comparison content/Maven/default-jdk-for-cross-jdk-profiles.md @ 0:4cd9b65e10e4

initial import of the pelican based blog
author Dirk Olmes <dirk@xanthippe.ping.de>
date Fri, 28 Jun 2013 08:48:58 +0200
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1 Title: Default JDK for cross JDK project profiles with Maven
2 Date: 2009-04-25
3 Lang: en
4
5 In my [previous blog post about Cross JDK project files with Maven](|filename|./cross-jdk-project-files-continued.md) I described a way to generate a custom JDK name into the Eclipse project files using the `maven-eclipse-plugin`.
6
7 That approach still had one shortcoming: you would either have to rename your JDK to match the default configured in the POM or you would have to give the JDK name on the commandline. Now I stumbled over a [good tip on the maven user's list](http://n2.nabble.com/org.apache.maven.plugins%3Amaven-eclipse-plugin%3A2.7-SNAPSHOT-ignores--maven-compiler-plugin-tp2689287p2689425.html) that allows you to configure a sensible, cross platform default for the JDK.
8
9 In short, the trick is not to use a concrete name of a JDK but to specify the name of a Java runtime environment. Eclipse automatically tries to match any configured JDK to an internal list of runtime environments.
10
11 So if you put the following into your pom:
12
13 :::xml
14 <properties>
15 <vmtype>org.eclipse.jdt.internal.debug.ui.launcher.StandardVMType</vmtype>
16 <jdk5Name>J2SE-1.5</jdk5Name>
17 </properties>
18 ...
19 <plugin>
20 <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
21 <artifactId>maven-eclipse-plugin</artifactId>
22 <version>2.5.1</version>
23 <configuration>
24 <downloadSources>true</downloadSources>
25 <classpathContainers>
26 <classpathContainer>org.eclipse.jdt.launching.JRE_CONTAINER/${vmtype}/${jdk5Name}</classpathContainer>
27 </classpathContainers>
28 </configuration>
29 </plugin>
30
31 Eclipse will assign a JDK5 runtime environment to the project (if it has a matching one configured, of course).