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Mylyn/User Guide

< Mylyn
Revision as of 12:38, 16 March 2007 by Mik.kersten.eclipse.org (Talk | contribs) (Configuration)


Also see: Tips & Tricks

Introduction

For tutorials and articles on using Mylar refer to the Publications page. The role of this document is to provide up-to-date documentation on a listing of the key Mylar features and is not intended as a tutorial, and to allow users to contribute additional documentation.

Mylar is a task-focused UI for Eclipse that makes working with very large workspaces as easy as working with small ones. Mylar extends Eclipse with mechanisms for keeping track of the tasks that you work on. A task is defined as any unit of work that you want to recall or share with others, such as a bug reported by a user or a note to yourself about improving a feature. You can store tasks locally in your workspace, or they can come from one or more task repositories. To connect to a task repository, you must have a connector that supports that repository. (A task repository is a bug/ticket/issue tracker such as Bugzilla, Trac, or JIRA).

Once your tasks are integrated, Mylar monitors your work activity on those tasks to identify information relevant to the task-at-hand. Mylar monitors Eclipse and captures your interaction in a task context. System artifacts such as files, types, methods, and fields get assigned a degree-of-interest based on how recently and frequently you interact with them. This results in uninteresting elements being filtered from view within Eclipse, allowing you to focus on on what is important. From this, Mylar creates a task context, which is the set of all artifacts related to your task. These can include methods you have edited, APIs you have referred to, and documents you have browsed. Mylar uses this task context to focus the Eclipse UI on interesting information, hide what's uninteresting, and automatically find what's related. Having the information you need to get your work done at your fingertips improves your productivity by reducing the time you spend searching, scrolling, and navigating. By making task context explicit, Mylar also facilitates multitasking, planning, reusing past efforts, and sharing expertise.

Installation

Also see the Installation FAQ

To install Mylar, you need to

After you have installed Mylar, there are a few more configuration steps that you might wish to do:

Releases

The best and most stable release to use is always the latest. This goes for milestone releases (e.g. 2.0M1) which will often have bug fixes and other improvements over final release versions (e.g. 1.0.1). The "milestone" tag only refers to the fact that the API for that release is still stabilizing. Our policy is not to destabilize, so any Mylar build that you install should be stable, including development builds. The UI of development builds can fluctuate.

Schedule

  • Dev builds
    • Eclipse 3.3: available every Friday, often more frequently
    • Eclipse 3.2: available 2 and 4 weeks after Milestone release date, or on request
  • Eclipse milestone releases
    • Day of the milestone release the dev build supports the latest milestone
    • 1 week after the milestone release a new Mylar release is available

Dev Builds

Development builds are released weekly, usually on Friday, and should be used by all Mylar contributors not using Mylar straight from CVS.

  • Eclipse 3.3: latest Eclipse milestone release is fully supported.
  • Eclipse 3.2: any 3.2.x version

Task List and Context Store Compatibility

The Task List and Context Store are compatible across all currently-supported Eclipse versions. This means that you can use the same .mylar data in both Eclipse 3.2 and 3.3. For Mylar versions that have reached their end-of-life we specify the update path so that the contents of the .mylar folder are updated. This is listed in the "Update notes" on top of the New & Noteworthy.

Task context compatibility

Task contexts can be shared with any previous released version of Mylar. Note that if elements have been renamed they may not appear as interesting when the context is activated.

Download

For supported platforms and known limitations please see the Mylar download page.

