Integration of protobuf-dt with protoc not working - eclipse

I've installed the Protobuf-dt plugin in Eclipse and It's working okay, except for a weird problem related to it's integration with Protoc.
When I point it to it's executable, it says the file isn't protoc. If I point it to PATH, it doesn't show me any error but when I save the .proto file, it shows me an error saying that it haven't found protoc.
If I compile my .proto file manually with command line (using the same executable), it works okay.
Could it be a problem related to my 64 bits environment (windows/eclipse/jdk)? I haven't found a win64 executable of protoc.
Does anyone had the same problem? Any tip would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance.

I believe it was some Bug. I raised an Issue on theirs Google Code page and they seem to have fixed.
http://code.google.com/p/protobuf-dt/issues/detail?id=103

Related

libgit Library not found in Qt Project

I am attempting to install Fritzing from source and have followed the instructions exactly, and even reinstalled and used other instructions. Every time I have gotten to the point of running the project in Qt Creator and add the proper command line arguments, I get an error saying
libgit2 library not found in C:/Users/harry/Desktop/Fritzing/fritzing-app/../libgit2/build64/release
I have checked my libgit2/build64 and there is no subfolder titled 'Release'. I am at a loss and do not know where to go, so if anyone knows, thank you!

Error in NS2 debugging using Eclipse: "Cant find a source file at... "

I am trying to debug NS-2.34 using Eclipse Luna 4.4.2 under Ubuntu 13.10, and I had successfully configured NS2 and Eclipse for debugging by following the instructions from here "https://erl1.wordpress.com/2012/01/11/using-ns-2-with-eclipse/." The problem is, when I start debugging, debugging will not continue due to the error
Can't find a source file at "/build/buildd/eglibc-2/17/elf/dl-debug.c"
Locate the file or edit the source lookup path to include its location
I tried to locate the file in my system but I can't seem to figure that part out. How can I solve this error?
I think that's one of the many reasons why a lot of people transfer from NS2 to NS3 when they find that the module they would like to use is available in NS3.
For your problem, the page you are referring to has been a long time ago and there might be conflicts caused by new version.
For me, as a ns2er, when I modified some code or add new files, I just do "make" command and see what I got in the terminal. It works in most of the time.
Cheers,
Zeyu

Using an ANTLR Lexer For Syntax Coloring: Module excluded from the target platform error

I'm new to Netbeans Platform Development and following this tutorial.
When I try to build the project I get this error:
Module org.netbeans.modules.editor.util excluded from the target platform
There are apparently no errors in the app.
I'm using
NB 8.0
JDK jdk1.7.0_45
OS Win 8.1
What might be going wrong?
UPDATE:
Somehow the module was excluded via the disabled.modules in the platform.properties properties file.
When i comment it out (or remove it), it runs but gives this warning
Regards,
I nailed part of the problem. The error occurred because of unresolved dependencies.
I went through the tut again on a Linux Mint with NB7.4.
Now I get no errors but facing yet another problem. Now as I open a file, it opens the file but the Cookie Editor disappears.
I'm expecting someone will help on the second Issue.
Moderators: I'm not sure how will you guys respond to this but I've no clue how to go about my half solved problem.

Error opening Eclipse

I am unable to open Eclipse IDE. The error displayed is as below
Any idea what could be the reason? And how do I solve this??
Note: I ran CCleaner recently (any registry issue??) and I got error executing my open Eclispe project. On restarting I get this issue. Is re-installation going to help? Am going to do that and update result here. And I would really like to know what caused this for future precautions.
Update: Same error for new installation. But this time got error regarding lauching JVM and missing dlls so going to reinstall Java.
Unable to understand what might be the exact problem , still giving it a shot.
Did you go through this URL http://michaelzanussi.com/?p=468
Appears to be the same issue , resetting JAVA_HOME and PATH solved the issue for him
The authors of Eclipse strongly recommend manually updating the Eclipse.ini file to point directly to the JRE that you want to use rather than relying on Windows environment variables.
Also C:\Windows\System32 is a really strange place to find the Java Runtime Environment files, typically they wind up in C:\Program Files\Java or C:\Program Files (x86)\Java.

Problems using netbeans 7.01 with CMake 2.8.6

so once again, I'm having a little problem I can't figure out myself. Meaning, I'm pretty sure I know what the problem is, I just can't fix it.
I'm developing in C++ using Netbeans 7.01 with CMake 2.8.6. However, when I'm trying to build a project, I get the following error from CMake:
CMake Error: The path to the source directory:
H:/Projects/Netbeans/CppApplication_1/CONF=Release
contains unsupported character '='.
Please use a different source directory name.
Please note, that "CONF=Release" isn't a folder. It seems to be a configuration flag set by Netbeans, as it changes when I'm trying a debug build. So, my guess here is, that theres a space missing, or something similar. Unfortunately, I can't figure out where to change that. There are no options in any related Netbeans window, I can't find anything related in the configuration files for netbeans itself or the project either.
Did anyone here have experienced the same problem and found a solution to it? I would be very glad to hear it. If there's any information missing, let me know, I will add them as fast as possible.
Edit:
Just noticed there is already version 7.1 of netbeans, nice to know. However, even with this version, the same problem occurs.
You must specify the command you ran to allow for the error to be identified. However, it looks like you missed the "source-path" parameter.
The cmake command ends with the path to source and should be something like:
cmake -D CONF=Release <path to source>