15

I add guava 17.0 to my pom.xml, Eclipse automatically rebuilds project.

Ran mvn dependency:resolve, maven shows com.google.guava:guava:jar:17.0:compile in the list of resolved files.

However when in Eclipse I try to auto-complete com.google.g, it says "No default proposals". I've added dependencies in my pom.xml before, run mvn dependency:resolve and Eclipse picked them up immediately. What's different this time?

I've tried the following so far:

I can see target/<projname>-1.0-SNAPSHOT/WEB-INF/lib/guava-17.0.jar.

My configuration:

  • OS: OS X 10.9.3
  • Maven: 3.1.1
  • Eclipse: Kepler (with m2e 1.4)
4
  • can you see that jar being added in eclipse managed classpath ? Jun 30, 2014 at 5:07
  • 1
    try running the mvn eclipse:clean and then the mvn eclipse:eclipse command in a seperate command prompt and then refresh the project in eclipse. Most of the times, this works for me.
    – Rahul
    Jun 30, 2014 at 5:11
  • 1
    Don't use mvn eclipse:eclipse use the import of Eclipse and the rest is handled by m2e plugin of Eclipse.
    – khmarbaise
    Jun 30, 2014 at 7:25
  • @khmarbaise You're saying that I should run mvn eclipse:clean, remove the project from Eclipse and then re-import it?
    – markvgti
    Jul 4, 2014 at 5:45

4 Answers 4

13

The suggestion by @khmarbaise works best and solves all problems.

  1. Just delete the project from Eclipse.

  2. Re-import as "Existing Maven Projects" and point it towards the directory that contains the project's pom.xml file.

  3. Let Eclipse's m2e plugin handle the rest

Worked flawlessly for me.

The following advice (taken from https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/java/webtoolsplatform#maven) may only apply to GAE projects, but seems like it should be generally applicable (my project is GAE, so can't be sure):

The directory at the root of the Maven project must not contain any of the following:

1. A subdirectory named target

2. A subdirectory named .settings

3. A file named .classpath

4. A file named .project 
7
  • I have all of those folders in my Maven project root folder, yet I can use similar Maven dependencies like apache commons-lang without any problems. Is Guava different in some way? Jul 27, 2015 at 18:49
  • Maybe this will help someone: The certificate to communicate with my organization's maven artifactory had expired; once I updated it everything worked. Jul 27, 2015 at 21:34
  • 2
    @JamesDaily I think that advice is only for the first time when importing a maven project into Eclipse.
    – markvgti
    Jul 28, 2015 at 8:06
  • The root directory does need those files.
    – robben
    May 12, 2017 at 14:15
  • @markvgti Eclipse didn't like me removing .project! Are you sure about this one? Feb 17, 2020 at 21:07
1

In file pom.xml inside < dependency > seleneium maybe you have defined < scope> test e.g. < scope>test < /scope>.

Removing/deleting this also can solve your problem.

0

At first, remove projects as markvgti suggested. I did this three times without success.

My solution was deleting ".project" files and the ".settings" directory in the several projects. Last step was reimporting as "Maven Projects" in eclipse.

0

I faced the issue too where my WebDriver and chrome driver was not being recognized even after adding the selenium dependencies. Followed below steps seeing the above comments.

And the issue got resolved. Thanks for the help.

  1. Create a Maven project.
  2. Add Maven dependencies(selenium and testng minimum)
  3. Go to CMD to where your project is.
  4. Run command mvn eclipse:clean
  5. Then run command mvn eclipse:eclipse
  6. Go to eclipse and refresh your project to apply the dependencies and then the jars are added to your project.

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