The recommended way to install Mylar is from inside Eclipse:

  1. Select Help->Software Updates->Find and Install.
  2. Select Search for new features to install and select Next.
  3. Select New Remote Site.
  4. Enter "Mylar" for the name and insert the download site given on the Mylar downloads page. The URL should end up as something similar to http://download.eclipse.org/technology/mylar/update-site/eX.Y. Select OK.
  5. Make sure there is a check in the Mylar box, and select Finish.
  6. Put a check in the box next to Mylar. If you don't mind downloading some stuff you don't need, go ahead and select Next. Otherwise, expand the Mylar line (by clicking on the disclosure triangle) and select what you want. We recommend downloading the Task List, the Focused UI, and connectors appropriate to the bug repository that you use -- Bugzilla, Trac, or Jira. (Note that to download Jira, you need both the core and the connector.) You can download Mylar without a bug repository, but it won't be as interesting an experience.
  7. Read the license agreements, accept or decline as appropriate, and either select Next (if you accept) or Cancel (if you do not accept).
  8. You will see a list of features and where to install them. If the default installation directory is fine, select Finish.


Errors you might get during the download process:

  • Network connection problems encountered during search means that Eclipse couldn't find the location you entered. This might be because you copied something incorrectly (watch for extra characters -- even extra spaces can cause errors), or because the site went down. You might be able to see if the site is down by copying the URL into your Web browser.
  • Update manager failure means that Eclipse could not access the update site, or that it got confused about the configuration state of your Eclipse. First try updating again to see if the update site is accessible.
  • If you are trying to update the JIRA connector you can also try de-selecting that feature in case the Tigris.org update site is not accessible. Using use Search for new features.. when installing can help to avoid this problem. If that does not work see the feature configuration troubleshooting below.
  • You will probably get a warning that the feature is unsigned. If you trust that hackers have not befouled the Mylar plug-in, select Install All.
  • You will get a dialog box asking if you would like to restart Eclipse. We recommend that you select Yes.


Platform requirements

Mylar requires the Java 5 virtual machine. To check the version of the Java virtual machine that Eclipse was launched with to to Help -> About Eclipse SDK -> Configuration Details and verify that the java.vm.version is 1.5.

Mac users should refer to the last comment on bug 1163477 for instructions on how to change the 1.4 default.

  • If you do not have Java 5, you can download it from Sun's web site.
  • If you have more than one VM, you need to specify that Eclipse should use the JDK1.5 VM.

We do not recommend using JDK 1.6 on Eclipse 3.1. (It works fine with Eclipse 3.2 or 3.3.) To use JDK 1.6 on Eclipse 3.1, you must add the following line to your config.ini file:

   org.osgi.framework.executionenvironment=OSGi/Minimum-1.0,OSGi/Minimum-1.1,JRE-1.1,J2SE-1.2,
   J2SE-1.3,J2SE-1.4,J2SE-1.5,JavaSE-1.6

Linux and JVM issues

For those experiencing unstable performance with Linux using the Sun JVM, download the IBM JVM, which will require you to register with IBM prior to download.


In Unix, set the environment variable JAVA_HOME to the root of the JDK1.5 installation and/or set the PATH variable to put the JDK1.5 executable directory before any other VM executable directories. For example, under bash in Unix:

export JAVA_HOME="(location of JDK1.5 root)"
export PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin:$PATH

Installing Browser on Linux

Mylar uses the Standard Widget Toolkit Browser, which means that there must be a browser on the system that works with the SWT Browser. For Windows and MacOS, the standard works fine, but on some Linux distributions, you will need to download one. Note: as of 3 Oct 2006, default Firefox distributions for Linux will not work; errors such as "Could not create Browser page: No more handles (java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: ...)" may appear.

See the SWT Browser guide for which browsers will work.

Seamonkey is reported to work well. Just install and then point MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME to /usr/lib/seamonkey. (read below for example of setting this variable)

To test to see if your browser is properly configured, select Window -> Show View -> Other -> General -> Internal Web Browser, then try to bring up a web page.


  • A quick work-around is to disable the internal browser pages in Mylar editors. To do this: Window -> Preferences -> Mylar -> Tasks -> Disable Internal Browser.
  • Before testing the browser support in Mylar, you must first ensure that the Eclipse internal browser is correctly configured. To test to see if your browser is properly configured, select Window -> Show View -> Other -> General -> Internal Web Browser, then try to bring up a web page.
  • Notice: You must use the GTK2 version of Mozilla for internal browser integration.
  • Notice: The internal browser does not correctly support HTTPS. See bug 80033.


