For me, the most important new feature in Eclipse 3.7.0 (Indigo) is the improved Maven Integration, formerly developed by Sonatype under the name of m2eclipse, now an official Eclipse subproject under the name of m2e.
m2eclipse and Eclipse sometimes used to have different opinions on what was going on in the workspace, and so we had to go through series of refresh/update dependencies/update configuration/rebuild voodoo (or "m2eclipse dance" as some called it) to get projects in a good state. (Quote from the m2e Wiki).
m2e has a different approach. First of all, it complains when detecting a Maven plugin in one of your POMs that it cannot handle out of the box. m2e flags your POM with an error marker that will not go away until you tell m2e what do to about the unknown plugin. The easy way out is a Quick Fix to ignore the plugin, which means you'll have to run the corresponding Maven goal manually when you need it.
However, when the Maven plugin in question generates source code or post-processes byte code, this is usually not sufficient - ideally, Eclipse and m2e should pick up the required build steps from your POM automatically.
This issue is addressed by m2e extensions, which provide the missing link between Eclipse project builders and Maven plugins. An m2e extension for a given Maven plugin not only invokes the required mojos but also informs Eclipse about new source or binary folders created by the mojos, so that Eclipse and Maven can stay in sync.
My projects use a number of Maven plugins that are not supported by m2e out of the box, e.g. for JAXB and OpenJPA, so I started creating some custom extensions for these plugins, based on a GitHub fork of the official m2e extensions from Sonatype.
See the wiki page at GitHub for more details. The GitHub project also contains an Eclipse update site (aka p2 repository) for installing the plugins. Time permitting, I'll try to make these extensions available via the Eclipse marketplace.
For any fixes, additions or new extensions, feel free to send my pull requests.
29 August 2011
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