I have installed the new version of eclispe and derby. I have also the three directories (ui, core and plugin doc).
Still to get derby server started, I only mange to do it from outside eclipse. I cannot manage to start the server from within eclipse or add derby nature to a project.
Can anyone helpout?
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I'm supporting a legacy application that runs on WLS 10.3.6, and I'm building a development environment with Eclipse 2022-09. All good when importing the Maven project, even doing an mvn install via Eclipse, all good.
I have the problem when trying to "create" a server in the Servers tab. I look inside the server types folder, and I find Oracle, but I don't know how to get the plugin for WLS 11g (10.3.6).
Thanks for your help.
Cheers !
That's my IDE version and the Servers tab
Eclipse installation Details
When i define a new server, i need find WLS 11g 10.3.6
When do i select a project to deploy
Next...
Next...
Nothing to do...
thanks in advance
I'm currently using Eclipse Mars on OS X to build a PHP based application which requires a web server for a form submission. However, upon attempting to add Tomcat 7.0 as a server, the server list is empty (shown below).
I've been following several tutorials for setting up and configuring a Tomcat server and each one says to place the extracted Tomcat folder in the Eclipse workspace directory so they'll be detected when adding them in Eclipse. The Apache Tomcat folder is in the workspace directory but it still isn't being detected. I've tried reinstalling Eclipse and deleting any duplicate files but I keep getting the same result. How can I properly set up and configure an Apache Tomcat server in Eclipse Mars?
You can tell it about the Tomcat installation using the Server Runtime Environments preference page.
If Tomcat isn't already a known server type, you might need to install a few more. The WTP FAQ has instructions.
All of those tutorials are wrong. You do want to download a copy of Tomcat from Apache so it has the expected layout when Eclipse looks for the jars needed to launch it, but there's no reason to actually put it in the workspace.
I am also using Eclipse neon and I faced the same problem and the answer was available in a question Apache Tomcat Not Showing in Eclipse Server Runtime Environments in the same site already posted
Of the Available Answers the below steps Worked for me:
1.Help-->Eclipse Marketplace
2.Type Tomcat in search box and choose the Option JST Server Adapters(Apache Tomcat,...) and click on Install
3.Then complete the Simple installation steps and after installation Eclipse prompts for a restart accept and then you can see the Target Run time updated with Tomcat server
Note:I am using Windows
I have this SpringRoo repository I have just cloned and imported on my Eclipse workspace. The Eclipse I'm using now is a newly download Eclipse Standard 4.3.2. I have installed the WTP (3.5.2) and SpringSource (all of them) plugins. Also I have installed a new Apache Tomcat 7 on my terminal.
The problem is that after importing the SpringRoo project (via Maven) on the workspace and resolved some issues with pom.xml, I can't get to run the application because I can't see Run As Server option on the Run As menu. How could I get the project/eclipse to have this feature again?
Spring Roo doesn't run in a server ... you should read the reference guide and understand what is Roo.
Any way, you can "Run As ..." the applications you create with Roo, not Roo itself.
I'm starting to use Java EE developing on Eclipse IDE, using GlassFish and the default Java database. What I should do if I want to change the database to Oracle?
The application runs on Glassfish and Google App Engine. But is there a way from Eclipse to deploy it to my own server?
You should be able to deploy locally to Glassfish and Oracle using Eclipse. (It's easy to do with IntelliJ.)
All you have to do to use Oracle is add the JDBC driver JAR to the appropriate spot in your CLASSPATH, use the new driver .class, and change the connection URL.
The driver JAR should match your JDK (e.g., ojdbc6.jar) and database version. It should come with your database or you can download it here.
I don't know if the JAR should go in your WEB-INF/lib or a server /lib; consult your docs to be sure.
One more thing: it goes without saying that you'll have to set up Oracle (e.g., proper credentials), create the new schema, and add the tables and indexes before you run your Java app. I thought I'd spell it out to be safe.
What's the easiest way for me to get Eclipse running with a Java servlet container on Ubuntu 9.10?
I've tried a number of things, hitting dead ends each time. The best setup would use Ubuntu packages as much as possible, not require running Eclipse as root, and be able to debug running servlets.
Dead ends so far include run-jetty-run, the Sysdeo Tomcat plugin, and Eclipse WTP with tomcat6.
A big part of the problem is that the Ubuntu tomcat6 installation is non-standard, splitting directories such that they're not all in TOMCAT_HOME. Eclipse is also non-standard, and the usual plugin installation methods don't work. I got close by installing the WTP through a PPA, but I stumbled when trying to get it to recognize tomcat.
Ubuntu recently includes a pretty full Eclipse package that you can install via Synaptic or such. But I prefer to download my own.
I download from the Eclipse download site. If I choose Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers then I have server environments for all Web app containers already built in. If I set up one for Tomcat (in Eclipse), Eclipse will download and install Tomcat for me. It's quite convenient, although I sometimes have trouble finding Tomcat or its files. Eclipse squirrels them away somewhere.
The server setup menus become accessible to you once you create a Web project (not plain Java project).
You should "apt-get install sun-java6-jdk", download and use the Java EE version of Eclipse, and then create a dynamic web project. In the web project create a jsp page, and right click -> "Run -> Run on server" where you may then install a server connector.
Some connectors are included in Java EE, some must be downloaded. Choose the one corresponding to the server you have downloaded and unpacked, and point Eclipse to the directory.
If all succeedes, the JSP page should then show up in a browser served from the started server.