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I want to import existing Maven project into Eclipse. I found 2 ways to do it:

  1. Through running from command line mvn eclipse:eclipse
  2. To install Maven Eclipse plugin from Eclipse.

What is the difference between the both and which one is preferable?

If I install Maven Eclipse plugin through the Eclipse menu Help -> Install New Software, do I still need to modify my pom.xml to include the Maven Eclipse plugin in the plugins section?

8 Answers 8

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I want to import existing maven project into eclipse. I found 2 ways to do it, one is through running from command line mvn eclipse:eclipse and another is to install maven eclipse plugin from eclipse. What is the difference between the both and which one is preferable?

The maven-eclipse-plugin is a Maven plugin which is one of the first plugins available with Maven 1, and one of the first plugins migrated to Maven 2. For a long time it has been the only decent way to integrateimport an existing maven project with Eclipse. Actually, it doesn't provide real integration, it just generates the .project and .classpath files (it has also WTP support) from a Maven project. I've used this plugin for years and was very happy with it (and I've been very unsatisfied with the Eclipse plugins for Maven like m2eclipse).

The m2eclipse plugin is one of the Eclipse plugins for Maven. It's actually the first and most mature of the projects aimed at integrating Maven within the Eclipse IDE (this has not always been the case, it was not really usable ~2 years ago, see the feedback in Mevenide vs. M2Eclipse, Q for Eclipse/IAM). But, even if I do not use things like creating a Maven project from Eclipse or the POM editor or other fancy wizards, I have to say that this plugin is now totally usable, provides very smooth integration, has nice features... In other words, I finally switched to it :) I'd now recommend it to any user (advanced or beginners).

If I install maven eclipse plugin through the eclipse menu Help -> Install New Software, do I still need to modify my pom.xml to include the maven eclipse plugin in the plugins section?

This question is a bit confusing but the answer is no. With the m2eclipse plugin installed, just right-click the package explorer and Import... > Maven projects to import an existing maven project into Eclipse.

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  • 7
    Thanks for the hint about import, I was trying to go through new project, and it was a lot of work for little gain. BTW, when you do this import, Eclipse leaves the files in the original location, it does not copy them to your workspace. Jan 7, 2013 at 18:51
  • Just wanted to clarify the "If I install maven eclipse plugin through the eclipse menu ..." part. You cannot install Maven Eclipse Plugin to Eclipse. Maven Eclipse Plugin is a Maven plugin. It is not an Eclipse plugin. Hence, you cannot install Maven Eclipse Plugin to Eclipse. You can install the M2Eclipse plugin to Eclipse.
    – Utku
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:39
  • A ton of work for little gain. This is exactly why I think Maven is counter productive. Jan 20, 2017 at 11:58
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I am not experienced with Eclipse or Maven so the other answers seemed a bit over complicated.

The following simpler set of steps worked for me:

Prerequisite: Make sure you have Maven plugin installed in your Eclipse IDE: How to add Maven plugin to Eclipse

  1. Open Eclipse
  2. Click File > Import
  3. Type Maven in the search box under Select an import source:
  4. Select Existing Maven Projects
  5. Click Next
  6. Click Browse and select the folder that is the root of the Maven project (probably contains the pom.xml file)
  7. Click Next
  8. Click Finish
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  • 3
    this is actually the most recommend solution as it is based on the maven pom-configuration and not on the derived, possibly outdated eclipse .project config
    – hotzen
    Jul 20, 2016 at 7:21
  • can we automate the above steps? like using powershell, is there a CLI?
    – sai
    Jul 21, 2016 at 13:50
  • 3
    Should also mention that you need the Maven plug-in for Eclipse otherwise the option won't be available. Jan 26, 2018 at 12:28
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Using mvn eclipse:eclipse will just generate general eclipse configuration files, this is fine if you have a simple project; but in case of a web-based project such as servlet/jsp you need to manually add Java EE features to eclipse (WTP).

To make the project runnable via eclipse servers portion, Configure Apache for Eclipse: Download and unzip Apache Tomcat somewhere. In Eclipse Windows -> Preferences -> Servers -> Runtime Environments add (Create local server), select your version of Tomcat, Next, Browse to the directory of the Tomcat you unzipped, click Finish.

Window -> Show View -> Servers Add the project to the server list

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I find the m2eclipse plugin to be more useful. This provides nice tools like the POM editor and creating a Maven project from within Eclipse.

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  • Is using the m2elcipse plugin the same as using mvn eclipse:eclipse? Jan 13, 2010 at 23:56
  • 1
    No, they are different. I never found the Maven eclipse:eclipse goal to be of much use. The eclipse goal is only useful if you have a development environment outside of Eclipse and you want to create an Eclipse project for it. If you just want to start a new project using Maven then use the m2eclipse plugin. Jan 14, 2010 at 0:04
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    mvn eclipse:eclipse initially and then once you have the initial project setup then you can use the m2eclipse plugin. Jan 14, 2010 at 0:34
  • 1
    Even for importing a new maven project to eclipse, cant I use the File->Import->Maven Projects and select the pom.xml? In this case I dont need to use mvn eclipse:eclipse. Is it right? Jan 14, 2010 at 0:59
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    NO, you don't have to use eclipse:eclipse initially, there is no need for that if you have m2eclipse installed. Just Import... > Maven projects and forget the maven-eclipse-plugin. Jan 14, 2010 at 1:36
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Maven have a Eclipse plugin and Eclipse have a Maven plugin we are going to discus those things.when we using maven with those command line stuffs and etc when we are going through eclipse we don't want to that command line codes it have very much helpful, Maven and eclipse giving good integration ,they will work very well together thanks for that plugins

Step 1: Go to the maven project. Here my project is FirstApp.(Example my project is FirstApp)

There you can see one pom.xml file, now what we want is to generate an eclipse project using that pom.xml.

Step 2: Use mvn eclipse:eclipse command

Step 3: Verify the project

after execution of this command notice that two new files have been created

Note:- both these files are created for Eclipse. When you open those files you will notice a "M2_REPO" class variable is generate. You want to add that class path in eclipse, otherwise eclipse will show a error.

Step 4: Importing eclipse project

File -> Import -> General -> Existing Projects in Workspace -> Select root directory -> Done

More details here

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  • I edited the steps, but didn't understand the first paragraph well enough to edit it. I hope you can improve it. Aug 4, 2014 at 15:22
  • more or less a full answer, unlike the others.
    – matanox
    Oct 16, 2015 at 14:11
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I was unable to import a Maven project with the steps suggested above until I figured out why it was not importing:

A maven project will not import if you have another Maven project with the same artifact id. Make sure that your project's artifact ID is unique in your eclipse workspace.

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Since Eclipse Neon which contains Eclipse Maven Integration (m2e) 1.7, the preferred way is one of the following ways:

  • File > Projects from File System... - This works for Eclipse projects (containing the file .project) as well as for non-Eclipse projects that only contain the file pom.xml.
  • If importing from a Git repository, in the Git Repositories view right-click the repository node, one folder or multiple selected folders in the Working Tree and choose Import Projects.... This opens the same dialog, but you don't have to select the directory.
-1

File » Import » Maven » Existing Maven Project » Next

http://www.websparrow.org/misc/how-to-import-maven-project-in-eclipse

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