In IntelliJ IDEA, I want to define environment variables for HTTP client, here is the document, but IDEA cannot find my environment when I run a request.
what's wrong?
environment config picture
request config picture
IDEA version:
IntelliJ IDEA 2020.1.1 (Ultimate Edition)
Build #IU-201.7223.91, built on April 30, 2020
right click on http-client.env.json and "Override File Type" select JSON.
This helps me.
Make sure you don't have the env.json files located in the .idea folder: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-239351
Related
IntelliJ IDEA used to have a option in the File menu to "Open URL...". However, when I went to use this feature today the option is missing:
Did a recent update remove this feature or is there a configuration option to restore it?
I'm running:
IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3.1 (Ultimate Edition)
Build #IU-193.5662.53, built on December 18, 2019
Looks like the File -> Open URL option was provided by the "JavaScript and TypeScript" plugin. Somehow that got disabled which is why the option was missing.
Re-enabling the "JavaScript and TypeScript" plugin fixed the issue.
I'm using IntelliJ with the go plugin to write my application.
version of Go: go version go1.7beta2 darwin/amd64
Operation system: OSX El Capitan 10.11.5
Intellij Version: 2016.1.3
Go Installation Location: /usr/local/go
Go Pkg Location ($GOPATH): /Users/ufk/projects/go
when I open terminal, browse to my application's main source file, and type go it compiles it properly without any errors.
but when I try to Run the program using Intellij, which also compiles it, i get the following error:
/usr/local/go/pkg/tool/darwin_amd64/link: cannot open file /usr/local/go/pkg/darwin_amd64/github.com/codegangsta/negroni.a: open /usr/local/go/pkg/darwin_amd64/github.com/codegangsta/negroni.a: no such file or directory
lookgs like it's looking for the negroni package in the location when I have go installed, and not where I the 3rd party packages are installed according to $GOPATH. My project is configured to use $GOPATH, and the real time error of the intellj editor doesn't complain about packages that are not installed which means that Intellij does check the $GOPATH variable.
so what am i missing ?
thanks
update
Hi :)
I noticed something new... I have 2 go projects, one of them is the JSON Api Server, and the other is for the web server.
The project that is causing issues is the Api Server.
now, the web server also uses and imports negroni, but the problem occurs only on the Api Server Project.
so I decided to go wild and delete the .idea and iml file from the Api Server, reopen it with intellij, and see what happens... welp, what happens is that now it complains about a different module.
/usr/local/go/pkg/tool/darwin_amd64/link: cannot open file /usr/local/go/pkg/darwin_amd64/github.com/jingweno/negroni-gorelic.a: open /usr/local/go/pkg/darwin_amd64/github.com/jingweno/negroni-gorelic.a: no such file or directory
the thing is.. that my web server project also uses negroni-gorelic and things are fine!
I tried downgrading go from 1.7beta2 to 1.6.2, deleting the content of the modules ($GOPATH/pkg and in src directory github.com and golang.org)
then I got all the modules again.. tried to compile with intellij and the results are the same.
so... hope this helps to further investigate the issue.
I have installed IntelliJ and I need to import a Gradle project.
I have build the gradle project using command prompt with the gradlew build command.
At the IntelliJ welcome page, I have proceeded with proper instructions, and when I choose "Finish". I get the following error:
Invalid Gradle JDK configuration found. Open Gradle Settings JAVA_HOME ennvironment variable not set.
When I click on "Open Gradle Settings" it pop up with error of Not found with a path under IntelliJ directory in Program files and searching in jre/jre/bin/....etc.
Deleting .gradle and .idea will likely solve the problem.
So:
Close the project
Go to the project dir and delete .gradle and .idea
Get back and re-open the project using the IDE
These two must be generated locally on your PC (Some content of .idea might be version controlled though) and not pulled from a remote or somewhere else (Also they should be in .gitignore).
In my case the reason was that these two folders were generated on another computer and I had opened a project with these two folders existing before.
Just found the solution :
Create an empty Gradle project, then go to "Project Structure" and check the path to JDK (it should be valid, if it isn't you can add your own path).
Then build this empty project, wait and once done, close IntelliJ.
Relaunch it and try to import/open your Gradle project, now it should work.
You don't need to create a new project to fix this. You can do it from the main window (Configure -> Project Defaults -> Project Structure):
Then, on SDKs, set the appropriate JDK home path:
If you are on a Mac, click on the button with 3 dots and select the folder /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_141.jdk/Contents/Home.
I've found this here:
https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/115000266650-invalid-gradle-jdk-configuration-found
Mac OS X Solution:
I had the same issue and fixed it by setting the JAVA_HOME environment variable using the command:
launchctl setenv JAVA_HOME /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_45.jdk/Contents/Home/
Refer to this answer on how to set environment variables in Mac OS X:
Setting environment variables in OS X?
Close the project
Go to the project dir and delete
.gradle
.idea
Get back and re-open the project using the IDE
I recently had the same problem while importing a Gradle project. The trick was the remove the quotes from the JAVA_HOME variable. So instead of "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_66" my path now contains only the plain path C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_66.
To add to the previous responses, if you want to prevent this problem when cloning a repository in Git, you can simply remove .idea/misc.xml from your .gitignore file. This contains information about the project jar. For example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project version="4">
<component name="ProjectRootManager" version="2" languageLevel="JDK_10" default="false" project-jdk-name="1.8" project-jdk-type="JavaSDK" />
</project>
For my case, I just restart the IDE and it works. It automatically download Gradle to suit the project version.
I had the same problem on the fresh installed Windows OS.
I did not have a JDK at all and forgot to check it invalid JDK configuration .
By default, you can check the Project configuration. If it is empty NO_SDK_ProjectStructure try to download JDK from Oracle web site and configure your project structure
I have faced same problem for tomcat 9 with my project based on Gradle.
You can easily rectify the problem by configuring the application.properties file with the following code.
location - src/main/resources/application.properties
server.port = 9090
spring.security.user.name= admin
spring.security.user.password= password
My issue was not addressed by the above solution, instead root cause was that I've imported settings from my old system and internal Intellij configuration was invalid because first jdk that it had in the list in jdk.table.xml pointed to a wrong path.
To fix this you should find this file in the intellij config folder and then simply open it with an editor and remove whole block related to the bad jdk version.
Close the project you are working on and then create another new project and build it and then close it and go back to your old project and it will work.
Comment this code on gradle.properties, the Issue was gone.
#org.gradle.java.home=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_141.jdk/Contents/Home
I was getting:
Invalid JDK: /home/sz97/idea-IC-223.7571.182/jbr/bin/jlink is not a file!
Ensure JAVA_HOME or buildSettings.javaHome is set to JDK 15 or newer
As mentioned by Mahdi-Malv, delete .gradle & .idea folders from the project directory.
Then delete other SDKs from File > Project Structure > Platform Settings > SDKs keeping the only required one.
Finally change the SDK version from Project Structure > Project Settings > Project.
This may solve the problem.
I have a groovy script I am working on, which imports dependencies using the #Grab annotation. This script will run within IDEA, and from the command line. However, within the IDE, the imports are shown in red (as unresolvable), and no auto-completion on the classes so imported is given.
I am accessing a corporate repository via a proxy, which has been configured as the Http Proxy within IDEA (the module should be, and is, in my local .m2 repo anyway!)
Anyone got any ideas (no pun intended!)?
I am using IntelliJ IDEA 12.5 Ultimate (IU-129.1135), JRE 1.7, and Groovy 2.1.6
As stated by CrazyCoder, Alt + Enter then select Grab the artifacts and Enter
There could be 2 problems interfering with the resolution of the Grab dependencies
Your source code folder has not been marked as "Sources Root". To do that, right click on the folder and select "Mark Directory As" -> "Sources Root"
Your project does not have a valid Project JDK. To do this, hit Ctrl-Alt-Shift-S, select "Project" -> "Project SDK" and give it a Java JDK.
Once these steps are done, you should be able to hit Alt + Enter and then select "Grab the artifacts"
So, I downloaded Gradle but I don't know how to set it up correctly. After I unzipped the zip file, what do I do next? I want to use Gradle in IntelliJ IDEA. From a livestream I've seen I know that there's a settings.gradle and a build.gradle file in the project folder in IntelliJ.
Also, I've seen that they used the windows console.
First of all, how do I access gradle through the windows console and tell it to generate a new project for IntelliJ?
As you can see, I don't have any experience with Gradle. Unfortunately I can't really find out how to use it.
I want the IntelliJ project then to have LWJGL and Slick.
Additionally, I know what it says in the build.gradle file I've seen on the livestream (I only want to create my project with the same structure like theirs).
Can anybody give a detailed description of what to do to achieve all this?
Lets' say you unpacked gradle to d:\tools\gradle.
To add its bin directory it to the PATH in a console window, execute the following command:
set PATH=d:\tools\gradle\bin;%PATH%
The above prepends the bin path to the current value of the PATH environment variable. This will only change the path for this specific command window.
If you want to add it to the PATH globally, then go to your control panel and choose System, then Advanced parameters (it might be something a little bit different: I'm translating from my French version of Windows). Then in the Advanced system parameters tab, click the button Environment variables.... Find the Path environment variable in the list, and add the directory, separated from the others using a semicolon (;).
Note: you can also define a new environment variable called GRADLE_HOME:
set GRADLE_HOME=d:\tools\gradle
or globally, as explained above, and reference it inside the PATH variable:
set PATH=%GRADLE_HOME%\bin;%PATH%
Just intall homebrew.
Then you can just open the terminal and install easy like:
brew install gradle
Done! It's installed!
For test just type in your terminal:
gradle -v
And you'll have something like this:
------------------------------------------------------------
Gradle 2.7
------------------------------------------------------------
Build time: 2015-09-14 07:26:16 UTC
Build number: none
Revision: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Groovy: 2.3.10
Ant: Apache Ant(TM) version 1.9.3 compiled on December 23 2013
JVM: 1.8.0_60 (Oracle Corporation 25.60-b23)
OS: Mac OS X 10.11.1 x86_64
Then, open your IntelliJ and create a new gradle project as normal, just setting the gradle's path when necessary (normally in /usr/local/Cellar when installed with homebrew or /opt when installed other ways).
Good luck!
For linux Users,
User SDK Man to easily manage your gradle installation and path settings for development as well as gradle update
GET SDK MAN HERE
(for mac os users) Let's assume, you unpacked zip file into /Users/onuryilmaz/gradle-3.3 folder. Then open terminal and define a new environment variable called GRADLE_HOME:
export GRADLE_HOME=/Users/onuryilmaz/gradle-3.3
After that reference it inside the PATH variable:
export PATH=$PATH:$GRADLE_HOME/bin
just update the brew and install and set path that's all
brew update && brew install gradle
export PATH=$PATH:/opt/gradle/gradle-5.1.1/bin
https://gradle.org/install/