Eclipse
Requirements
Eclipse requires a Java JDK to work. See Java JDK setup
Installation
Download eclipse from the official website: http://eclipse.org/downloads/
Take the Eclipse IDE for Java EE developers version.
Windows
Just extract the archive and run ./eclipse/eclipse.exe
Linux
Basic installation
- Download the eclipse.deb package
- Install the package using:
tar -xzvf eclipse.tar.gz
- Launch application by running ./eclipse/eclipse
Create a desktop launcher
sudo vim /usr/share/applications/eclipse.desktop
Put the following content where /home/guillaume/DEV/eclipse is the path to Eclipse.
[Desktop Entry]
Version=4.3.0
Name=Eclipse
Comment=Eclipse IDE
Exec=/home/guillaume/DEV/eclipse/eclipse -clean
Icon=/home/guillaume/DEV/eclipse/icon.xpm
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=Utility;Application
Ubuntu 13.10 - launcher Fix
If the menu doesn't appear correctly you must create the following launcher:
[Desktop Entry]
Version=4.3.0
Name=Eclipse
Comment=IDE for all seasons
Exec=env UBUNTU_MENUPROXY=0 /home/guillaume/DEV/eclipse/eclipse -clean
Icon=/home/guillaume/DEV/eclipse/icon.xpm
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=Utility;Application
Don't forget the Exec=... line! The key is "env UBUNTU MENUPROXY=0"
SWT libraries fixes
On the latest distribution Eclipse sometimes crashed due to libswt-*.so
To resolve that, install the development libraries:
apt-get install libx11-dev libxtst-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libglu1-mesa-dev libgtk-3-dev
Eclipse configuration
JDK
Window menu -> Preferences -> Java -> Installed JRE
> Add the JDK as a standard VM > JRE home = JDK root > Click "Finish"
Select the new JDK as the default one
Preferences -> Java -> Installed JRE -> Execution Environment
> For each java version adjust the JVM to use
Display line numbers
Window menu -> Preferences -> General -> Editors -> Text Editors
> Enable show line numbers > show print margin (you can adjust the size. I'm using "160")
Increase console size
Window menu -> Preferences -> Run / debug -> Console
If you limit the console output put a hudge value (>= 100 000)
Adjust encoding to UTF-8
By default Eclipse use the same encoding as your O.S, which is probably ISO-8859-1 .You should instead use UTF-8.
Window menu -> Preferences -> General -> Workspace
At the bottom of the script, choose "UTF-8"
Window menu -> Preferences -> General -> Editors -> Text Editors -> Spelling
Choose UTF-8 to encode javadoc
Window menu -> Preferences -> General -> filter "encoding"
Encode CSS + HTML + JSP + XML in UTF-8
On the General -> Content Types, check that everything has default encoding: UTF-8. If the default encoding is blank, then add "UTF-8"
Check:
- Android Binary XML (if available)
- Diagram (if available)
- JAR Content
- Java class File
- Text
- HTML
- Java properties file
- JSP
- CSS JSP
- JSP fragment
- JSP Tag definition
- XML
Code formatting
Import formatter
Window menu -> Preferences -> Java -> Code style -> Formatter
> Import formatter
=Save actions
Before saving a java file, you can perform some "save actions", that will result in automatic formatting.
Window menu -> Preferences -> Java -> Editor -> Save Actions Enable Perform the selected actions on save
Check:
- Perform save actions
- Format source code
- format ALL lines
- Organize imports
- Additional actions
- Format source code
... Configure additional actions:
- Code organizing
- Remove trailing whitespace (all lines)
- Correct indentation
- Sort members
- Code style
- Use block in if/while/for/do statements (always)
- Use modifer "final" where possible (parameter)
- Missing code
- Select all
- Unnecessary code
- Remove unused imports
- Remove unnecessary casts + '$NON-NLS' tags
Eclipse plug-ins
Eclipse marketplace: http://marketplace.eclipse.org/
Maven
Plugins installation and configuration
Maven plugin settings
Window menu -> Preferences -> Maven
Enable:
- download artifact sources
- download artifact javadoc
Window menu -> Preferences -> Maven -> Installation
> Add the path to your own MAVEN 3 installation
Window menu -> Preferences -> Maven -> User Interface
>Open XML page in the POM editor by default [VERY important for performances]
Window menu -> Preferences -> Maven -> User Settings
- Choose the correct settings.xml (the one from your Maven installation instead of ~/.m2/)
- Set the repository path
Run configurations
You can run MAVEN from Eclipse thanks to the run configurations.
Run menu -> Run Configurations -> Maven Build -> [Double click on it]
Create a new run configuration for each maven sequence.
- Configuration (1)
- Name: Maven clean install
- Base directory: ${project_loc}
- Goals: clean install
- Configuration (2) #
- Name: Maven clean install -DskipTests
- Base directory: ${project_loc}
- Goals: clean install
- Options: select "Skip Tests"
Add run configurations to favorite
Click on the arrow of the RUN button (left side) -> Organize favorites
Click "ADD" > Select your configurations Now, you can run your configurations by using the same button.
Checkstyle
Installation
Checkstyle Plug-in
> Update site: http://eclipse-cs.sourceforge.net/update/
Install:
- Eclipse checkstyle plug-in
- All additional checks
Configuration
Window menu -> Preferences -> Checkstyle
You can either:
- Import your own checkstyle set of rule (new -> external configuration file -> browse to your own checkstyle -> set it as default)
- Set the "Sun Check (Eclipse)" as default.
- Duplicate the "Sun Check (Eclipse)" + make your own arrangements and use it as default
-- hint: --
I strongly advised you to commit your formatter.xml; checkstyle.xml; code_templates.xml; cleanup.xml into your SVN project.
Enable
1. You have to enable / disable checkstyle for each one of your projects
Right click on a project -> Properties -> Checkstyle -> Enable checkstyle for this project
2. You have to open the "Window menu -> Show view -> Others... -> Checkstyle -> Checkstyle violations" to get the analyze results
JavaHL for Subclipse
Source: Subclipse JavaHL wiki
Linux requires the JavaHL client for Subclipse:
sudo apt-get install libsvn-java
Find the library file:
sudo find / -name libsvnjavahl-1.so
You should have something like:
guillaume@VC076:~/DEV/eclipse$ sudo find / -name libsvnjavahl-1.so
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/jni/libsvnjavahl-1.so
Now, update your eclipse.ini configuration
vim eclipse.ini
Add the path without '/' at the end.
-vmargs
-Djava.library.path=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/jni
→ Note: Ubuntu 13.10 as only the JavaHL 1.7 library. So you should not install SVN client 1.8.x but SVN client 1.7.x !!