Mylar Task Management features makes use of Eclipse's internal browser, which may require additional install steps listed below. You also have the option of disabling Mylar's use of the internal browser via Preferences -> Mylar -> Tasks.

The following steps have been verified on Fedora Core 5, and OpenSuSE 10.1.

  1. Run Mozilla (not Firefox) to confirm that it works.
  2. Confirm the location of your Mozilla install (ex: /usr/lib/mozilla-1.7.12)
  3. Set necessary environment variables in <home_directory>/.bashrc, adding the following 3 lines

    MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME=/usr/lib/mozilla-1.7.12
    LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:$MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME
    export MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME LD_LIBRARY_PATH

For Debian Etch and newer use the following MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME:

    MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME=/usr/lib/iceape

4. Log out and log in again (or type "source .bashrc" at the prompt)
5. Start Eclipse and test the internal web browser

If you are getting exceptions indicating missing libraries, check that the paths are accurate and that you have the libraries required. For example, on our test box a library was still missing after these steps. The libstdc++.so.5 was being reported as missing. To solve this problem, find an rpm online that will install the missing legacy library. In our case we found necessary rpm (compat-libstdc++-33-3.2.3-47.fc4.i386.rpm) on rpmfind.net using their search facility. See also: Standard Widget Toolkit FAQ

Memory consumption problem with internal browser on Linux-GTK

If you are experiencing abnormal memory consumption upon launching the internal browser (or opening repository tasks), try shutting down eclipse, renaming/moving your ~/.mozilla/eclipse folder and relaunching eclipse. (see bug#172782)

Installing on MacOS

If you see errors like the following it may be due to Xerces missing from the Mac JDK so you may need to add it to your default classpath. Please refer to and comment on bug 144287 if you see this problem.

   Could not create Bugzilla editor input
   java.io.IOException: SAX2 driver class org.apache.xerces.parsers.SAXParser not found

To ensure that you are using the 1.5 VM refer to the last comment on bug 1163477 for instructions on how to change the 1.4 default.

Rich Task List Install

Mylar's Task Management features can be used purely as a rich client to supported bug/task/issue trackers, and do not require the programming facilities of the full Eclipse SDK.

For example, to use Mylar as a rich client for Bugzilla:

Starting Mylar for the first time

Once everything has been installed, upon restarting, you will see a dialog box titled Mylar Recommended Preferences. It's probably best to accept the defaults unless you are already familiar with Mylar.

Mylar introduces a number of views to the Eclipse workbench that can be found via Window->Show View->Other, under the Mylar category.

Configuration

After you have installed Mylar, there are a number of things that you can configure to make your experience even richer.

Recommended Eclipse settings

Recommendations for workspace configuration when using Mylar:

  • Package Explorer
    • Use flat layout in the Package Explorer (local pull down -> Layout -> Flat).
    • Link the Package Explorer with the editor (toolbar -> Link with Editor). With Mylar applied this won't cause the jumping around problems it typically does.
    • Deselect the Referenced Libraries filter (local pull down -> Filters -> Referenced Libraries). With Mylar applied libraries won't blow up the tree.
    • Leave the General -> Appearance -> Label Decorations -> Java Type Indicator off. The type is visible under the Java file when Mylar is applied making such additional information redundant.
  • Editors
    • Turn comment folding on to reduce clutter when using auto folding (Preferences -> Java -> Editor -> Folding).
    • Turn off or increase the number of editors to leave open (Preferences -> General -> Editors -> Number of opened editors before closing). Since Mylar will manage the open editors with task activation, this number can be set higher or automatic closing disabled entirely.
    • If auto folding is used, the Outline view can be closed or made a fast view
  • Views
    • Outline: can keep closed for Java development, since the Package Explorer and folded signatures should provide enough context, and the in-place Outline Ctrl+O can be used when needed.
  • Team
    • Set Synchronize view to Change Sets mode (on 3.2: third toolbar button: select Change Sets; on 3.1: toggle toolbar button: Show Change Sets)
    • Use graphical CVS decorators only (Preferences -> Team -> CVS -> Label Decorations -> Text Decorations -> clear all but Project; Icon Decorations -> enable all). This helps reduce visual clutter.

