Create and develop cloud-native, containerized web applications from Eclipse.
You can install Codewind locally in Eclipse. For more information about installing Codewind, see Getting started: Codewind for Eclipse.
Prerequisites
- Download and install the latest Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers or use an existing installation.
- Install Eclipse IDE Version 2019-09 R (4.13.0) or later to avoid Bug 541220.
- However, the earliest supported version of the Eclipse IDE is Version 2019-06 (4.12).
- Install Docker 17.06 or later.
- If you use Linux, you also need to install Docker Compose.
Complete the installation:
- Install Codewind from the Eclipse Marketplace.
- Open the Codewind Explorer view. Go to Window>Show View>Other…>Codewind>Codewind Explorer.
- Double-click the Local entry in the view to finish installing Codewind. The download is approximately 1 GB. For more information, see Installing Codewind for Eclipse.
Right-click the Local entry in the view to create new projects or add existing projects to Codewind. After a project is created or added, it displays in the Codewind Explorer view. Right-click the project to see the available actions.
- Open Application: Opens the application in the default Eclipse browser. This action is only available when the application is running or debugging.
- Open Project Overview: Opens the overview page for a project. You can use this action to see information about the project and edit project settings.
- Open Container Shell: Opens a shell into your application container. This action is available only when the container is active.
- Open Application Monitor: Opens the application monitor in the default Eclipse browser. Use this action to monitor the activity and health of your application. This action is available only when the application is running or debugging.
- Open Performance Dashboard: Opens the performance dashboard in the default Eclipse browser. This action is available only when the application is running or debugging.
- Import Project: Imports your project into the Eclipse workspace.
- Disable/Enable Project: Disables or enables the project.
- Show Log Files: If log files are available, this action displays a list of log files. Click Show All or an individual log file toggle action to open the log file in the Eclipse Console view. Click the log file again to remove the log file, or click Hide All to remove all log files from the Console view.
- Restart in Run Mode: Restarts the application in run mode.
- Restart in Debug Mode: Restarts the application in debug mode and attaches the debugger. Only MicroProfile/Java EE, Spring, and Node.js projects can be debugged. For more information, see Debugging Codewind projects.
- Attach Debugger: If you detached the debugger accidentally or restarted Eclipse, use this action to re-attach the debugger to an application in debug mode. For more information, see Debugging Codewind projects.
- Build: Initiate a build of your project. This action is not available if a build is already running. For more information, see Building Codewind projects.
- Disable Auto Build: Use this to disable automatic builds if you are making a lot of changes and don't want builds to be triggered until you are done. This action is available only when auto build is enabled.
- Enable Auto Build: Use this to re-enable automatic builds whenever a change is made. This action is available only when auto build is disabled.
- Remove: Removes a project. This action removes the project from Codewind and optionally deletes the project files from the file system.
- Refresh: If the project gets out of sync, use this option to refresh it. To refresh all projects, right-click the Local item in the Codewind Explorer view and select Refresh.
- Create an
.options
file in your Eclipse install directory, the same directory with theeclipse
executable. Include the following content in the new file:
org.eclipse.codewind.core/debug/info=true
- Launch Eclipse with the
-debug
flag. - The logs are written to the Eclipse workspace directory to
.metadata/.log
.
- Clone the repository to your system:
git clone https://github.com/eclipse/codewind-eclipse
- (Optional:) To get a test build, copy the
codewind-eclipse
folder to thebuild
directory to keep your source folder intact. - Run a Gradle build:
cd build/dev
./gradlew
- Test the driver built from the Gradle build:
build/dev/ant_build/artifacts/codewind-[Version].vYYYYMMDD_hhmm.zip
- Download and install the latest Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers or use an existing installation. The earliest supported version of the Eclipse IDE for Codewind for Eclipse is 4.11.0 (2019-03).
- Clone the repository to your system:
git clone https://github.com/eclipse/codewind-eclipse
- From the
codewind-eclipse/dev
directory rungradlew getDependencies
to download the dependency jars. - The extension bundles dependency executables. These are gitignored, but should be kept up-to-date on your local system with the same versions used in the
Jenkinsfile
parameters
section. Rundev/org.eclipse.codewind.core/binaries/meta-pull.sh
to pull down the required scripts from the codewind-vscode repository, then rundev/org.eclipse.codewind.core/binaries/pull.sh
to download the dependencies. Also seedev/org.eclipse.codewind.core/binaries/README.txt
, and the downloadeddev/org.eclipse.codewind.core/binaries/README-pull.txt
. - Open the Git Repositories view in Eclipse and click on the Add an existing local Git Repository to this view toolbar button.
- Fill in the location of your repository clone and finish the wizard.
- Right-click on the repository you just created, select Import Projects, and import all of the
org.eclipse.codewind.*
projects. - Modify the code and then use the Eclipse self-hosting feature to test and debug your changes:
- Click Run > Debug Configurations and create a new debug launch configuration of type Eclipse Application.
- Modify the workspace location if you want.
- For Program to Run, choose Run a product and select org.eclipse.epp.package.jee.product from the drop down list.
- You can work with different versions of the Codewind images by adding the CW_TAG environment variable in the Environment tab. Set it to latest to get the latest images or to a specific tag such as 0.3.
- To launch the self-hosted Eclipse and begin your testing, click the Debug button when you are finished.
- The tests are located in the
org.eclipse.codewind.test
project and are JUnit tests. - Tests can be run individually or there are two test lists:
- AllTests: This includes all of the tests.
- BuildVerificationTests: This is the subset of tests that are run with the build.
- To run the tests create a new run configuration in Eclipse of type JUnit Plug-in Test:
- Set Test runner to
JUnit 4
. Do this first otherwise the Search button for the test class will not work. - Set Project to
org.eclipse.codewind.test
. - Set Test class to the test case or test list you want to run.
- (Optional) Un-check Run in UI thread. This allows you to interact with the Eclipse instance running the test.
- Click the Run button.
- Set Test runner to
- Make sure to use the Codewind Explorer view in Eclipse to uninstall any current Codewind images before starting. If Codewind is installed, right click on Codewind in the view and select Uninstall.
- To work with the Codewind images, clone this repository to your system:
git clone https://github.com/eclipse/codewind
- Use an editor of your choice to make changes to the code.
- Build and run Codewind using
run.sh
. - When it is running you can right-click Codewind in the Codewind Explorer view in Eclipse and select Refresh to pick up the newly running Codewind images.
Dependency | License |
---|---|
socket.io-client-1.0.0.jar | MIT |
engine.io-client-1.0.0.jar | MIT |
org.json_1.0.0.v201011060100.jar | EPL-1.0 |
okhttp-3.8.1.jar | Apache 2.0 |
okio-1.13.0.jar | Apache 2.0 |
To contribute to Codewind, see CONTRIBUTING.md.