Eric is it possible to specify the target location for the resource to be
included at?  I guess thats kinda vague, but an example is:
      <resource>
        <directory>${basedir}/src/resources</directory>
        <targetPath>resources</targetPath>
        <includes>
          <include>*</include>
        </includes>
      </resource>

so everything within src/resources gets put into /resources on the classpath
-David

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Eric Pugh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Maven Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 1:25 PM
Subject: RE: Building Webapps


> The solution is simple!
>
> From http://maven.apache.org/reference/plugins/eclipse/properties.html:
> maven.eclipse.classpath.include=src\resources
>
> Eric
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: David Erickson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 9:16 PM
> > To: Maven User List
> > Subject: Building Webapps
> >
> >
> > Hey everyone I have been having a difficult time figuring out the best
> > process to work with maven when building webapps.  Here is how I
started:
> > Eclipse 3, with myEclipseIDE and of course maven.  I had my webapp
project
> > and another non-webapp project.  This was working pretty well, I
> > had eclipse
> > set the nonwebapp project as dependent to my webapp, so whenever
> > i deployed
> > it would jar up the classes and chuck them into my web-inf/lib folder
and
> > everything was great.  All up until I found that I needed a
> > resource from my
> > webapp to be placed on the class path, so something like
> > \src\resources\myContext.xml (Spring) needed to be sitting in
> > \WEB-INF\classes, or the root of my classes jar file.  Well maven
handles
> > this easily by including it in the jar resources section.  However
Eclipse
> > the only way to do this (as far as I am aware) is to put it into my
> > \src\java directory and have it copy it in with my classes.  And I DO
NOT
> > like doing that because basically its just a hack.  Ideally I'd
> > like to have
> > maven rebuild stuff anytime there are changes, kind of like eclipse's
auto
> > build, however I don't know if thats feasible?  It just seems like your
> > fighting two battles using maven and an IDE, the first battle is to get
> > maven to work correctly in the commandline, and the second battle is to
> > attempt to have your ide do what maven does for includes and
> > stuff.  I know
> > you can execute maven targets from within eclipse, and I've tried
> > that, but
> > it gets annoying having to constantly click the targets every time you
> > change anything so you can see how it looks in your webbrowser.
> >
> > Anyway I guess that was a lot of random thoughts put together.. I
> > guess I'm
> > just curious how everyone else is doing this, I'm open to switching to
> > IntelliJ if i has a lot better support for this kind of thing..
> > eclipse has
> > been driving me nuts lately.
> > Thanks all,
> > David
> >
> >
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