Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

We have tested this with the latest Eclipse version (Kepler).

Set up Eclipse

m2eclipse

m2eclipse (m2e) provides reasonable integration of a maven project in Eclipse. Luckily, the m2e plugin is part of the standard Eclipse bundle since the Indigo release. If you have an older version of Eclipse (Helios or older), you'll have to install the plugin manually (it is not clear if that's supported any more - please consult the interwebs).

Subclipse

Whatever your Eclipse version, you'll need to make sure you have a Subversion plugin - either Subclipse or Subversve. We use Subclipse - to install it, follow instructions here: Subclipse installation. We use version 1.8 (later versions don't have the SvnKit option yet, which is what works in MacOSX). Once installed (requires a restart of Eclipse), go to Preferences->Team->SVN and select SvnKit as client interface

m2eclipse Subclipse connector

You will also need to add the subclipse connector for m2e, in order to checkout the project directly as a maven project. To do so, go to Preferences -> Maven -> Discovery, click on Open Catalog scroll until you see the connector m2e-subclipse (in the Team Providers section) and install it.

Check out the eagle-i code

Open the SVN perspective and add the eagle-i svn repository: https://open.med.harvard.edu/svn/eagle-i-devImage Removed

Right click on trunk and select Checkout as Maven project.... You can accept the defaults or customize as you please (e.g. add a prefix to all checked-out projects, add to a filtered list, etc.). If you're prompted to select additional m2e connectors, accept the suggestions and continue. After a little while you'll see Eclipse building the workspace. A full build will take quite some time. Note that this initial build is not a maven compilation, but an Eclipse compilation.

...