I have successfully upgraded my localhost copy of SAP Commerce 2005 to 2105, and I'm now in the process of importing the 2105 platform into my Eclipse IDE. This import process runs for a long time and eventually errors out with the following error:
java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Java heap space
I've tried increasing heap size for Eclipse multiple times, but I still end up running out of memory. I'm using the Hybris/Eclipse plugin to do this.
It appears that the smartedit module has significantly increased in size and seems to be the culprit in getting the platform to load.
I've read that it's not possible to load the 2105 platform into Eclipse with the smartedit projects included, and I've also read that upgrading the version of the Hybris/Eclipse plugin does not help either.
What is everyone else doing to solve this problem? I've tried several times loading individual projects, making sure to exclude any project with the name 'smartedit' in it, but it still runs for a long time and then exits with the out of memory error.
Without stacktrace hard to say what is going on your PC. MAYBE that issue is same to already raised on github.com on plugin repository.
https://github.com/SAP/hybris-commerce-eclipse-plugin/issues/99
I have tested that and closed. There is solution proposed to that particular case. Maybe will work out with yours
Related
I am using NetBeans as my IDE. After working a few hours, I got the following problems
1. It got stuck with scan for external changes suspended
2. and after this came, the auto-load also got fails. It shows please wait... only.
Due to this I am planning to change my IDE. Is there any way to overcome this? I thought it was due to the issue with my slow computer. I just formatted and upgraded it. Then also it shows the same issue.
My NetNeans is the small package with PHP and HTML only.
3. It also cause high CPU usage sometimes
My operating system is Windows 8.1 with 4 GB memory and i3 processor
You should close your old projects that you are not working. You clears your netbeans cache as well.
You can get help about clear netbeans cache from here
Yes, I know. I got no rep on this site. But I have to ask this.
I upgraded my laptop, my main dev machine, from 14.02 LTS to 14.04 LTS and the plugins I use with eclipse (3.7) completely broke. I use WOLips (https://github.com/wocommunity/wolips) with eclipse. WOLips is for working with WebObjects applications.
I was getting two crashes. One would occur when editing a java file, when auto-suggest kicked in. I fixed this by adding "-Dorg.eclipse.swt.browser.DefaultType=mozilla" to the end of my eclipse.ini. I have no idea how I found that. It took a lot of random searching.
Now, I get an exception whenever I open a WOComponent:
Unhandled event loop exception
No more handles [Could not detect registered XULRunner to use]
Trying to define a XULRunnerPath just gives me even stranger errors.
I can file a bug with eclipse (which I did). I tried eclipse 4.2 and 4.4 and got other complicated integration issues. I can file a bug with mozilla (though I was not aware that they were involved). I can install a copy of xulrunner (outside of my copy of Firefox) and point to that (which I did). I can file a bug with ubuntu launchpad (which I did). None of these get you very much response.
So, I was going from one LTS to another LTS. 14.04 - 14.02 = 0.02. Not a huge deal, yes? Should I have expected problems? How can I file a bug with the people involved in just this upgrade and not the other twelve systems that this touches upon?
I had Apple laptops for a long time. I do not expect that amount of hand-holding. But I do wish someone would throw me a bone.
I can get work done if I go buy another hard disk, install 12.04 onto it and copy all of my data back. Is this really necessary? You know, I am willing to help integration testing of these releases. But the systems for finding the right place to put my oar in the water seem fairly impenetrable. Any suggestions? I do not mind working for a solution. If there is a solution.
Ray,
Did you try Eclipse 4.4 and use the instructions on the wiki for compiling the new WOLips? the Eclipse 4.4 is acting just fine for me (but I'm on a Mac sorry :( )
We are developing our web application using JAVA GWT-P framework (Version 2.4). We are using Eclipse (Version 3.7) Indigo as a development GUI. While we are debugging the application, eclipse is getting hanged generally and surprisingly this is a random behavior.
And this is not happening in only part of the program. Anytime, while we debug, Eclipse hangs in different module.
To resolve this , we tried to use different Operating system such as Windows XP (development gui: Eclipse version 3.7 Indigo), Fedora Version 16 (with development gui: Eclipse version Helios Service Release 2), Cent OS (with development gui: Eclipse version Helios Service Release 2). But no luck.