Workspace setup

The following is an example of how to set up your Eclipse to work with a single workspace in a way where you can use Mylar to focus you on your task while using Working Sets to maintain only a single workspace while keeping project/product boundaries clear.

  • Create a Working Set for each project/product that you have checked out.
  • Set the Package Explorer to show Working Sets as the top-level elements.
  • Set the Problems view to filter out warnings from any Working Sets that you do not contribute to.
  • Set the File Search scope to only include Working Sets that you contribute to.

Spell checking

Spell checking is supported in the task editor for local tasks and for connectors that support rich editing (e.g. Bugzilla, Trac).

  • To install spell checking for editors that support it you need to enable the preference in General -> Editors -> Text Editors -> Spelling.
  • You also need to install a dictionary, some instructions are here. A word list is available [here] as well.

Mylar-spell-checking-preference.gif

Keyboard mappings on Linux

If you are running Mylar on X-Windows, for example on Linux, FreeBSD, AIX and HP-UX, some keyboard bindings may not work by default.

If the Ctrl+Alt+Shift+Arrow Up shortcut for Mark as Landmark does not work do the following:

  • Menu Bar -> Desktop -> Control Centre -> Keyboard Shortcuts -> Move one workspace up, Move one workspace down: disable both.

If Alt+Click quick unfiltering does not work try one of the following:

  • Hold down the Windows key while holding Alt, if available (ironic, but unsurprisingly this key is not usually mapped on Linux).
  • Disable the Alt+drag to move functionality:

GNOME Desktop

  1. Open a terminal and run gconf-editor
  2. Go into: /apps/metacity/general
  3. Edit the mouse_button_modifier field. Setting it to nothing disables it. You can use <Super> to set it to the windows key.
  4. Exit gconf-editor.

KDE Desktop

  1. Run the KDE Control Center.
  2. Go to the Desktop/Window Behavior panel and select the Window Actions tab.
  3. Down in the Inner Window, Titlebar & Frame area, change the Modifier Key option from Alt to Meta.

Also, see keyboard shortcuts.

Task List

Icon Legend

Please see the Tips & Tricks page.

Also note the following connector-specific icons, which currently do not appear in the legend:

  • Bugzilla
    • Green triangle: enhancement
    • Red dot: major, critical or blocker
  • Jira
    • Icons correspond to issue type icons in the Web UI.

Weekly Progress

When in Focus on Workweek mode (right-most toolbar button), the Task List will show a JUnit-style progress bar which indicates progress on the tasks scheduled for that week. Each task that is scheduled for the week but not yet completed adds to the bar. A task completed by you adds to the green progress in the bar. Deferring a task to a future week will also add to the apparent progress because it will remove the task from the current week. Mousing over the bar will indicate details about your progress, such as the number of tasks and hours completed. To avoid the need for manual estimation by default every task is estimated for 1 hour, but if you have longer or shorter running tasks that week you can adjust the estimate in the task editor's Planning page to ensure that the progress bar is accurate.

Note that when in Focus on Workweek mode the Task List will show each of the tasks scheduled for this week. However, overdue tasks and those with incoming changes will also show, making the number of tasks visible not be a reliable indicator of progress on the tasks planned for the week.

Weekly-progress.gif

Progress for Categories

Categories show progress for the number of completed tasks.

File:Progress-categories.gif

Incoming Changes

All comments added since your last reading of a repository task will be automatically expanded when a task with incoming changes is opened. Incoming changes are retrieved with the background synchronization to avoid waiting for the server when opening. Note that a background synchronization is still kicked off upon opening in case changes came in since the last scheduled synchronization. Repository tasks can be explicitly marked as read or unread.

