The following has been tested against Intellij IDEA 13.1
The following has been tested against IntelliJ IDEA 2016.2.2
## Steps
_Within your locally cloned spring-framework working directory:_
1. Pre-compile `spring-oxm` with `./gradlew cleanIdea :spring-oxm:compileTestJava`
2. Import into IntelliJ IDEA (File-> import project -> import from external model -> Gradle)
3. Set the Project JDK as appropriate (1.8+)
4. Exclude the `spring-aspects` module (Go to File-> Project Structure -> Modules)
5. Code away
1. Import into IntelliJ IDEA (File -> New -> Project from Existing Sources -> Select directory -> Select Gradle -> Use gradle wrapper task configuration
2. Set the Project JDK as appropriate (1.8+)
3. Code away
## Known issues
## Known issues for IntelliJ IDEA 13.1
1. `spring-oxm` should be pre-compiled since it's using repackaged dependencies (see *RepackJar tasks)
1. `spring-oxm` should be pre-compiled since it's using repackaged dependencies (see *RepackJar tasks). You can precompile `spring-oxm` with `./gradlew cleanIdea :spring-oxm:compileTestJava`
2. `spring-aspects` does not compile out of the box due to references to aspect types unknown to
IntelliJ IDEA. See http://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-64446 for details. In the meantime, the
'spring-aspects' should be excluded from the overall project to avoid compilation errors.
'spring-aspects' should be excluded from the overall project to avoid compilation errors. To exclude go to File-> Project Structure -> Modules
3. While all JUnit tests pass from the command line with Gradle, many will fail when run from
IntelliJ IDEA. Resolving this is a work in progress. If attempting to run all JUnit tests from within
IntelliJ IDEA, you will likely need to set the following VM options to avoid out of memory errors: