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Intellij IDEA Java classes not auto compiling on save

Yesterday I switched to IntelliJ IDEA from Eclipse.

I am using JRebel with WebSphere Server 7 as well.

Everything now seems to be working somewhat fine, except that when I modify a Java file, and hit save, IntelliJ does not re-compile the file, in order for JRebel to pick it up.

The Eclipse "Build Automatically" feature resolved this issue.

In IntelliJ IDEA, I have to hit CTRL+SHIFT+9 to re-compile the relevant class for JRebel to pick it up. If changes are done across two files, I have to do this on each and one of them and since IntelliJ uses the save all mechanism, its pretty hard to know what to recompile manually which I am not really interested in doing either.

Isn't there a way to make IntelliJ to do this on its own?

Why don't you just press Ctrl+F9? That will build the whole project and if only two files has changed then those will be rebuild.
I was afraid it would rebuild all. I believe default is clear output on rebuild ... so normally this doesnt work to good...
It does not clean before build. It's an incremental build. You have another choice to rebuild if desired.

d
dan

UPDATED

For IntelliJ IDEA 12+ releases we can build automatically the edited sources if we are using the external compiler option. The only thing needed is to check the option "Build project automatically", located under "Compiler" settings:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Wj0TX.png

Also, if you would like to hot deploy, while the application is running or if you are using spring boot devtools you should enable the compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running from registry too. This will automatically compile your changes.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Spv3R.png

For versions older than 2021.2:

Using Ctrl+Shift+A (or +Shift+A on Mac) type Registry once the registry windows is open, locate and enable compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running, see here:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/piDMv.png

For more tips see the "Migrating From Eclipse to IntelliJ IDEA" guide.


Feels annoying that I have to install a plugin for this. I already spent yesterday and today on this. I wish they could just build in an option for this, I don't think Eclipse has a patent on this feature, do they? I could also remap to CTRL + S to make as it saves automatically. I will try a couple of options. thanks
This is slow. This is too slow. There is much room for improvement! I am not what it does in the background, but it takes Intellij about 3-4 seconds to compile one small change in one single class. Even the "Compile 'StartController.java'" meaning one class only takes 3-4 seconds. Eclipse does this in less than 100 milliseconds. I will test the eclipse mode plugin again and decide what to go with..
"make project automatically" only works when not running/debugging
Doesn't work for me with Intellij 2017.1.3 and spring boot devtools.
Doesnt work 2020.4. Hey, its my question! Just discovered that. lol ... back here again I guess.
C
Community

Please follow both steps:

1 - Enable Automake from the compiler

Press: ctrl + shift + A (For Mac ⌘ + shift + A)

Type: make project automatically

Hit: Enter

Enable Make Project automatically feature

2 - Enable Automake when the application is running

Press: ctrl + shift + A (For Mac ⌘ + shift + A)

Type: Registry

Find the key compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running and enable it or click the checkbox next to it

Note: Restart your application now :)

Note: This should also allow live reload with spring boot devtools.


Perfect, this was just what i was looking for =)
This also worked for me with spring-boot-devtools and IntelliJ IDEA 2016.2.5
Right, so this seems to work on IntelliJ 2017.1.3, I used option 2 as this is what one needs with spring boot devtools.
Worked well but it takes 4-5 seconds to reload in JRebel. Any way around that?
I don't think the items 1 & 2 above are "options", but are steps. You need to do both.
C
CrazyCoder

WARNING

Eclipse Mode plug-in is obsolete and is not compatible with the recent IDEA 12+ builds. If you install it, IDE will hang on every file change and will respond extremely slow.

IntelliJ IDEA doesn't use automatic build, it detects errors on the fly, not via compiler. Similar to Eclipse mode will be available in IDEA 12:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/KOj6j.png

Use Build | Make, it invokes the incremental make process that will compile only changed and dependent files (it's very fast).

There is also a FAQ entry that may help.

