I created an application on my desktop, added an index.html in the public directory and a JavaScript file in the lib directory. I pushed the application to Bluemix where I wanted to adapt the JavaScript file (watson-developer-cloud) in the Web IDE. However, in the Web IDE, I don't see all the files and folders, only:
.git
launchConfigurations
.cfignore
License.txt
README.md
How can I get in the right directory?
Please see this link:
https://hub.jazz.net/code/edit/edit.html#/code/file/jps-JazzSandbox/jps%2520%257C%2520myacp/
I used cf push on my Mac.
I can see this link to https://hub.jazz.net/git/jps/myacp, which seems to be IBM DevOps.
Related
So I'm working on my first website in Eclipse. It is very simple only shows some text and an input box currently that does nothing, all this eclipse stuff is in my project folder. I've set it up to use Apache Tomcat 9 which is also in my project folder.
Now I think that I shouldn't just push my top level project folder as if I do this, everytime I open up the project in Eclipse, Sourcetree will show 50 or so files modified (.metadata files and such), so I'm guessing that I shouldn't have pushed these to start with.
I've since reset all my commits and am now wondering which files are necessary to upload to github?
You should add all source files to git: the actual code that runs your site (PHP, JavaScript, HTML, whatever it is), along with things like CSS. Don't include config files or files auto generated by the IDE (Eclipse in your case). You can use a .gitignore file to tell git not to pay attention to certain files, types of files, or directories. A guide to .gitignore files can be found here.
Recently we'd updated our Worklight platform with the latest Fixpack (6.1.01) and everything works fine after the update.
However although we had check in all our files into our SVN repository, when we check out a fresh copy of project, the eclipse Worklight plugin will still perform an upgrade to the project.
Is there a Worklight platform version control in the project folder that we missed out and didn't commit to the repository? or is there extra setting that we need to apply before checking into the SVN repo?
Any clues will help, thank you.
EDIT
Below is the print screen taken from the SVN Repository browser in eclipse. We use Windows environment for development. The .settings folder is inside the repo.
EDIT 2
After inspecting the org.eclipse.core.resources.prefs file in the .settings folder, i notice that there's this line of properties that are not updated in the repo:
wl_version=6.1.0.00.20131219-1900
Is it this line that is causing the problem?
Edit the question with the files/folders you did commit to SVN.
Additionally, make sure to setup your PC/Mac to display hidden files and folders and see that you did not miss those.
Specifically, there is a .settings folder (. denotes a hidden folder in Mac) that also contains a org.eclipse.core.resources.prefs file.
I'd be interested to see the result of an import of a project that does contain this folder and this specific file.
As previous Eclipse user switched to IntelliJ I would like to be able to access folder external to my project from inside the IDE, while developing.
In Eclipse I was using the feature Creating linked resources.
I wonder if there is any feature in IntelliJ that helps me to access external files and folder in a similar way (for instance, if I want to edit the configuration of my application server which is located outside my project).
Yes you can do it by adding an new content root in your module.
You do that from
Project Structure (alt+ctrl+shift+s) - Modules - "My-Module" - + Add Content root
Now you have the contents of the added folder available in your project.
I was searching for a way to get the asset folder link working in IntelliJ as it was working in Eclipse and I found following link in the wikis of libgdx itself.
Linking the asset directories
It describes basically three approaches:
Just copy the asset folder into the desktop folder. (BAD)
Use the asset folder in the android project as working directory for the desktop project through 'Run-Configurations'. (GOOD)
Create a symbolic-link (GOOD)
I tested the 2nd option and it's working fine for me.
When I use Eclipse Remote System Explorer or Aptana plugin to upload files, the files are placed in a sub-directory of my intended upload folder. The sub-directory is named according to my project name. How do I upload to the folder I intend to upload to without the files going into a sub-directory? Thanks for your wisdom!
I could not speak of RSE, but in Aptana Studio everything depends on how did you setup a connection between FTP and local project. Basically, if your ftp://xyz/myproject is connected to myproject in workspace, all files will go where intended to without sub-folders.
See http://wiki.appcelerator.org/display/tis/FTP%2C+SFTP%2C+and+FTPS+Deployment for more information.
Regards,
Max
I have been creating Google AppEngine projects using Eclipse SDK 3.6.1.
In all of the projects I have a StyleSheet default.css (all seperate copies) that I have in the war folder.
I would like to keep this file in one place to be included in all of the projects.
I have created a copy in the workspace folder.
I have tried linking the file into the war folder, it shows up as a linked file, I can edit it, and all looks fine.
When I run the application I can see by the webpage created that it is not recognizing the linked file.
I hope that I am missing something simple, I do not like keeping multiple copies of a common resource.
Any ideas?
Thanks,
RRaney
Creating a symbolic link to the file will do the job.
For example, on a Windows 7/Vista machine, run a command like this from the shell (as an administrator) to link two folders:
mklink /D C:\workspace\YetAnotherAppEngineProject\war\shared C:\workspace\SharedResourcesProject\shared
I assume that when you wrote "I have tried linking the file into the war folder" you meant that you tried linking a file/folder into the war folder using Eclipse's linked file/folder functionality. These links are limited to the Eclipse IDE and managed by it (int the .project file) - the Google App Engine runtime doesn't recognize them since it accesses the file system directly and not through Eclipse.
A symbolic link is done at the file-system level, and Google App Engine will recognize and respect it properly.
To create a symbolic link, use the "ln" shell command on Linux. On Windows Vista/7 use "mklink" (earlier Windows versions only have "hard links" which are not as nice for this purpose but should also get the job done, see the "linkd" command).
Have you tried "Static Files and Resource Files"?