Incoming-changes.gif

Task Repository Integration

Task repositories are easy to add, and can be named via the Task Repositories view. An icon decoration indicates the repository type. A task repository can be associated with a project, enabling it to be used for actions such as resolving bug hyperlinks. Note: you do not need to associate all of your projects with repositories after updating, since you will be prompted to do this when the associate is needed.

Task-repository-integration.gif

After the Task Repository has been setup and associated with a project, you need to create a new query against that repository to pull down the task list.

See Task-focused programming with Mylar, Part 1, Querying a repository.

Open Task dialog

An Open Type style dialog is available for opening tasks (Ctrl+F12) and for activating tasks (Ctrl+F9). The list is initially populated by recently active tasks. The active task can also be deactivated via Ctrl+Shift+F9. This can be used as a keyboard-only alternative for multi-tasking without the Task List view visible. These actions appear in the Navigate menu.

Open-task-dialog.gif

Open Repository Task dialog

For tasks not available on Task List view, there is a Open Repository Task dialog (Ctrl+Shift+F12). On this case, the task can be opened by informing its ID and repository. This way the task will be retrieved from repository without being added to task list.

Optionally, you can add the remote task to task list, by checking the Add to Task List category option and informing the category where it will be inserted.

Multiple tasks can be added simultaneously by informing a sequence of IDs, separated by commas, e.g. "1,2,3".

Repository task attachments

Repository task attachments (supported by the Bugzilla and Trac connectors) can be attached via drag-and-drop from both within the Eclipse workspace and from outside, and from text selections, which will invoke the attachment wizard. Attachments can be opened with a browser or corresponding editor.

Repository-task-attachments.gif

Task List backup and restore

Where does Mylar keep the task list?

By default Mylar keeps your task list in <workspace>/.mylar/tasklist.xml.zip. You can change this in the Mylar Task List preferences (Window -> Preferences -> Mylar -> Task List -> Task Data).

Where does Mylar keep the task list backups?

By default, Mylar keeps the task list backups in the <workspace>/.mylar/backup folder. The location of this file, as well as backup scheduling, can be changed in Preferences -> Mylar -> Tasks in the Task Data -> Backup section.

How do I restore my task list from a backup?

Task and context data can be restored from a backup snapshot zip file via File -> Import -> Mylar Task Data. By default backup snapshots are taken daily and kept for 30 days.

Tasklist-restore.gif

Can I create manual backups?

Yes. Use File -> Import/Export -> Mylar Task Data.

File:Mylar-tasklist-backup.gif

Note: uninstalling a connector will cause all of the queries and tasks of that kind to disappear from the Task List, but if you reinstall that connector they will reappear.

If the Task List is blank, either Mylar failed to install or update, or there was a problem reading the Task List. By default Mylar keeps your Task List in <workspace>/.mylar/tasklist.xml. If you move workspaces, and have not changed the Mylar data directory via the Task List preference page, the new location will be used when Eclipse restarts (hit Restore Defaults on that page to copy tasks back to the default location). If your tasks disappear due to to a bug you can check the .mylar folder for a tasklist-backup.xml file, which will contain the previously-saved list.

Report Bugs from Error Log

Bugs can created directly from events in the Error Log view. This will create a new repository task editor with the summary and description populated with the error event's details. If the Connector you are using does not have a rich editor, the event details will be placed into the clipboard so that you can paste them into the web-based editor that will be opened automatically.

Report-bugs-error-log.gif

Automatic Duplicate Detection

The Search for Duplicates button on the New Repository Task editor encourages and facilitates finding similar bug reports before creating a new one. Potential duplicates are displayed in the Search view which can be used to open a bug and comment or vote if a duplicate is found. The current duplicate detection mechanism uses stack traces, either automatically inserted by the Report as Bug mechanism, or manually pasted into the Description area. All descriptions and comments of bugs on the corresponding repository are included in the search.

Automatic-duplicate-detection.gif

Submitting Contexts

When submitting comments, contexts can be attached by selecting the corresponding check-box in the Actions section.