Update on the automatic make feature: When run/debug configuration is running, Make project automatically has no effect. Classes on disk will change only on Build | Make. It's the core design decision as in our opinion class changes on disk should be always under user's control. Automatic make is not the copycat of Eclipse feature, it works differently and it's main purpose is to save time waiting for the classes to be ready when they are really needed (before running the app or tests). Automatic make doesn't replace the explicit compilation that you still need to trigger like in the case described in this question. If you are looking for different behavior, EclipseMode plug-in linked in the FAQ above would be a better choice.


Yeah, I had see it before, but dismissed it as being too slow, with the popup and all. Thought it was for something else. I might give a try althoguh a CTRL + 9 is annoying, but I guess I could remap to CTRL + S to make as it saves automatically.
Thanks for the update. I have installed the Eclipse Mode plugin. Don't have that dialog... Ook.. Intellij 12 ... well, good that you are improving. Is intellij 12 even out?
I have been trying out 12 for a couple of days. The use external build -> make automatically does not fire any action. Nothing happnes. When I use the eclipse mode plugin ( enable/disable it from settings) that works fine, but when I disable the eclipse mode plugin and enable "use external build -> auto make" nothing happens on edit and save... any idea to why?
@CrazyCoder I just came back to this and jRebel. This is too slow. There is much room for improvement! I am not what it does in the background, but it takes Intellij about 3-4 seconds to compile one small change in one single class. Even the "Compile 'StartController.java'" meaning one class only takes 3-4 seconds. Eclipse does this in less than 100 milliseconds. I will test the plugin again and decide what to go with..
@SecretService tab behavior suggestions are welcome at youtrack.jetbrains.com/issues/IDEA . There are already several open issues about pinned tabs and preventing them from closing.
D
Daniel Kaplan

You can keymap ctrl+s to save AND compile in one step. Go to the keymap settings and search for Compile.


Thanks, I like this best! The auto compile in intellij, and this one as well, but at least I see when it finishes now, is too slow.
Didn't work for me, assigning CTRL+S to compile didn't restart my server start with the debug button
It works for me, Intellij 2018.2. It should search for Build Project
a
andruso

There is actually no difference as both require 1 click:

Eclipse: manual Save, auto-compile.

IntelliJ: auto Save, manual compile.

Simplest solution is just to get used to it. Because when you spend most of your daytime in your IDE, then better have fast habits in one than slow habits in several of them.


There is way to improve IntelliJ experience: save and compile while you switching to browser
Eclipse has the ability to add save actions, you so can also do things like organize imports and format code on save. Doing all of these things manually adds a significant number of keystrokes and makes the process more error prone. For instance, you can never have unformatted code if you format on save in Eclipse. It's very easy to forget formatting in IntelliJ.
@Max, IntelliJ runs those actions during commit (which to my personal taste is the best moment). In some cases it also highlights coding style problems directly in the editor (e.g. PEP8 conformance for python).
Getting used to something that one IDE does for me and another does not, making my life more difficult, is not a good selling point.
@Jonathan improving usability very often requires dropping old, oftentimes unnecessary, habits for users.
T
TonioKnight

I ended up recording a Macro to save and compile in one step, and keymap Ctrl+s to it.


@SecretService Might not work for everyone, as the order of actions is not defined when multiple actions are mapped to the same shortcut.
D
Damaged Organic

I managed to solve this using macros.

I started recording a macro:

Click Edit - Macros - Start macro recording

Click File - Save All

Click Build - Make Project

Click Edit - Macros - Stop macro recording

Name it something useful like, "SaveAndMake".

Now just remove the Save all keybinding, and add the same keybinding to your macro!

So now, every time i save, it saves and makes a dirty compile, and jRebel now detects all changes correctly.


Would suggest giving the macro a different keybinding rather than replace existing save all - but that just being equally subjective.
Thanks. Since a normal "Build" (as suggested by the other answers) is not even sufficient for me I use this solution to save + rebuild every time. Gives me back the Eclipse feeling, even if it consumes lots of resources...
A
Ajay Kumar

Please follow these steps carefully to enable it.

