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When building our Java applications in Eclipse, the Spring builder is very slow and gives no status updates.

Specifically, I start building a project, and Eclipse's Progress pane displays

Invoking 'Spring Project Builder' on 'project name'...

for multiple minutes at a time, with no additional details.

I've already turned off the Spring AOP Reference Model Builder, and I just recently disabled the Spring project builder completely out of desperation.

I'm just building and using these projects, not developing them, so theoretically they should compile fine - but this is our development branch, so I'd still like to keep Spring on in case there's a nasty reflection error somewhere.

So, in order to keep using them, is there anything I can do to:

  1. Speed the Spring portion of the build?
  2. Display more detailed output during the Spring project building process?

Edit 2010-02-15 21:39 GMT:

I'm specifically referring to the Spring IDE plugin in Eclipse.

2 Answers 2

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I'm assuming you're referring either to the Spring IDE plugin for Eclipse, or the SpringSource ToolSuite bundle.

The big performance killer that I've nailed down is the processing of <import resource="..."/> entries in the beans files. The plugin has an option for enabling the processing of these, and if turned on, it absolutely hammers performance - it searches the entire classpath (including libraries) for each imported resource, ever ytime something changes. I reported this as a bug, and thankfully it's been fixed, but not yet released.

The <import> support is just a nice-to-have, though, since you can manually add the imported files directly. Turning it off makes the whole experience much more edifying.

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  • Yes, I'm referring to the Spring IDE plugin (I wasn't aware of SpringSource). I looked for references to the <import> tag, and unfortunately we don't use it. Thanks for the detailed answer, though!
    – mskfisher
    Feb 15, 2010 at 21:38
  • @mskfisher: Curses, I thought I had it, there. OK, try this instead - download a copy of VisualVM, and use it to take a series of stack dumps of Eclipse while it's in this "waiting" stage. This is often quite informative in telling you what it's spending its time doing.
    – skaffman
    Feb 15, 2010 at 21:52
  • Sweet, Monte Carlo profiling. This is going to be fun to try tomorrow. :)
    – mskfisher
    Feb 15, 2010 at 22:12
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    The profiler looks like it's going to be my best option, even though it hasn't pointed directly to anything yet. I'm accepting this answer specifically for the VisualVM suggestion.
    – mskfisher
    Feb 19, 2010 at 14:00
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Try checking your validators. I remember having some issues at one point because I had a bunch of plugins installed which added a number of validators to my project and the build process took forever mostly because of checking all the XML.

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