Can anyone help me out to decide which OS, and eclipse or version should we have to use so can able to resolve the hanging issue?
Use a machine with at least 8G RAM, quad core for GWT development. Anything less than that would be catastrophic and unproductive.
Ideally 8 core, 12 GB.
Increase your eclipse jvm vm heap size max, at startup.
Default eclipse startup is either 256M or 512M. It should be at least 768M. I have tried 1024M which
made only a marginal difference above 768M. I found 900M seems to be
the most that would be used in my cases.
You may have to increase your permgen memory allocation too. I think
permgen space is used for storing class definition and are never
garbage-collected. I presume that when my eclipse hung indefinitely
was when there was no more permgen space to store new class defn.
I have never had to redefine the stackspace allocation for eclipse.
You can google around to find out the jvm startup arguments to define mem allocation. e.g. -Xmx, etc.
Initially develop only for a single browser. Decide between using FF
or Chrome as your dev browser. Then tune your entrypoint gwt.xml to
set the user-agent property for that browser. Google on gwt set
property user-agent. Compiling for only one browser, I have found,
speeds up the compilation a lot.
Don't ever store your projects, source files, resources or libs
that are accessed by the compiler, in a network or usb drive. All your
compilable/includable resources should be on your local drive.
Try to use maven or some other tool for dependency management, so that you do not need to access your jars or dependent projects over the network.
Do not, ever, let your development strategy roll down the hill by
depending on live-project dependencies. Having workspace with 50 or more
projects is disaster and signifies a development team in crisis.
The compulsive and persistent compilation, scanning of projects by
eclipse background take a huge toll on the performance of eclipse.
Try to disable as much validation as possible. e.g., disable html and
javascript validation.
If you have a huge number of server side projects ...
You need to re-architect your development strategy to cluster your 50 - 100 projects into project packages, so that each project package has no more than 20 compilable/validateable project members (ideally less than 5 projects). Each package is frozen by versions and packaged as jars. Use only the jars for development dependencies.
Your programmers need to learn not to have the impulse to work on a workspace with 200 projects. Enhancements are reserved for bugzillas of each project package. Having a 200 project workspace is bad project management. It wastes your programmers' time by having eclipse slow down now and then.
Have sufficient temp space (or for Windows sufficient slack space on
the user disk). I have experienced that insufficient disk space for
compiler buffering/caching has caused slow-downs and hang-ups. Having
a 5G slack space is the minimal - the more the merrier so as to
preclude having to clear the trash or search for files to delete or
clear the GWT compiler generated temp files. A 5G slack space is still
very inconvenient.
AFAI have experienced, neither windows 7/vista or linux made much performance difference except that eclipse seems to start up much slower on Windows.
Therefore, if you know how to tune your anti-virus, may be you should
tell the anti-virus software to skip scanning the workspace and project folders.
Unless you have an 8-core 12GB machine, you should disable most of windows
aero, trasparency. But you need to keep windows compositing
(otherwise you would destroy your eyesight looking at the bad fonts).
THE PROBLEM
I have a GWT project that worked fine on my old core2 machine. When I recently got a new core i7, 8GB ram (Dell XPS Ubuntu developer edition), I discovered that Eclipse hangs VERY OFTEN (about 90% of the startups hang) when I try to start debugging by clicking the browser link under the "Development Mode" eclipse view. There MUST be a thread synchronization bug (deadlock) that can only happen when the 'timing is different' from normal test cases. This fact that it's a timing bug deadlock is why it appears so "random" and has not yet been discovered and fixed. I have all the LATEST GWT at the time I'm writing this, and latest Eclipse etc.
THE WORKAROUND:
Luckily I discovered that if I copy that link and paste it into an already started instance of Firefox (outside eclipse) then there is never any hang. I'm 100% certain that this is not a problem in my code. I'm 95% certain it's a deadlock happening in GWT. So just don't click the "Development Mode" link and you'll be fine. Hope to have helped someone with this post.
I am using RAD 7.5 on a Windows XP m/c. Whenever I try to do a clean up/build the project, I get a message saying
The project was not built due to "Could not delete 'D:\Documents and Settings\User\My Documents\project\exe\EXE\WebContent\WEB-INF\classes\BusinessRules.properties'.". Fix the problem, then try refreshing this project and building it since it may be inconsistent
To overcome this problem, I need to stop the server, manually delete this file & then build & restart the server. Any idea why I am facing this issue?
