I do not see a JPA Tools item in a context menu of my project in Eclipse Photon.
In my Eclipse Oxygen installation I have this item. It is provided by the "Eclipse Web Tools Platform" provider's "Dali Java Persistence Tools - JPA UI" plugin. I can verify that it is installed in my Eclipse Oxygen by going to Help → About Eclipse SDK → Installation Details → Plug-ins and searching for org.eclipse.jpt.jpa.ui.
The only JPA plugin that is not yet installed in my Eclipse Photon from the "Photon" repo is "Dali Java Persistence Tools - JPA Diagram Editor". But I do not have it in my Eclipse Oxygen installation as well.
Which plugin should I install in order to enable the JPA Tools entry?
I do not know the plugin name, but this comment worked for me:
Open the context menu of the project
Choose Properties
In the Project Facets section check the JPA checkbox
Related
I'm using Eclipse Luna, I want to create a web app and use Hibernate for my data. In Eclipse Marketplace I found Hibernate Tools for Indigo or Helios but not for Luna.
I found just Red Hat JBoss Developper Studio for Luna ( what's that ?).
Hibernate Tools is part of JBoss Developer Studio. One option is to install (from Eclipse Marketplace) Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio (Luna), which will include the entire suite of JBoss tools (including Hibernate Tools). If you just want the Hibernate Tools, you'll have to use Help > Install New Software... and then add the JBoss Tools update site (http://download.jboss.org/jbosstools/updates/stable/luna/). From there you can select just the Hibernate Tools (or anything else you want).
I use Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP) version 4.4 Luna. Menu Help \ Install new software...
Add plug-in repository: http://download.jboss.org/jbosstools/updates/stable/luna/
Search modules for Hibernate (Install all JBoss plug-ins is not good practice), then install
(open screenshot image in a new window for big size)
just go to eclipse marketplace.
type jboss tools luna.
install the plugin.
Done.
I'm trying to use project facets in Eclipse but the "project facets" section under "project -> properties" is gone. I noticed this when switching to Eclipse Juno from Eclipse Indigo. I thought this was related to Juno, so I switched back to Indigo, only to find the "project facets" were gone there too.
I tried both versions as a fresh install and with a clean workspace.
Searching the web for this issue only came up with "go to 'project -> properties -> project facets'", but this simply isn't possible.
UPDATE:
I managed to break it down. The facet related stuff disappears after I installed the "JBossAS Tools" package from the JBoss update site (http://download.jboss.org/jbosstools/updates/development/juno/).
Steps to reproduce:
Install Eclipse Juno (4.2.0)
Install project facets from http://download.eclipse.org/releases/juno
Under "Modeling": "EMF Facet SDK (Incubation)"
Under "Web, XML, Java EE and OSGi Enterprise Development": "Eclipse Faceted Project Framework"
After a restart see that Eclipse has possibility to create a faceted project (File -> New -> Other -> Faceted Project)
Install "JBossAS Tools" from http://download.jboss.org/jbosstools/updates/development/juno/
Restart, check for faceted things, aaand it's gone.
This might depend on which install of eclipse you are using. In any case, you can download the needed packages to get Facets working.
Facets are part of the Web Tools Platform. If you can't find it in the package manager, you can download it here:
http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/downloads/
You should create your Eclipse project using File / New / Project... / General / Faceted Project wizard or use project's popup menu Configure / Convert to Faceted From....
I installed the "JBossAS Tools" package from the nightly built update site. This didn't cause problems regarding project facets.
Nightly update site: http://download.jboss.org/jbosstools/updates/nightly/core/trunk/
I have Standard version of eclipse Galileo. Now I want to develop enterprise applications on it. Any idea how can I get Java EE perspective? How to install Java EE tools in the standard version?
I had the same problem. I installed the latest Eclipse platform, Indigo, first using the Ubuntu Software Center, and when I didn't see the JavaEE perspective, I though I'd gotten the wrong one. I deleted that and installed the Java EE version downloadable from eclipse.org -- but still no Java EE perspective available. Then I read the advice above (and elsewhere) about installing the WTP plugins.
I decided to blow away the previous installation of Eclipse, because I prefer installing everything through the normal package management system. Then, after having installed Eclipse again, through the Ubuntu Software Center (and not seeing the Java EE perspective)... but I'll tell the rest of the story as a set of instructions:
Install Eclipse. In Ubuntu, you can do it at least in these two ways:
Go to the Ubuntu Software Center, search for eclipse, and install "Extensible Tool Platform and Java IDE"; or
Give the command sudo apt-get install eclipse eclipse-cdt eclipse-emf eclipse-emf-examples eclipse-emf-sdk eclipse-jdt eclipse-pde eclipse-platform eclipse-platform-data eclipse-rcp eclipse-rse eclipse-xsd eclipse-xsd-sdk (those are what I have after doing all these steps; they might not all be necessary, but can't hurt)
Open Eclipse, and give a directory to use as a workspace.
