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I need some help with properly versioning my Android project with Git/Eclipse.
I have no problem setting this up with a single Android project.

However, I am trying to figure out the proper and correct way to set this up, if I add one or more third party Android libraries to my main project (e.g. Facebook SDK).

So currently I am using git-submodules to accomplish this, and here's my directory structure:

/project/android-main.git
   +--- /project/android-main/facebook-sdk

I added facebook-sdk as a git-submodule within my android-main project.
In Eclipse workspace's android-main project, I am seeing the subfolder 'facebook-sdk'.

Then here comes the kludge:
I have to import 'Existing project' from /project/android-main/facebook-sdk as a new project, so that I can reference this project as a library from my android-main project.

In the end, Eclipse workspace has three references to 'facebook-sdk':

  1. The project itself in the workspace.
  2. because I added it as a git-submodule, it showed up as a folder in android-main project.
  3. Another folder 'facebook_sdk_src' is created by the Android SDK plugin in android-main project.

This seems to clutter the workspace and the main project, if I add more submodules.
Am I doing it right?
Is there a better way to use Android Libraries as a submodule in Eclipse?

3
  • You current solution bears some resemblance with stackoverflow.com/questions/5091946/…
    – VonC
    Mar 25, 2011 at 12:25
  • Are 1 and 2 different checkouts (modifying files in one doesn't affect the other)? Sounds like 1 is a clone of the remote and 2 is a submodule clone of the local.
    – idbrii
    Apr 2, 2011 at 16:36
  • If you have two checkouts, you don't need to have the project itself in the workspace. You can add a submodule directly from a remote.
    – idbrii
    Apr 2, 2011 at 16:57

1 Answer 1

2

All of my Android projects are at the same level. Eclipse displays each project twice: in the workspace (workspace/library) and inside projects that reference it (workspace/project/library_src).

You could try making both facebook-sdk and android-main submodules so that they're at the same level. Something like this:

/project/
   +--- android-main.git
   +--- android-project/
           +--- android-main/
           +--- facebook-sdk/

So create a bare repo for your android project (android-main.git). This repo doesn't need to be in your workspace. Then add a subfolder for your code (android-project) and add your submodules.

4
  • Thanks, it turns out EGit (Eclipse Git plugin) does not support submodules too well, so I have to look at other solutions.
    – azgolfer
    Apr 3, 2011 at 4:18
  • I would not recommend using EGit - it is very half-baked and presents many problems especially in a large environment.
    – jjNford
    May 25, 2012 at 17:17
  • 1
    I think the other solution that works very well is, the terminal :)
    – philipp
    Nov 15, 2012 at 21:53
  • See also this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/302089/git-plugin-for-eclipse
    – idbrii
    Nov 16, 2012 at 19:09

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