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Difference between revisions of "Starting Eclipse Commandline With Equinox Launcher"

(Bash Shell Script: resolve the path to the script)
(Added quotes around the paths in the batch file so that it also works for paths that contain spaces.)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
 
=== <b style="color:darkgreen">A</b>nt Script ===
 
=== <b style="color:darkgreen">A</b>nt Script ===
  
  <nowiki><!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ --></nowiki>
+
<source lang="xml">
 +
  <!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ -->
 
   <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
   <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
   
 
   
Line 17: Line 18:
 
   <java classpath="''${eclipse.home}''/eclipse/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.jar"
 
   <java classpath="''${eclipse.home}''/eclipse/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.jar"
 
   .../>
 
   .../>
 +
</source>
  
 
Or, if you are using Ant 1.7 and don't like copying resources around (or don't have permission to do so) this appears to work to set the path to the newest available equinox launcher jar in a property for later use:
 
Or, if you are using Ant 1.7 and don't like copying resources around (or don't have permission to do so) this appears to work to set the path to the newest available equinox launcher jar in a property for later use:
  
  <nowiki><!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ --></nowiki>
+
<source lang="xml">
 +
  <!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ -->
 
   <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
   <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
   
 
   
   <nowiki><!-- store path to newest launcher JAR in path id 'newest.equinox.launcher.path.id' --></nowiki>
+
   <!-- store path to newest launcher JAR in path id 'newest.equinox.launcher.path.id' -->
 
   <path id="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id">
 
   <path id="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id">
 
     <first count="1">
 
     <first count="1">
Line 41: Line 44:
 
   </path>
 
   </path>
 
   
 
   
   <nowiki><!-- turn the path into a property --></nowiki>
+
   <!-- turn the path into a property -->
 
   <property name="equinox.launcher.jar.location" refid="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id" />
 
   <property name="equinox.launcher.jar.location" refid="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id" />
 
   
 
   
   <nowiki><!-- you can now reference the jar through the property ${equinox.launcher.jar.location} --></nowiki>
+
   <!-- you can now reference the jar through the property ${equinox.launcher.jar.location} -->
 
   <echo message="Using equinox launcher jar: ${equinox.launcher.jar.location}" />
 
   <echo message="Using equinox launcher jar: ${equinox.launcher.jar.location}" />
 +
</source>
  
 
=== <b style="color:orange">B</b>ash Shell Script ===
 
=== <b style="color:orange">B</b>ash Shell Script ===
Line 62: Line 66:
 
=== <b style="color:darkred">C</b>md/Bat Script ===
 
=== <b style="color:darkred">C</b>md/Bat Script ===
  
Save this as eclipse.cmd. This has been tested with Windows XP Pro (SP2).
+
Save this as eclipse.cmd. This has been tested with Windows XP Pro (SP2) as well as Windows 8.1 Pro.
  
 
   @echo off
 
   @echo off
Line 70: Line 74:
 
    
 
    
 
   :: get path to equinox jar inside ECLIPSEHOME folder
 
   :: get path to equinox jar inside ECLIPSEHOME folder
   for /f "delims= tokens=1" %%c in ('dir /B /S /OD %ECLIPSEHOME%\plugins\org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar') do set EQUINOXJAR=%%c
+
   for /f "delims= tokens=1" %%c in ('dir /B /S /OD "%ECLIPSEHOME%\plugins\org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar"') do set EQUINOXJAR=%%c
 
    
 
    
 
   :: start Eclipse w/ java
 
   :: start Eclipse w/ java
 
   echo Using %EQUINOXJAR% to start up Eclipse...
 
   echo Using %EQUINOXJAR% to start up Eclipse...
   java -jar %EQUINOXJAR% ...
+
   java -jar "%EQUINOXJAR%" ...
  
 
=== Variations ===
 
=== Variations ===

Latest revision as of 11:01, 31 July 2015

Launching Eclipse with the new Equinox jar is as easy as A, B, C.

Note that the initial releases of Eclipse 3.3 on Windows have a configuration bug preventing the following approach from working. See this mail thread for details.

Ant Script

  <!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ -->
  <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
  <nowiki><!--  get path to equinox jar inside ${eclipse.home} folder (copy/rename actual jar) --></nowiki>
  <copy tofile="''${eclipse.home}''/eclipse/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.jar">
    <fileset dir="''${eclipse.home}''/eclipse/plugins"
      includes="**/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar"/>
  </copy>
 
  <nowiki><!-- start Eclipse w/ java --></nowiki>
  <java classpath="''${eclipse.home}''/eclipse/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.jar"
  .../>

Or, if you are using Ant 1.7 and don't like copying resources around (or don't have permission to do so) this appears to work to set the path to the newest available equinox launcher jar in a property for later use:

  <!-- set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse or /path/to/eclipse/ -->
  <property name="eclipse.home" value="."/>
 
  <!-- store path to newest launcher JAR in path id 'newest.equinox.launcher.path.id' -->
  <path id="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id">
    <first count="1">
      <sort>
        <fileset dir="${eclipse.home}/eclipse/plugins" includes="**/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar"/>
 
        <nowiki><!-- Seems the default order is oldest > newest so we must reverse it.
            The 'reverse' and 'date' comparators are in the internal antlib
            org.apache.tools.ant.types.resources.comparators.
         --></nowiki>
        <reverse xmlns="antlib:org.apache.tools.ant.types.resources.comparators">
          <nowiki><!-- 'date' inherits 'reverse's namespace --></nowiki>
          <date/>
        </reverse>
      </sort>
    </first>
  </path>
 
  <!-- turn the path into a property -->
  <property name="equinox.launcher.jar.location" refid="newest.equinox.launcher.path.id" />
 
  <!-- you can now reference the jar through the property ${equinox.launcher.jar.location} -->
  <echo message="Using equinox launcher jar: ${equinox.launcher.jar.location}" />

Bash Shell Script

 #!/bin/bash

 # set path to eclipse folder. If the same folder as this script, use the default; otherwise, use /path/to/eclipse/
 eclipsehome=`dirname $BASH_SOURCE`;

 # get path to equinox jar inside $eclipsehome folder
 cp=$(find $eclipsehome -name "org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar" | sort | tail -1);

 # start Eclipse w/ java
 /opt/java50/bin/java -cp $cp org.eclipse.equinox.launcher.Main ...

Cmd/Bat Script

Save this as eclipse.cmd. This has been tested with Windows XP Pro (SP2) as well as Windows 8.1 Pro.

 @echo off

 :: set path to eclipse folder. If local folder, use '.'; otherwise, use c:\path\to\eclipse
 set ECLIPSEHOME=.
 
 :: get path to equinox jar inside ECLIPSEHOME folder
 for /f "delims= tokens=1" %%c in ('dir /B /S /OD "%ECLIPSEHOME%\plugins\org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar"') do set EQUINOXJAR=%%c
 
 :: start Eclipse w/ java
 echo Using %EQUINOXJAR% to start up Eclipse...
 java -jar "%EQUINOXJAR%" ...

Variations

  • If you're looking to the Equinox p2 Admin UI, see p2 Admin UI.

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