1) create Spring Boot project with SB V1.3 and add "Devtools" (1*) to dependencies

2) invoke Help->Find Action... and type "Registry", in the dialog search for "automake" and enable the entry "compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running", close dialog

3) enable background compilation in Settings->Build, Execution, Deployment->Compiler "Make project automatically"

4) open Spring Boot run config, you should get warning message if everything is configured correctly

5) Run your app, change your classes on-the-fly

Please report your experiences and problems as comments to this issue.

click here for more info


It's marked as still "In Progress", and doesn't work for me.
k
keyboardsamurai

The only thing that worked for me in my maven project that was affected by this is to add a "test-compile" goal to the run configuration of my unit tests. Incredibly clumsy solution, but it works.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/U83X8.png


at least it works :D but yeah, it's better to find a source of this problem
t
tworec

Intellij fails quietly when it encounters compile problem in other module, and then automatic build is not performed. So check your Problems window


Y
YaaKouB

i had same issue and also a problem file icon in intellij, so i removed the .idea folder and re import project solved my issue.


T
Tyler2P

For folks using the new Intellij version and can't find compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running

https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-274903

Basically the option has now moved to Settings -> Advanced Settings -> Compiler (Check the Allow auto-make option)


u
user3214451

I had the same issue. I was using the "Power save mode", which prevents from compiling incrementally and showing compilation errors.


Idont know why this answer gots downvoted, its also answers the question, for me was the same - "Power save mode", although its wrote in settings, but with this enabled auto compiling doesnt work.
s
sbmpost

Use the Reformat and Compile plugin (inspired by the Save Actions plugin of Alexandre DuBreuil):

https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/8231?pr=idea_ce

At the moment I am only offering a jar file, but this is the most important part of the code:

private final static Set<Document> documentsToProcess = new HashSet<Document>();
private static VirtualFile[] fileToCompile = VirtualFile.EMPTY_ARRAY;

// The plugin extends FileDocumentManagerAdapter.
// beforeDocumentSaving calls reformatAndCompile
private static void reformatAndCompile(
        @NotNull final Project project,
        @NotNull final Document document,
        @NotNull final PsiFile psiFile) {
    documentsToProcess.add(document);
    if (storage.isEnabled(Action.compileFile) && isDocumentActive(project, document)) {
        fileToCompile = isFileCompilable(project, psiFile.getVirtualFile());
    }
    ApplicationManager.getApplication().invokeLater(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            if (documentsToProcess.contains(document)) {
                documentsToProcess.remove(document);
                if (storage.isEnabled(Action.optimizeImports)
                        || storage.isEnabled(Action.reformatCode)) {
                    CommandProcessor.getInstance().runUndoTransparentAction(new Runnable() {
                        @Override
                        public void run() {
                            if (storage.isEnabled(Action.optimizeImports)) {
                                new OptimizeImportsProcessor(project, psiFile)
                                    .run();
                            }
                            if (storage.isEnabled(Action.reformatCode)) {
                                new ReformatCodeProcessor(
                                        project,
                                        psiFile,
                                        null,
                                        ChangeListManager
                                            .getInstance(project)
                                            .getChange(psiFile.getVirtualFile()) != null)
                                                .run();
                            }
                            ApplicationManager.getApplication().runWriteAction(new Runnable() {
                                @Override
                                public void run() {
                                    CodeInsightUtilCore.forcePsiPostprocessAndRestoreElement(psiFile);
                                }
                            });
                        }
                    });
                }
            }

            if (fileToCompile.length > 0) {
                if (documentsToProcess.isEmpty()) {
                    compileFile(project, fileToCompile);
                    fileToCompile = VirtualFile.EMPTY_ARRAY;
                }
            } else if (storage.isEnabled(Action.makeProject)) {
                if (documentsToProcess.isEmpty()) {
                    makeProject(project);
                }
            } else {
                saveFile(project, document, psiFile.getVirtualFile());
            }
        }
    }, project.getDisposed());
}

