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I am following this Contract first using CXF tutorial.

All was going well, including generating sources from the WSDL, using build-helper-maven-plugin but when time came to "implement the service", i.e. move the generated RegistryResourceImpl.java to the normal source folder src/main/java, Eclipse started complaining about some symbols (like the interface RegistryResource) not being recognized.

Realizing that the normal src/main/java folder is assigned a different package name, I simply added in the RegistryResourceImpl.java the import for the package where RegistryResource.java belongs:

import com.yourcompany.sample.ns.RegistryResource;

But Eclipse in its current project configuration appears to be blind to com.yourcompany.sample.ns, not knowing where to find it.

I tried finding an option in the Build Path to point to the generated sources but none of what I tried helped.

I have a feeling I am missing something very trivial but what is it?

Also, shouldn't m2e (Maven plugin for Eclipse) already handle that kind of moving implementation files automatically?

Update (after trying @Patrick's suggested solution):

  1. target/generated/src/main/java doesn't exist, but checking the "Create new folder" box, I was able to create it.
  2. However, upon pom.xml > Run As > Maven clean, it gets deleted (so needs to be re-created after every clean???)
  3. If not re-creating after clean, doing pom.xml > Run As > Maven install, creates the generates source under a totally different tree: generated-sources/cxf/com/yourcompany/sample/ns. Why???
  4. Yet, the RegistryResourceImpl.java module is still automatically created under target/generated sources. At this point, I no longer see complaints about "unresolved package/imports/symbols" (weird).
  5. But... as soon as it is being moved to non-target folder/package, i.e. com.yourcompany.sample.ns under src/main/java, "import com.yourcompany.sample.ns.RegistryType;" cannot be resolved again!

On the other hand, if I try to add as a "source folder" the actual generated path generated-sources/cxf/com/yourcompany/sample/ns (instead of the irrelevant/non-existent target/generated/src/main/java, the generated tree under target is moved (deleted) to under /src/main/java. I don't understand this behavior of Eclipse.

Lastly, even when I do the Maven > Update Project suggested here, thereby getting rid the "Maven 2 project error icon", the RegistryResourceImpl.java module still shows unresolved symbols, although the entire project build perfectly fine!

What could explain this?

Is it possible that the build-helper-maven-plugin is incomplete or even broken?

Is there a way to make CXF + build-helper-maven-plugin work harmoniously with Eclipse so that I don't see those disturbing red underlines of "unresolved symbols" even when the project builds successfully?

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  • Are all the projects compiling in your workspace ? Because sometime dependent projects have errors. If you are referring to a jar for the mentioned import, check if you have multiple versions of it, which one you are using. Aug 16, 2013 at 15:12

4 Answers 4

7

You need to add a source folder in Eclipse for your generated sources. The tutorial mentions this in its comment "Note: M2Eclipse doesnt seem to pick up on this source folder so you will have to add it manually in eclipse." If you followed the directions at the tutorial, the location you need to add should be (relative to your project directory)

target/generated/src/main/java

To add the folder, open your project properties and select "Java Build Path" from the left hand menu. From the "Source" tab, press the "Add Folder..." button, and select "target/generated/src/main/java" as the source folder.

Please not that Maven will remove the generated folders when running a mvn clean install. You may want to configure Eclipse to refresh resources when you run this command, in order to avoid inconsistencies. The Eclipse run configuration includes a Refresh tab that allows you to enable "refresh resources upon completion."

Another option you might consider is skipping the use of Maven for your wsimport needs. I would call wsimport directly, put the generated artifacts under your src/main/java folder, and be done with it. Unless you really need to re-generate the artifacts with each build, I think the Maven plugin is more trouble than its worth.

3
  • Your answer brought me closer to solving the problem but please see my update and I would appreciate it if you could explain why the build system (i.e. Eclipse + CXF + Maven) is behaving so weirdly as it does. Thanks +1. Aug 13, 2013 at 2:34
  • I added some more detail to my answer. Let me know if that helps.
    – Patrick
    Aug 14, 2013 at 22:38
  • It is generally considered a bad practice to add generated classes in src/main/java. Its good practice to generate them under target and add to build path for example with build-helper-maven-plugin if there is no connector.
    – JSamir
    Sep 6, 2018 at 20:02
3
+50

If not re-creating after clean, doing pom.xml > Run As > Maven install, creates the generates source under a totally different tree: generated-sources/cxf/com/yourcompany/sample/ns. Why???

You need to configure the cxf-codegen-plugin to output the generated code to the desired folder.

...
<configuration>
    <sourceRoot>${basedir}/target/generated/src/main/java</sourceRoot>
    ...  
</configuration>  

Then either install a connector for cxf-codegen-plugin (that is, if one is available) or use maven build-helper-maven-plugin with its connector. Make sure that sources point to the same place as sourceRoot.

<configuration>
    <sources>
        <source>${basedir}/target/generated/src/main/java</source>
    </sources>
</configuration>

ps: To install / discover connectors go to Preferences -> Maven -> Discover

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  • 2
    This seems the best tip so far as to how to change the path for the generated sources. Looks like I need to do a Ph.D. in each an every Maven plugin... Is there a central reference that can provide a recipe from A to Z on how to properly configure a Maven project with idiosyncrasies and requirements each such plugin has? Aug 16, 2013 at 19:09
0

The problem is that the generated sources folder has many other class definitions which are also needed by the RegistryResourceImpl class. You need to add the generated source folder as a source code location in the maven pom. A similar question has a decent answer.

Appropriated from that answer:

 <plugin>
    <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
    <artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <id>add-source</id>
            <phase>generate-sources</phase>
            <goals>
                <goal>add-source</goal>
            </goals>
            <configuration>
                <sources>
                    <source>${project.build.directory}/generated-sources/java/</source>
                </sources>
            </configuration>
        </execution>
    </executions>
 </plugin>
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  • 3
    Thanks. I have already done that. That's not the source of the problem. The problem appears much later, after the sources have been generated and only when I try to move one of them to a different source/package path. Ideas? Aug 2, 2013 at 23:20
0

Are you sure you want to generate these sources with every build? From the looks of it, the generate-sources from the cxf-codegen-plugin only generate stub files, which you then have to modify (the "Implement the service" part that you mentioned) to fully complete the file. In that case, you wouldn't want the generate-sources to overwrite your file on every build anyway, no? That should be something that you have to explicitly invoke (a maven profile would be a good candidate; or perhaps something that triggers off an edit to the wsdl file). You could then generate to target or some arbitrary (non-source) directory when explicitly requested, and pull/merge those files into the standard src/main/java portion. If the files were generated complete, then it would be a different story, but since you're expected to generate then edit then full build it's not really a one-shot deal...

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