+1. Even the maven-eclipse-plugin developers advice to use M2Eclipse instead. Cheers 2013/2/25 Lyons, Roy > From my experience to date, it has proven far better to use the m2eclipse > plugin and import the maven project directly. It will then perform the > build using maven... > > When people come to me with issues such as yours, I generally tell them to > delete the project and re-import using m2eclipse (and never use mvn > eclipse:eclipse again) -- and then everything works wonderfully for them. > > > Thanks, > > Roy Lyons > > > > > On 2/25/13 11:03 AM, "Stiffler82" wrote: > > >I have a problem and can not find any support for it, also not in google. > >I > >created my own lib called "core.jar" and when I try to refer it as a > >dependency in from my POM all works fine: > > > > > > com.innosquared > > core > > 1.1.10 > > > > > >But when I run mvn eclipse:eclipse Maven creates wrong .classpath and > >.project files. It resolves my jar as a java project instead of a jar > >library. The following entry will be created in my classpath: > > > > > > > >In my .projects file there is now: > > > > > > core > > > > > >I do not define anything in my Build-Cycle in POM, so I don't understand > >this strange behaviour. What can I do to prevent Maven from resolving my > >jar > >as a java project and resolving it as a normal dependency instead? > > > > > > > >-- > >View this message in context: > > > http://maven.40175.n5.nabble.com/Eclipse-plugin-and-project-references-tp9 > >9838p5748396.html > >Sent from the Maven - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- > >To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@maven.apache.org > >For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@maven.apache.org > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@maven.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@maven.apache.org > > -- Baptiste MATHUS - http://batmat.net Sauvez un arbre, Mangez un castor !