Go to "Help" -> "Install New Software...".
In the new dialog, in the "Work with:" pull-down list, select "Indigo - http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigoIndigo - http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo".
Click the checkbox to the left of "Web, XML, Java EE and OSGI Enterprise Development".
Click the "Next >" button. The installation will start.
The dialog will now list the items to be installed, and ask you to confirm the installation. Click the "Next >" button. The installation will complete.
Now, back in the main window, in "Window" -> "Perspective", I still could not see "Java EE" -- but it might have been under the "Other" selection; I didn't check, and that's where it can be found now that I've done everything described here.
Click on "File" -> "New" -> "Dynamic Web Project". The existence of this selection means that you've successfully installed the web development tools.
Configure the project. After you've pressed "Finish", Eclipse should ask you whether you want to open the Java EE perspective.
By the way, some of those Eclipse packages that I give for installing through apt-get might have been installed during the Eclipse software update phase, as I didn't install all of them by myself. The most important ones are eclipse, eclipse-platform, eclipse-platform-data, eclipse-pde, and eclipse-rcp. The descriptions of all of them are:
eclipse - Extensible Tool Platform and Java IDE
eclipse-cdt - C/C++ Development Tools for Eclipse
eclipse-emf - Eclipse Modeling Framework (EMF)
eclipse-emf-examples - Eclipse EMF/XSD examples
eclipse-emf-sdk - Eclipse Modeling Framework (EMF) - (Source/Documentation)
eclipse-jdt - Eclipse Java Development Tools (JDT)
eclipse-pde - Eclipse Plug-in Development Environment (PDE)
eclipse-platform - Eclipse platform without plug-ins to develop any language
eclipse-platform-data - Eclipse platform without plug-ins to develop any language (data)
eclipse-rcp - Eclipse Rich Client Platform (RCP)
eclipse-rse - Eclipse Remote System Explorer (RSE)
eclipse-xsd - XML Schema Definition (XSD) for Eclipse
eclipse-xsd-sdk -
The standard edition can be upgraded to J2EE edition by installing the different plug-ins like WTP and so on.
Did you try to look at the update site for Galileo?
It's better to download newest version of eclipse "for Java EE Developers".
It also includes standard version.
As per http://help.eclipse.org/helios/topic/org.eclipse.jst.ws.cxf.doc.user/reference/preferences.html
The CXF 2.x preferences can be accessed via Window > Preferences... > Web Services > CXF 2.x Preferences from the top level menu.
but I dont see the option CXF 2.x Preferences under Web Services, though I have chosen JavaEE perspective.
any ideas how to enable this?
Sorry for such a simple question.
I also cannot do not see CXF as a Project Facet as per http://help.eclipse.org/helios/index.jsp?topic=/org.eclipse.jst.ws.jaxws.doc.user/gettingstarted/requirements.html
I know this is something to do with getting Eclipse aware of CXF libraries, but cant find the tutorial for this.
Go to Help -> Install New Software. In the drop down 'Work With' select :
The Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP) Project update site - http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/updates
In the 'type filter text', type in 'cxf' and select the SDK and other results and install them. Restart Eclipse and you should get CXF 2.x Preferences under Window > Preferences... > Web Services
CXF tooling is not present in Eclipse 3.5 "Galileo" release. It was added in Eclipse 3.6 "Helios". You cannot upgrade in place from one major release of Eclipse to another. You will need to download a new Eclipse distro. I recommend Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers package that you can get from the official download site.
If CXF runtime is not showing up in the Preferences, try updating the WTP version for your Eclipse installation.
Point to http://download.eclipse.org/releases/galileo/, update the plugins and restart Eclipse.
I want an Eclipse Java EE plugin which I can install directly from Eclipse.
I searched about it on Google and found some ones but couldn't figure out how to download them directly from Eclipse.
One plugin I found was WTP but couldn't find the location of the WTP repository that I can enter in the Eclipse's Software Update tool.
I am using Eclipse 3.4.2 (Ganymede)
I warmly suggest to install Eclipse IDE for Java EE developers which already includes the Web Tools Platform (WTP) and much more (see this page for a full comparison).
As an alternative, you can download a zip of the Web Tools from here or install it via Update Manager using this URL:
http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/updates/
If you have Eclipse Galileo you should go to Help > Install New Software. Then the list of available sites to install updates will appear. You should add the WTP plug-in to this list, for example.
To do this, click on Add and enter the name and location (you can get this from the WTP site). Then, select this plug-in and click on Finish. That's it and it's valid to all plug-ins.
when you are searching do a comprehensive search http:// in eclipse
Google search the repository containing Java EE WTP
Install the new software in your IDE, restart your IDE, right click under the project explorer view, select new, the option for creating a dynamic web project should now be available. I did it using the luna version of eclipse which dose not have the default and now have the option.
Use
help---install new software--type http://findbugs.cs.umd.edu/eclipse
And go from there