I'm trying to move a build which generates sources using an annotation processor to Maven. I've tried configuring the maven-compiler-plugin as follows:

	<plugins>
		<plugin>
			<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
			<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
			<configuration>
				<fork>true</fork>
				<compilerArgument>-s ${project.build.directory}/target/generated-sources/annotation-processing</compilerArgument>
			</configuration>
		</plugin>
	</plugins>

But javac fails with

[INFO] Compilation failure  
Failure executing javac,  but could not parse the error:
javac: invalid flag: -s /home/robert/workspaces/betbrain/sportsengine.common/sportsengine.bean.test/target/target/generated-sources/annotation-processing  
Usage: javac <options> <source files>  
use -help for a list of possible options

As far as I can tell, -s should be passed before the source files to javac, but maven passes it after.

How can I pass the -s flag properly to the maven-compiler-plugin?


Update: the maven-annotation-plugin does not seem to work.

When configured as

		<plugin>
			<groupId>org.bsc.maven</groupId>
			<artifactId>maven-processor-plugin</artifactId>
			<version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
			<executions>
				<execution>
					<id>process</id>
					<goals>
						<goal>process</goal>
					</goals>
					<phase>generate-sources</phase>
					<configuration>
						<outputDirectory>${generated.sources.directory}</outputDirectory>
						<processors>
							<processor>xxx.annotation.EnforceJavaBeansConventionsProcessor</processor>
						</processors>
					</configuration>
				</execution>
			</executions>
		</plugin>

Execution fails with

[INFO] [processor:process {execution: process}]
error: Annotation processor 'xxx.annotation.EnforceJavaBeansConventionsProcessor' not found
1 error
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75% accept rate
Thanks to mentioning maven-annotation-plugin. It worked for me. – Ivan Nevostruev Feb 15 at 18:36
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5 Answers

I may be missing something but shouldn't you:

  1. Generate sources in target/generated-sources/annotation-processing during the generate-sources phase? The apt-maven-plugin or the maven-annotation-plugin could help.

  2. Include generated sources when compiling sources into target/classes using <includes> in the maven-compiler-plugin or the maven-build-helper-plugin?

EDIT: Where is xxx.annotation.EnforceJavaBeansConventionsProcessor located? Don't you need to add dependencies to the configuration of the maven-annotation-plugin as documented on the Usage page?

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.bsc.maven</groupId>
  <artifactId>maven-processor-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <id>process</id>
      <goals>
        <goal>process</goal>
      </goals>
      <phase>generate-sources</phase>
      <configuration>
        <outputDirectory>src/main/generated</outputDirectory><!-- PROCESSOR OUT DIR --> 
        <processors><!-- LIST OF PROCESSOR CLASS(S) -->
          <processor>org.bsc.apt.BeanInfoAnnotationProcessor</processor>
        </processors>
      </configuration> 
    </execution>
  </executions>
  <dependencies/><!-- ADD DEPENDENCIES HERE IF REQUIRED -->
</plugin>

PS: I wouldn't use src/main/generated as output directory but rather a subdirectory of target/generated-sources.

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Yes, I should. How should I perform step 1? – Robert Munteanu Oct 19 '09 at 11:38
Do you use the maven-apt-plugin or the maven-annotation-plugin? – Pascal Thivent Oct 19 '09 at 11:47
I am now investigating the maven-annotation-plugin - since I'm using the Java 6 APIs, but apparently I'm required to list the processor I'm using, and I can't pass those in properly. Is it possible to bind the maven-compiler-plugin to the generate-sources phase? – Robert Munteanu Oct 19 '09 at 12:28
Please see my update about the maven-annotation-plugin. – Robert Munteanu Oct 19 '09 at 12:37
feedback

Not exactly an answer to your question, but of interest:

http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MCOMPILER-75

I'm afraid there are a number of issues using JSR 269 in Maven, at least with the default compiler plugin.

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With maven-compiler-plugin 2.2, you should not need to do anything to get 269 to discover default processors. – Jesse Glick Oct 6 '10 at 18:16
+1 Jesse Glick should have a higher reputation – Daniel Bell Apr 13 '11 at 10:35
feedback

One reason for this could be that $JAVA_HOME is pointing to jdk 1.5 version instead of 1.6. (on windows check %JAVA_HOME% of course)

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up vote 0 down vote accepted

The plugin was using the harcoded Windows classpath separator to build the classpath, so it was failing on my Linux machine.

Submitted patches:

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Good to know. Thanks for the patches :) – Pascal Thivent Oct 19 '09 at 14:28
feedback

I got the same problem ...


[ERROR] COMPILATION ERROR :

[INFO] -------------------------------------------------------------

[ERROR] Failure executing javac, but could not parse the error:

javac: invalid flag: -s
...

Are you using java 5 ?

$ mvn -version

Apache Maven 2.2.1 (rdebian-8)

Java version: 1.5.0_22

Java home: /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.5.0-sun-1.5.0.22/jre

Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: UTF-8

OS name: "linux" version: "3.2.0-24-generic" arch: "amd64" Family: "unix"

$ which java
/usr/bin/java

$ ll /usr/bin/java
/usr/bin/java -> /etc/alternatives/java*

$ ll /etc/alternatives/java
/etc/alternatives/java -> /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.5.0-sun/jre/bin/java*

$ sudo update-alternatives --config java



$ mvn -version

Apache Maven 2.2.1 (rdebian-8)

Java version: 1.6.0_24

Java home: /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk-amd64/jre

Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: UTF-8

OS name: "linux" version: "3.2.0-24-generic" arch: "amd64" Family: "unix"

now, mvn install should work :-)

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