Submitting-contexts.gif

Task-Focused UI

Alt+Click navigation

When a view is in Focused mode, you can Alt+Click a node in order to temporarily show all of it's children.

  • Once an element that was not interesting is selected with the mouse, the uninteresting elements will disappear.
  • Alt+Right Arrow can be used instead of Alt+Click, but still requires a mouse selection of an element in order for the uninteresting elements to disappear.
  • Alt+Click can be held down when drilling down from a top-level element, e.g. navigating from a project element with everything filtered right down to a method declaration.
  • Multiple Alt+Clicks are supported, but as soon as a single selection is made all uninteresting elements will disappear.

Automatically toggle focus on navigator views

For navigator views (Package Explorer, Project Explorer and Navigator) the Apply Mylar button can be set to automatically toggle on with task activation and off with task deactivation. Note that the context-related preferences (including this one) are in Preferences -> Mylar -> Context.

Auto-appy-mylar.gif

Focus the Java Browsing Perspective views

The leftmost toolbar button visible in the image below will toggle focus on the Packages, Types and Members views of the Java Browsing Perspective.

Mylar-java-browsing.gif

Team Support

Configuring the Synchronize view for change sets

There are two modes for Eclipse's Change Sets support: the models mode (Eclipse 3.2 and later) and the standard mode. These modes are unrelated to Mylar and apply to both Mylar's automated Change Sets and the ones you can created manually in Eclipse. The models mode is toggled via Synchronize View -> Preferences -> CVS -> Allow Models to participate in synchronizations. The Eclipse UI for Change Sets is not obvious so consider the following guidelines if you are having problems with it.

If you are using the standard mode, Change Sets toolbar button will only appear if the Synchronize view is in Incoming or Outgoing mode, not in the combined Incoming/Outgoing mode. This button must be pressed in order for change sets to appear. For working with CVS two modes are indistinguishable beyond this limitation. Subclipse only supports the standard mode. If you switch modes you must re-create your synchronization via the Synchronize... button available from the first toolbar button on the Synchronize view.

Mylar-changesets-subclipse.gif

If you are using the models mode, you will notice that the Mylar Active Change Sets work show up with a decoration in the lower-right corner, and that you can view both incoming and outgoing change sets at the same time. However, note that there is a refresh problem with this mode (bug 142395). To work around it, if a Change Set you expect is missing or if you get a "There are no more Incoming/Outgoing changes" message in the view on startup, toggle the third toolbar button between All Models and Change Sets. If that doesn't resolve it activate and deactivate the current task.

  • Note: if you have enabled the models mode, but do not see the overlay icon visible in the screenshot below, it is because you are using an old non-models based synchronization. Old synchronizations are not updated automatically when you switch modes so you must create a new one.

Mylar-changesets-model-based.gif

Automatic change sets

Operations such as committing, updating, and patch creation can all be performed on Mylar's automatically managed Change Sets. Right+click the change set node to get the corresponding Team menu. Changed resources that are not a part of any task context will appear under the root of the Synchronize view. If needed missing resources can be added to the task context Change Set via the Synchronize View by right+clicking the resource and selecting Add to and then selecting the corresponding task.

Automatic commit messages

Mylar will automatically generate commit messages for you when you use its Change Set support. To modify the template go to Window -> Preferences -> Mylar -> Team -> Commit Comment Templates.

Mylar-commit-tempates.gif

Task Repository Connectors

Mylar allows you to collaborate on tasks via a shared task repository, also known as bug tracking systems. In order to collaborate, you need to have a Connector to your particular repository.

Presently Bugzilla, JIRA, and Trac are supported. To connect to unsupported repositories, see Generic Web Repository Connectors. Also, be sure to vote for your favourite Connector to see it supported earlier, or create a new bug if your issue tracker is not listed.

Bugzilla Connector

Once Mylar is installed there are a few steps involved to get up and running.

  • To access tasks (reports/issues) on a repository such as Bugzilla you must first set up a Task Repository
    • Navigate to Window -> Show View -> Other -> Mylar -> Task Repositories to open the Task Repositories view.
    • Launch the add repository wizard by pressing the add repository button located in the view's toolbar Mylar-add-repository.png.
    • The first page of this wizard asks for the type of repository you wish to connect to (if you have installed multiple connectors). Select Bugzilla for example and press the Next button.
    • On the second page you can enter the repository's address and your login credentials. After filling in these details, press the Validate button to ensure the repository exists and your login credentials are valid. Once the settings validate you can finish the wizard. The repository you added will be shown in the Task Repositories view.

Repository Configuration

  • Once the repository has been created, you may add queries to the Task List.
    • In the Task List view right click anywhere in the list pane and select New Query from the context menu.
    • Choose the repository you added in the previous steps.
    • Enter query title and search criteria and then press Finish.
    • A query with the title you gave will appear in the Task List and will synchronize with the remote repository. If the query has hits they will appear within the query folder you've created.
    • Double click to open a hit. Double click on the query to edit the query parameters.
    • Click on the lightly shaded button (left of task icon) in the Task List to activate the task. Click again to deactivate.

See also Bugzilla Connector Troubleshooting.


Bugzilla Tasks

If the Bugzilla task's severity is "major", "blocker", or "critical", the task icon in the Task List will be decorated with a red dot. If the Bugzilla task's severity is "enhancement" the task icon in the Task List will be decorated with a green triangle.

Trac Connector

The Trac connector offers two access methods:

  • Trac 0.9 and later: In this mode the standard Trac web interface is used for repository access. Tickets may be created and edited through a web browser.
  • XML-RPC Plugin (Trac trunk): This requires the latest revision (1175) of the XmlRpcPlugin for Trac to be enabled for the accessed repository. The XmlRpcPlugin provides a remote interface to the Trac repository and is distributed separately from Trac (see #217). Currently, Trac and the XmlRpcPlugin need to be installed from source. See these install instructions for requirements and documentation.

The Trac connector integrates Trac queries into the Task List. If you do not know your Trac repository version use the Automatic setting and click Validate Settings.


New Task Editor

A rich editor for creating new Trac tasks is available for repositories that use XML-RPC (see the FAQ for XML-RPC configuration instructions).

Trac-editor-new.gif


Rich Editor, Attachments and Offline support

The Trac connector supports the rich task editor. Attributes and comments can be viewed and edited offline, synchronization is done in the background, and attachments can be posted and retrieved.

Task Context attachments are supported via the context menu actions in the Task List. This support requires the Trac XML-RPC plug-in to be enabled and the integration will fall back to the web mode if it is not, (see: Trac Connector troubleshooting).

Trac-editor.gif

JIRA Connector

Note that the JIRA SOAP/RPC services have to be running on the server. For additional details see the Requirements on the JIRA Dashboard page. For supported versions see the download page.

Rich Editor

The JIRA connector provides a rich editor, offline editing, and change notifications.

File:Jira-editor.gif

Search Integration

Searching through JIRA repositories is integrated with the Search dialog.

Jira-search.gif

Query

The JIRA query dialog has been streamlined into a single page. Date range queries are now supported.

Jira-query.gif

See also JIRA Connector Troubleshooting.

Generic Web Repository Connector

The generic web repository connector is part of the Mylar install. It allows connection to repositories that are not currently supported by a rich connector. Out of the box it provides templates for the following issue tracking systems:

  • Google Code Hosting (code.google.com)
  • IssueZilla (java.net, dev2dev, tigris.org)
  • GForge (objectweb.org)
  • SourceForge (sf.net)
  • Mantis (www.futureware.biz/mantis)
  • ChangeLogic (changelogic.araneaframework.org)
  • OTRS (otrs.org)
  • phpBB
  • vBulletin

Lists of issues can be retrieved from a web page using a simple template configuration. Templates can be also parametrized to make it easier to customize them for a specific project.

The parameters used for configuring project properties are typically substituted into the URLs used to access the repository. Substitution and matching rules can be edited under the Advanced Configuration section on both the Repository Settings page and the Edit Query page.