I've experienced the issue in RAD 8.0, but not nearly as consistently as you. A second build attempt nearly always resolves the problem for me.
Although there are a number of references to this issue on the Eclipse bug tracking site, none of the bugs I've read have a definitive answer on the cause. There is some speculation that it may be due to a file handle leak. The problem appears to have begun around Eclipse version 3.6.1. I'm not sure exactly which Eclipse version RAD 7.5 is based on, but I believe it is 3.6.1 or later.
Does the issue only occur when the application is deployed and the server is running? I was wondering if you'd gotten the same results with the server shut down.
Unfortunately, the only concrete suggestions I can offer are to try refreshing the project frequently, and perhaps creating a new workspace -- its a bit of a hack, but a creating a fresh workspace has fixed a few really odd RAD issues I've encountered.
Here are a couple of the bug reports from the Eclipse bug tracking site:
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=309235
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=332607
I have a very strange issue that I'm hoping someone can help me with. I have various installations of Eclipse on my development machine at work. The one I primarily use is Weblogic WorkSpace Studio 10.2. This installation, along with a few Pulse installations I have set up works fine when I'm logged into my computer physically.
However, when I try to log into the computer using Microsoft's Remote Desktop Connection utility I get an error stating: "Could not create Java virtual machine." and then I get the lovely Eclipse error box which I personally can gather almost nothing from.
Even if you don't have the solution, any help would be greatly appreciated.
Justin
What ended up working for me was the memory settings for the JVM. Apparently the remote desktop connection, or some other setting in Windows, blocks off a fairly large amount of space. By reducing the heap size allocation for the JVM during Eclipse and server start-up I was able to get this working. As a side note, I had PLENTY of space that windows could have used, so I don't think blankly adding more memory would necessarily solve the issue. If you find another solution, please let me know.
• We came across an issue when user RDC’s to a remote system where the OS is Windows 10 and has a running Eclipse instance, the Eclipse instance terminates
• Eclipse is one of the IDE’s for Java
• The issue is because of Windows 10 Exploit protection
• Pre-requisite: You will need Administrative permissions for executing the below
• Navigate to Settings -> Update & Security -> Windows Security -> App & Browser Control -> Exploit Protection Settings
• Add the program to exclude as below
P.s. As of Window 10 1909 MS security advisory mentions we can disable some exploit protections by default.
Perhaps it is permission related. take a look at similar issue that symantec has:
http://service1.symantec.com/support/ent-security.nsf/854fa02b4f5013678825731a007d06af/8ea1593f1d1fcee68025759a003d8403?OpenDocument
Try to see if you have same patches installed that causes the security issue. Also refer to application log to see if there is a more specific error. Good luck :)
I think issue happens due to Windows, not Eclipse nor JVM. There is still open Bug report on the Eclipse side and one of the comments state that Microsoft is working on the issue.
I have tried Windows Remote Desktop-ing into my dev machine at work (which had only one version of eclipse installed on it). I had no troubles.
Is it possible that your problems stem from multiple versions of eclipse running at the same time?
Also, have you tried a fresh install of eclipse on your dev machine?
If the above two suggestions don't work, then the only thing that I can think of is what Mohammad said: you might need to check your permissions.
I would check the system log if I were you: Start > run > eventvwr
The first thing to look at is the .log file which is in your eclipse's metadata folder (found in your workspace at $WORKSPACE_ROOT/.metadata/.log). If you post the stack trace that it generates upon initialization, we can give a definitive answer.
I am now experiencing this in Eclipse (the Oxygen release and Java 1.8.0_181). I previously had the same problem with another Java-based program (Oxygen XML/XSL editor - the product name is coincidentally the same as the Eclipse version). Last year the Oxygen support team answered that it may be a known problem in Java.
Even without seeing a crash report, considering your sequence of
events, this seems like a known common cause of crash for the Java
runtime. Keeping Oxygen/Java running for a long time, until the screen
or video card enters sleep then connecting/disconnecting
screens/projectors or connecting/disconnecting RDP can trigger a crash
in the Java runtime. We keep updating the Java runtime (JRE) with each
new version of Oxygen, but so far the issue has not been resolved in
newer versions of the JRE.
e.g. Java VM logged issue:
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8153389