed in the Maven settings in
"Window > Preferences... > Maven >
Goals to run on project import" (e.g.
you can specify "process-resources"
build phase or specific plugins in
that field).
Alternatively you can run "Maven >
Update project configuration" action
from the project popup menu, which is
configured to run "process-resources"
by default and it can be also changed
on the same preference page.
So either add the goal to which the source generation process is bound to the list of goals to run on import or generate sources by running maven and update the project configuration.
Try using mvn eclipse:eclipse
Under the project where you have additionally generated source. When this is generated by maven it is normally under target folder.
Therefor eclipse:eclipse will recognize this and add as a source folder.
Rembember to refresh the project after this.
Use build-helper-maven-plugin (sample bellow) to tell Eclipse to add a generated folder to the build path :
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.8</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<phase>generate-sources</phase>
<goals>
<goal>add-source</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<sources>
<source>target/generated-sources/cxf</source>
</sources>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Add this in the pom of each project that generates sources...