For example, consider the configuration steps for GlassFish project at java.net:

1. Create new Generic web-based repository (in the Task Repository view). GlassFish is using IssueZilla and has a preconfigured template that can be selected by server url https://glassfish.dev.java.net/issues. You can also specify all fields manually in the Advanced Configuration section. For GlassFish the following settings are required:

  • Task URL: ${serverUrl}/show_bug.cgi?id=
  • New Task URL: ${serverUrl}/enter_bug.cgi?issue_type=DEFECT
  • Query URL: ${serverUrl}/buglist.cgi?component=glassfish&issue_status=NEW&issue_status=STARTED&issue_status=REOPENED&order=Issue+Number
  • Query Pattern: <a href="show_bug.cgi\?id\=(.+?)">.+?<span class="summary">(.+?)</span>
  • Note: Query Pattern field should have a regexp with 1st matching group on Issue ID and 2nd on Issue Description.
  • Note: the above fields are using parameter substitution ${..}. Variables serverUrl, userId and password are substituted from the values of corresponding fields of the repository preference page. In addition you can specify any arbitrary parameters and their values that will be also substituted into the template fields.

2. Create a new query for the GlassFish task repository created above (either from popup context menu in the Task List view or using a "New..." wizard from File -> New... -> Other... menu).

  • Query URL and Query Pattern in the Repository Preferences are used as default query parameters and can be overwritten in Advanced Configuration section in Query Preferences. Custom parameter values can also be overridden here as well as new parameters for substitution into the specific query.
  • In the Advanced Configuration section of the "New Query" dialog, there is a "Preview" button. You can use it to test your query pattern.

Generic-web-repository-settings.gif

Integration with other tools

Mylar can be integrated with other tools. Mylar relies on Bridges to integrate the context model with the structure and UI features of domain-specific tools. To create a Bridge, see Creating Bridges.

The core set of Bridges supports the Eclipse SDK (i.e. has bridges for Java, JUnit, PDE, Ant and Resources). The Resources Bridge enables a basic level of interoperability with other tools that use files (e.g. .php, .cpp), and enables Mylar filtering to work for generic views that show those files (i.e. the Project Explorer, Navigator) and any corresponding markers (i.e. the Problems and Tasks views). This is only the most basic context model integration, and does not offer the benefits of a specialized structure bridge, such as making declarations part of the context and providing Active Search facilities. Without a Bridge Mylar cannot be applied to tool-specific views.

If you would like to see support for a particular tool, first do a search of the open bridge requests and vote for the corresponding bug if your tool is there, or create a new bug. Also consider adding your experiences to the "Integration..." section of the Mylar FAQ.

Using Mylar with WTP

Context modeling works at the file level, noting the limitation of bug 144882: interest filter fails on WTP Dynamic Web Project

Maven and other external builders

If an external builder like Maven is producing output files that are being automatically added to your context because they are not being marked "derived" as with Eclipse-based builders. You can explicitly exclude these folders via the Preferences -> Mylar -> Resources page. For example, if the output folder of the builder is "target", you could set this the following way:

Mylar-resource-exclusion.gif

SVN integration via Subversive

Refer to Polarion's Mylar Integration Quick Start

NOTE: For release 0.9.2 and 1.0.0 the a Mylar integration plug-in must be downloaded from the Subversive update site.

SVN integration via Subclipse

For 1.0.0 the a Mylar integration plug-in must be downloaded from the Subclipse update site: http://subclipse.tigris.org/update_1.2.x

Supported features:

  • Automatic Change Set management (see Mylar FAQ Team Support)
  • Automatic commit messages
  • Open Corresponding Task action to open Mylar's task editor from the Change Set in Synchronize view and from entries in History view.

PHP Development

If using the all-in-one package of PDT 0.7, it does not include the PDE Runtime Binary that is required by Mylar Focussed UI (1.0.1). Get the PDE Runtime Binary here (link found on this page).

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