private static void makeProject(@NotNull final Project project) {
    ApplicationManager.getApplication().invokeLater(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            CompilerManager.getInstance(project).make(null);
        }
    }, project.getDisposed());
}

private static void compileFile(
        @NotNull final Project project,
        @NotNull final VirtualFile[] files) {
    ApplicationManager.getApplication().invokeLater(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            CompilerManager.getInstance(project).compile(files, null);
        }
    }, project.getDisposed());
}

private static void saveFile(
        @NotNull final Project project,
        @NotNull final Document document,
        @NotNull final VirtualFile file) {
    ApplicationManager.getApplication().invokeLater(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            final FileDocumentManager fileDocumentManager = FileDocumentManager.getInstance();
            if (fileDocumentManager.isFileModified(file)) {
                fileDocumentManager.saveDocument(document);
            }
        }
    }, project.getDisposed());
}

Why would anyone download some random code and run it?
@Drew: Just uploaded it to Jetbrains for review. But if you are paranoid I suppose you could wait some days before it is available from there...
sbmpost, I am merely pointing out why some would (not that I did) downvote, flag as Not An Answer, and get this deleted.
If it is code you can post, in text, that is great. Can you? This is a code site.
@drew: added note about the jar and added a little more context to the code. It might seem high level, but if you extend from FileDocumentManagerAdapter and add the code, you would (almost) have a compiling ReformatAndCompile class.
A
Asanka Siriwardena

Edit your Run/Debug Configuration so that Build option is selected before launching

https://i.stack.imgur.com/xAfFO.png

After Build option is selected

https://i.stack.imgur.com/ATtlH.png

The above solution worked for me while working on my JBehave test suite


this is nice, but the question was around auto compiling on save, without having to compile explicity again using a custom command, before doing anything like running a test, etc.,
O
Orkun Ozen

It was not working for me due to having an unnecessary module in my project structure. The tests were executed using the other module, I suppose.

I don't know how it ended up like that but removing it solved the problem.

Make sure your Run/Debug settings are using the module you are building with the autosave.

E.g. : see the module in

https://i.stack.imgur.com/adg8R.png

You can change the modules in Project Structure - Modules

https://i.stack.imgur.com/glm8H.png


S
Sergei Podlipaev

I had the same issue. I think it would be appropriate to check whether your class can be compiled or not. Click recompile (Ctrl+Shift+F9 by default). If its not working then you have to investigate why it isn't compiling.

In my case the code wasn't autocompiling because there were hidden errors with compilation (they weren't shown in logs anywhere and maven clean-install was working). The rootcause was incorrect Project Structure -> Modules configuration, so Intellij Idea wasn't able to build it according to this configuration.


H
HelpMatters

For Intellij 2021 or later, you'll not find the registry entry

compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running

It has been moved to advanced settings as shown in the below screenshot

https://i.stack.imgur.com/HCZhp.png

Source: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-274903


P
Priyanshu Singh

I was getting error: some jars are not in classpath.So I just delete the corrupted jar and perrform below steps

1.Project >  Setting>Build,Execution,Deployment>Compiler>check build project automatically
2.CTRL+SHIFT+A find/search **registry** --Check for below param
compiler.automake.allow.when.app.running
compiler.automake.trigger.delay=500---According to ur requirement
3.Add devtool in pom.xml
         <dependency>
            <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
            <artifactId>spring-boot-devtools</artifactId>
            <optional>true</optional>
        </dependency>
4.Build ,If found any probelm while building ,saying some jar in not in class path.Just delete the corrupted jar
and re-build the project angain after sync with maven lib

l
lance fallon

Not enough points to comment on an existing answer, but similar to some people above, I wound up just adding a macro & keymap to Organize Imports / Format / SaveAll / FastReload(F9) / Synchronize.

The synchronize is added as it seems to be the only way I can also see updates in resources modified by external build tools / watchers (i.e., webpack).

The process is slower than eclipse - and for the external file refresh often have to run the command multiple times - but suppose I can live with it.


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