Setting Up IntelliJ IDEA¶
This article describes how to configure your IntelliJ IDEA workspace for plugin development with SpongeAPI and a build system such as Maven or Gradle or the Minecraft Development plugin.
If you want to create your project completely from scratch, please skip ahead to the Gradle or Maven sections. Using the Minecraft Dev plugin sets up a working starting point and eliminates some of the guesswork in getting your project off the ground.
Using IDEA Minecraft Dev Plugin to Create a Working Starting Point¶
The Minecraft Development plugin for IntelliJ is a great plugin by a community member which makes plugin project creation much easier while also providing some neat and useful features for development. By default, it will create a project which uses Gradle as the build tool.
Installing the Minecraft Dev Plugin¶
This plugin is available on the JetBrains IntelliJ plugin repository.
Because of this, you can install the plugin through IntelliJ’s internal plugin browser. Navigate to
File -> Settings -> Plugins
and click the Browse Repositories...
button at the bottom of the
window. In the search box, simply search for Minecraft
. You can install it from there and
restart IntelliJ to activate the plugin.
Creating Your Project from a Template¶
- Open IntelliJ IDEA.
- Click
Create New Project
. - Select
Minecraft
in the popup. - Make sure your Project SDK is set to some version of Java 8/1.8.
- Select
Sponge plugin
for your project type, then clickNext
. - Enter your Group ID, Artifact ID, and Version.
- Your Group ID should usually correspond to your Java package name. See Main Plugin Class for details.
- Your Artifact ID should usually correspond to your plugin ID you chose earlier, e.g.
myplugin
. - Your Version is up to you. See Version Numbers for details.
- Select your desired build tool, either Gradle or Maven, and click
Next
. - Check your Plugin Name and Main Class Name to make sure they are what you want.
- Specify your desired plugin description, authors, website, and dependencies if you want.
- Click
Next
to move on. - Verify your project name, location, and module information, then click
Finish
. - The plugin will create a main java file as a starting point, with the logger already injected.
You may add a
logger.info()
statement in theonServerStart
event handler to verify that the plugin is working when you run it.
Creating a Plugin from Scratch – Gradle¶
- Open IntelliJ IDEA.
- Click
Create New Project
. - Select
Gradle
in the popup. - If you want, select any additional libraries and frameworks you desire, for example Kotlin.
- Make sure your Project SDK is set to some version of Java 8/1.8.
- Click
Next
to move on. - Enter your Group ID, Artifact ID, and Version.
- Your Group ID should usually correspond to your Java package name. See Main Plugin Class for details.
- Your Artifact ID should usually correspond to your plugin ID you chose earlier, e.g.
myplugin
. - Your Version is up to you. See Version Numbers for details.
- Click
Next
twice, name your project, and clickFinish
. - The project will be created without a
src
directory. If you add java files to the incorrect location underneath the project, they will be ignored and not compiled, so it is a good idea to enable the checkbox “Create directories for empty content roots”, found in:- Windows:
File
->Settings
->Build, Execution, Deployment
->Gradle
- Mac:
Intellij IDEA
->Preferences
->Build, Execution, Deployment
->Build Tools
->Gradle
- Windows:
- Enabling
Use Auto-import
in the same location will allow change to the gradle configuration to automatically reload without IDEA prompting you each time. - Upon enabling those settings, a
/src/main/java
directory should be created, where you can start creating your main plugin code files.
Editing the Build Script¶
- Open
build.gradle
in the navigator and add the dependencies. - Edit the build script according to the instructions at Setting Up Gradle.
- Open the Gradle tab on the right of the IntelliJ window and hit the refresh button.
- Gradle setup is done! Now you can start coding your plugin.
Creating a Plugin from Scratch – Maven¶
Creating Your Project¶
- Open IntelliJ IDEA.
- Click
Create New Project
. - Select
Maven
in the popup. - Make sure your Project SDK is set to some version of Java 8/1.8.
- Click
Next
to move on. - Enter your Group ID, Artifact ID, and Version.
- Your Group ID should usually correspond to your Java package name. See Main Plugin Class for details.
- Your Artifact ID should usually correspond to your plugin ID you chose earlier, e.g.
myplugin
. - Your Version is up to you. See Version Numbers for details.
- Click
Next
. - Enter your project’s name, and click
Finish
.
Editing the Project Configuration¶
- Open
pom.xml
in the navigator. - Edit the build configuration according to the instructions at Setting Up Maven.
- Refresh your Maven project.
- Import the Maven changes, if prompted.
Testing Your Plugin¶
The following instructions are a quick way to test your plugin, but won’t be the most efficient way to iteratively develop.
To make a .jar
file, using Gradle:
- Go to
View
->Tool Windows
->Gradle
- Under
Tasks
->Build
, click onjar
- The build process should create the jar underneath
build\libs
To make a .jar
file, using Maven:
- Go to
View
->Tool Windows
->Maven Projects
- In the
Maven Projects
window, expand your project’s name - Under
Plugins
, expandjar
- Double click
jar:jar
- The build process should create the jar underneath
target
Copy your jar file to the mods
directory of a working Sponge server, then restart the server to test.
For a more efficient development process, see Plugin Debugging for instructions on running both the Sponge server and your plugin from within IDEA. This process allows for hot-swapping, allowing you to change plugin code without restarting the server.
Importing An Existing Project (Gradle or Maven)¶
If you’ve already started with your project and want to import it again at a later point you need to import it instead of re-creating it inside your IDE:
- Click
File > Open
orImport Project
. - Gradle: Navigate to the project’s
build.gradle
file and select it. - Maven: Navigate to the project’s
pom.xml
file and select it. - Make sure the settings are as you desire and click
Ok
.
Git Integration¶
JetBrains offers in-depth documentation on using their Git integration:
https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/using-git-integration.html