Reputation: 4600
Is there a way to include all the jar files within a directory in the classpath using Eclipse?
It can be done by using command line by the following command:
java -cp "lib/*" my.package.Main
But how can it be done from eclipse?
EDIT: I edited the .classpath
entry in my project floder as:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<classpath>
<classpathentry kind="src" path="src"/>
<classpathentry kind="con" path="org.eclipse.jdt.launching.JRE_CONTAINER"/>
<classpathentry kind="lib" path="F:/Program Files/Java/log4j/apache-log4j-2.0-alpha2-bin/*"/>
<classpathentry kind="output" path="classes"/>
</classpath>
Here F:/Program Files/Java/log4j/apache-log4j-2.0-alpha2-bin/
is the folder where the jar
files are. But it didn't work.
UPDATE: It seems that there is no direct way to do this. And may be the easiest solution will be creating a user library.
Upvotes: 29
Views: 54241
Reputation: 11
In eclipse (windows) right click on the libs folder(contains all the jar files) that you want to add in classpath as well -> Build Path-> Configure Build Path -> click on classpath -> add class folder -> select the folder of java files ...so this way you can multiple jar files in classpath
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1996
Not without a Plug-in. I do not know why this feature is not a basic part of eclipse.
https://github.com/benjchristensen/SimpleDirectoryContainer_EclipsePlugin
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 4903
Right Click Project -> Properties.. -> Java Build Path -> Libraries -> Add Class Folder...
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 328624
Instead of using a folder outside of your project, copy all necessary JARs into a lib/
folder inside of your project.
Now you can select all JARs in that folder, right click -> Build Path -> Add To Build Path.
Alternatively, you can define a "User Library" which contains all the JARs and add that single item to your project's build path.
But the best solution IMO, is to use Maven for this. Get the M2E Plugin for Eclipse and convert your project to a Maven project. Now you can use "Add Dependency" to add millions of other project (including everything they need) to your project. Maven will download and manage the dependencies for you.
Upvotes: 29