“AEM Developer Tools” is an Eclipse plug-in based on the Eclipse plugin for Apache Sling released under the Apache License 2.
It offers several features that make AEM development easier:
Before using the AEM Developer Tools, do the following:
Download and install Eclipse IDE for Java™ EE Developers. AEM Developer Tools currently support Eclipse Kepler or newer
Can be used with AEM version 5.6.1 or newer
Configure your eclipse installation to ensure that you have at least 1 GB of heap memory by editing your eclipse.ini
configuration file as described in the Eclipse FAQ.
On macOS, right-click Eclipse.app, and then select Show Package Contents to find your eclipse.ini
.
Once you have fulfilled the requirements above, you can install the plugin as follows:
Browse the AEM Developer Tools website at https://eclipse.adobe.com/aem/dev-tools/
.
Copy the Installation Link.
Alternatively, you can download an archive instead of using the installation link. Doing so allows offline installation but you miss automatic update notifications.
In Eclipse, open the Help menu.
Click Install New Software.
Click Add….
In Name type AEM Developer Tools.
In Location copy the installation URL.
Click Ok.
Check both AEM and Sling plugins.
Click Next.
Click Next.
Accept the lincese agreements and click Finish.
Click Yes to restart Eclipse.
The AEM Development Tools for Eclipse ships with a Perspective that offers you full control over your AEM Projects and instances.
“AEM Developer Tools” include a sample, multi-module project that helps you quickly get up to speed with a project setup in Eclipse. It also serves as a best-practice guide to several AEM features. Learn more about the Project Archetype.
To create the sample project, complete the following steps:
In the File > New > Project menu, browse to the AEM section and select AEM Sample Multi-Module Project.
Click Next.
This step might take a while because m2eclipse must scan the archetype catalogs.
Choose com.adobe.granite.archetypes : sample-project-archetype : (highest number) from the menu, then click Next.
Fill in a Name, Group id, and an Artifact id for the sample project. You can also opt to set some advanced properties.
Now configure an AEM server to which Eclipse can connect.
To use the debugger feature, be sure you started AEM in debug mode, which can be achieved by adding the following to the command line:
-nofork -agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n,address=10123
Click Finish. The project structure is created.
On a fresh installation (more specifically: when maven dependencies have never been downloaded) you might get the project created with errors. In this case, follow the procedure describe in Resolving Invalid Project Definition.
To resolve invalid dependencies and project definition proceed as follows:
Tag library autocompletion works out of the box, given that the proper dependencies are added to the project. There is one known issue when using the AEM Uber Jar, which does not include the needed tld and TagExtraInfo files.
To work around it, ensure that the org.apache.sling.scripting.jsp.taglib artifact is in the classpath before the AEM Uber Jar. For Maven projects, place the following dependency in the pom.xml before the Uber Jar.
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.sling</groupId>
<artifactId>org.apache.sling.scripting.jsp.taglib</artifactId>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
Make sure to add the proper version for your deployment of AEM.
The official Apache Sling IDE tooling for Eclipse website provides you with useful information:
The following official Eclipse documentation can help to set up your environment: