Rescuing eclipse from bad workspace/project data - eclipse

I would like to take a step backwards opening eclipse without it automatically opening the source files which were last open, nor the projects which were last loaded, I have reason to believe this might clear it all up.
Motivation being that as of a forced quit of eclipse, after it had gone stuck after some project changes, my eclipse Luna is no longer able to start without getting hung up again.
How may I accomplish that?
It's important to me not to lose my settings such as syntax highlighting and stuff, while performing the salvation... and whereas I am pretty certain I could locate my workspace directory on disk, would be nice finding where does eclipse keep the pointer to it, just to make sure I'll be tinkering with the right workspace, if needed..
I guess I could call it "starting eclipse in safe mode" :)

Related

Eclipse: Complete Build State Clean/Reset

Is there a good way to reset Eclipse build state completely?
I am stuck getting 'Building all...' on each build (manual, BTW), even though it seems to finish normally, and it has been working just fine for weeks, and I've had this issue before, but it would resolve itself on one or more rebuilds; all of which leads me to believe that there is something internal that gets stuck in a wrong state.
Clean Project does not seem to do it. And the full rebuild 'says' it does a clean anyway, 'cleaning output folder'.
Clean + Close Project + Restart Eclipse does not seem to do it either (which fact I find rather unsatisfying and weird).
I suppose a re-import could do it.
Perhaps re-import under a different name?
But maybe there's something easier than re-import. Perhaps deleting some file or folder in Eclipse persisted state?
(Maybe tag this 'internals'? I am asking for specific solutions, but I am certainly interested in the IDE internals too, whether that will help solve this issue or not.)

Launching a Project in Eclipse

I am trying to run my projects in Eclipse, whenever I used to run any program a window appear and it shows that project is launching and building.
This never happened before. In fact, it was working very okay an hour before but now, even for old created project it showing this and not moving ahead.
Is this a general thing happened in eclipse as I haven't seen this before.
I want to get out of this to move ahead and to run the project.
The Launcher looks like this :
The progress Bar is also not moving ahead if it's building the project.
It's definitely normal to see; there's times I'll see it two or three times in a day. It shows up if the launching process is waiting on anything or is expected to take more than a couple seconds.
In your case, it seems to be stuck on "Building workspace," which happens when you open Eclipse. The more projects you have in Eclipse and the more sections of workspace you have (groups of tabs), the longer it takes to build your workspace. So I'm going to wager a guess that you tried to launch a project within the first minute or two of Eclipse being open. Am I right?
If that's the case, just wait a bit, and watch the lower right corner (where it says "Launching Clock" in your screenshot). When it shows it's stopped trying to do start-up tasks, you should be good to go.
If Eclsipse had been open for a while, then perhaps Eclipse is busy with other junk and calling it "Building workspace." Maybe it's having a hard time understanding what to do with one of your projects, so check for compiler errors. You can also try to "clean" your projects (Project -> Clean).
If that also fails...hmmm...I'm sure there's other options before you get to this point, but you might need to re-install Eclipse. I suppose there's a chance that in the deep dark corners of Eclipse, a file was corrupted, causing Eclipse to hang on a task that requires a missing/bad file. But before you go this far, make you get second or third opinions, because I might be missing some simpler cause of your Eclipse hanging than what I've listed already.
I found the solution.
I don't know what was the error and why it was displaying the Launcher window and stuck there. But, I forcefully stopped eclipse using Task Manager and then restarted it.
When restarted it took few minutes (more than usual time) and I was done with it. now it's working okay.
Re-installation of Eclipse also worked but i tried this before re-installing or upgrading.

Eclipse pydev: automatically save file when running program

It used to be that when I made changes to my .py file in Eclipse, then the changes would be automatically saved when I then ran the program in debug mode. I liked this since it meant that what it was debugging was the same as what I was looking at. Now it no longer does that, which means that's it's actually running an old version, unless I manually save the file first. The first time I ran the program, Eclipse asked me whether I always wanted any changes to be saved when the program was run, and I answered yes. I don't know why it doesn't do it anymore or how to get it back.
This seems to have happened after I started using Mercurial TortoiseHg with BitBucket. As part of that, I did move some files around, but everything is back and named the same as before.
Of course, I can just do change, save, run, but I'd rather not have to remember the extra save step.
Edit: Actually it's a bigger problem. It also shifts my breakpoints. In regular edit mode, I 1) set a break point and Save. 2) Add a new line above the breakpoint. Everything looks fine. 3) Save. Now the first breakpoint shifts position.
From your description, it seems that you're always opening the file as an external file and not a file within your workspace (the fact that breakpoints don't get updated is the major clue here).
You can check if this is what happening from the title that's shown in Eclipse (if it's a full filesystem path and not relative path considering your workspace location, this is what's probably happening).
How are you opening the file you're running? Are you opening it from the PyDev package explorer or dragging from the filesystem? (also, it'd be interesting knowing which eclipse/pydev/tortoise versions are you using)
Look at your Preferences -> Run/Debug -> Launching, you probably have "Never" set for Save Required Dirty Editors before launching.

Eclipse: High CPU Usage during Autocomplete

I've been using Eclipse without issue (I mean, besides the usual) for several weeks now. It's been speedy enough for my purposes. But as of today around noon, anytime I start typing an HTML tag or other autocomplete-able element, my whole System bogs down so much it's completely unusable. Watching in Task Manager, I show that Eclipse jumps from 0 up to 10-15% every time I type a "<" or ">" symbol!
I have a Core i7 PC with 6 GB of RAM, so this definitely isn't a system specs limitation. I've also uninstalled a couple of programs I installed today hoping maybe one of them was conflicting, but no dice. Even after a restart, I am unable to use Eclipse without pausing for several seconds every time it tries to auto-complete!
Anyone know what's going on here? I did some searching but all I found were VERY old bug reports that say the developers "are aware of the issue and are working on a solution".
First, I'd try bumping up the memory that eclipse has allocated to it:
-vmargs
-Xms2048m
-Xmx3072m
-XX:MaxPermSize 128m
That should be in your eclipse.ini file. This blog has some great reading as far as memory and Eclipse are concerned. Also you can read this lengthy SO thread if you need some more info and / or wish to induce sleep.
Next, try speeding up autocomplete. Go to Window / Preferences / Java / Editor / Content Assist / Auto-Activation and decrease Auto activation delay from 500 to zero.
Finally, you might look into hippie complete; the default key binding in Eclipse is 'alt-/' . This is also called "Word Completion" if you check out the shortcut list 'ctr-shft-l' ( that's L as in list ). On my mac the default key setting is 'ctr-.' . This is a faster version of autocomplete that I believe harkens back to the days of emacs. It seems to work great with local variables but not so great with functions on objects. Different beast I guess.
As a bonus, you can check here for a list of ways to speed up the Eclipse experience in general.
First, just as a test, try switching to a new workspace (File → Switch Workspace → Specify a folder which does not exist, it will be created).
If the problem is solved, this could be an issue with some bad settings or cache in your current workspace. If you can easily move to this new workspace (don't know how much effort you've put in customizing your workspace), I'd do that.
If you want to fix your current workspace, go into the .metadata/.plugins folder of your workspace, and look for folder that start with org.eclipse.wst. I'd try to take them out, and see if it helps (close Eclipse first). You may lose mostly history and cache in the process. You can check the folders specifically and intelligently guess what should stay.
If the problem is not solve by changing workspace, I would try downloading a fresh copy of Eclipse. You could try to reset the configuration folder, but that's a bit risky. If it's too much trouble, I'd start fresh.

Eclipse: Refreshing known types in Java project

If you press Shift+Ctrl+T or choose "Navigate > Open Type..." you get the "Open Type" dialog for quickly navigating to a known class. When you start typing a name only the classes for which the name matches stay visible. That way you can find a class of which you know the name very quick without having to browse through the package explorer tree.
This has been working great for me up until this morning. All of a sudden for a couple of my projects I am only seeing some of the types that exist. Of course I tried the obvious steps of refreshing the projects, cleaning the projects, re-building the projects, rebuilding the projects externally, but all to no avail. It is a bit odd since the types are known in other places. If I add an import statement Eclipse does not complain that it doesn't know the type and I can Ctrl-Click through the types to get to their file. However, the type navigation knows nothing about them.
In the past when InteliJ used to do this to me I would go find its cache files and delete them forcing it to rebuild. Does Eclipse have something similar I might do (I'm an Eclipse newbie)? I am using Eclipse 3.4.2 and I have it configured to not delete files on a clean (because our actual build process puts files into the output directories that I don't want Eclipse mucking with).
Have you tried closing and reopening the project? Only types from open projects are held in memory, and the refresh occurs when you Shift+Ctrl+T for the first time on a newly opened project.
Edit to add: Ctrl+Shift+R also displays the types (along with everything else) but it also supports the Camel-case thing to find the Java types quickly.
Close eclipse and delete any .index files and the savedIndexNames.txt file in workspace/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.jdt.core once eclipse is restarted it will rebuildl the entire index for Ctrl+T
try starting eclipse with the -clean flag, you can add this to your eclipse.ini which can be found in the same directory as you eclispe.exe, or if you start eclipse using a bat or shell script, add it as a startup argument, e.g. eclipse -clean.
The clean will tidy your workspace, and should force eclipse JDT to recalulate types. Ive had issue with .snap files (with seem to be created on dirty shutdowns) that seem to corrupt my workspace until I clean them up, not long ago eclipse lost the Object class!! made for some interesting errors!
I get problems like this often. I tried your solution, noticed it seemed to rebuild its search index, but I still couldn't find any of my classes. Then I took a look at the little green arrow on top right corner of that dialog, and noticed I had a working set selected which belonged to another project. I find it a little dumb that Eclipse doesn't warn you about this or anything, since this can be a very annoying little detail that one tends to forget (me at least ;-)).
Anyways, clicked on "Deselect Working Set" and bam I can find my classes again. Thought I'd add this here since others may make the same mistake.
This worked for me -
Select your project in Package Explorer
Press F5 or Right click and select Refresh
I used the "-clean" as first line in the eclipse.ini (version Juno) and worked like a charm.
I'v tried all the answers and I still had the issue. I then tried this:
I deleted the project (it's a maven project) and re-imported it. This time I made sure i check the "Add Project(s) to working set" checkbox. After that Eclipse was able to find the classes in that project.
The problem must have started because I didn't check this checkbox when i first imported this project.
By the way, I'm using Neon
(Warning: Shameless marketing ahead)
If you like this feature, you would love nWire. nWire allows, among other things, to quickly search not only for types, but for any possible Java element like method or field. It also uses a navigator view which is non-modal. After searching you can see the class associations in a very quick and easy way. Check out the video on our site.