I need to create a BPEL project but I can't find SOA plugin to install it. Can someone tell how can I add SOA plugin to my Netbeans version?
From a NetBeans Formus post via a mailing list it appears that the short answer is no.
It appears that the last version of NetBeans that supported the Sun-distributed SOA plugin was NetBeans 6.5, with dubious support on 6.7.
Oracle appears to be killing off competitors to their SOA Suite 11g. Unfortunate because NetBeans was oh-so-nice, and I have had only painful and awkward experiences with JDeveloper. I was just looking for an alternative SCA tool to SOA Suite in NetBeans and it seems that links to any NetBeans/Glassfish related Service Component Architecture type software have been methodically removed.
Try this:
1. Netbeans 6.X > 6.5 install normally.
2. Go to "Tools -> Plugins" to create a new "Update Center"
3. Click on "Add" and enter the URL: http://updates.netbeans.org/netbeans/updates/6.8/uc/m1/dev/catalog.xml.
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I have problem about importing Java EE glassfish server to my IntelliJ.
I have searched nothing on the web.
When I want to create a new glassfish project, I don't have option for it.
I can't add image cause I don't have reputation for it. I add direct link to image below text.
Screenshots:
It appears you have a community version of IntelliJ. Tools to support enterprise frameworks, like JavaEE or Grails, are only available in paid version. If need a free JavaEE IDE, I recommend Netbeans,which is similar to IntelliJ but free, or Eclipse, which is also great, but more different
If you have the Ultimate version, the accepted answer provides no value.
To enable these project templates to show up you have to enable the Java EE: EJB, JPA, Servlets plugin
This is bundled with IntelliJ but chances are when you first installed it, this was not selected as one of the resources you wanted, or it was deselected for not knowing what it does.
All you have to do is go to your plugins, click on the 'Installed Tab' and re-enable it. IntelliJ will prompt you to restart
I have installed Eclipse Luna for windows 64 bit. But I am not able to create a new Dynamic Web Project. I also installed Web, XML, Java EE and OSGi Enterprise Development , but still it shows only Static Web Project inside Web projects.
Is there anything else to be installed ?
you need the Web Tools Platform package for this
add it to your eclipse through Help > install new software.
Then add the software repository site location for WTP for your version of eclipse.
http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/updates/
I think the accepted answer is not the recommended solution. In Luna you should install Web Tools Platform via the Luna download site, not the WTC download site.
Here are the instructions:
https://wiki.eclipse.org/WTP_FAQ#How_do_I_install_WTP.3F
Here is what happens if you use WTP site:
Can't install WTP (Web Tools Platform) in Eclipse - something about missing dependencies...?
Yes, I see that the asker says he has done this, so I guess the accepted answer worked for him, but I think people should try this recommended method first.
You need to go to http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo or luna or whatever version of eclipse you are using and select Web, XML, Java EE and OSGi Enterprise Development.
i'm going to add service to my OSGI project and follow the tutorial to add "Component Definition" using eclipse wizard. so i navigate to menu "new->plug-in development->Component Definition" but i can't find there.
i'm using eclipse indigo and buckminster 3.7
i tried using eclipse juno and buckminster 4.2 still got the same problem.
so, is my buckminster installation wrong or something that i miss? thx for your help.
screenshot here
I GOT THE ANSWER
the problem is related to my eclipse. i'm using Eclipse Java Developer
rather than for EE Developer. when i reinstall the eclipse using for
EE Developer and install buckminster, i found the Component Definition
Wizard.
Maybe someone need this info. thx
You need to install the Plugin Development Environment. You don't actually nee the EE Developer version for this, you can install just this feature.
I'm trying to do this tutorial after having installed Eclipse Juno 4.2 service release 2 (Java EE distribution) und following exactly the GWT installation instructions over here.
However, I neither get the WindowBuilder entry under Preferences, nor is there a WindowBuilder entry in the new projects dialog appearing. What am I doing wrong?
I'm running Ubuntu 12.04.02 LTS on amd64, and I have tried oracle jdk 7u17 and Ubuntu's own jdk6 distribution, but to no avail...
Just tried the same in Win2k3. Exact same result. Google is starting to annoy me. GWT 2.5.1 throws an error when trying one of my simplest projects...
Update: it is working to some extent. Meaning: WindowBuilder does not recognize GWT Designer's installation and offers to install GWT Designer for Eclipse 3.7. The designer toolbar's GWT selection possibilities therefore are not there.
Update: bug filed.
Update: bug was closed as won't fix. They don't care.
They do care. GWT is a magical development environment, under constant evolution.
They have to race with new versions of browsers, Javascript and releases of Eclipse, so sometimes tiny things may not be always documented up to date. The tutorial you are trying to run is made for GWT Designer 2.3, GPE 2.3, Eclipse 3.7 & Java 1.6.
This tutorial works also perfectly well for Juno 4.2 SR2 with a few minor changes:
In step 1, just Create a Web Application Project. You can generate project sample code, make sure that things work and then clean it up and stick with the folder layout.
In step 3, just add a class and make it extend com.google.gwt.user.client.ui.Composite. Add an empty Constructor and then you can open the GWT Designer as always, in order to do the rest. The CSS styleName property has been improved. There are tool-tips to guide you.
PS: My tests were made in Ubuntu12.04-32bit, WinXP-32bit and Win7-64bit with JDK1.7.0_17-32bit and Eclipse-32bit.
In case the designer tab does't show up by default, I noticed that I can get it by right-clicking the .java on the package explorer and selecting 'open with ...' 'WindowBuilder Editor'.
How do I find which Eclipse version I have on my Ubuntu system?
This is what "About Eclipse SDK" says.
Eclipse SDK
Version: 3.5.2
Build id: M20100211-1343
I am not sure if its the Eclipse IDE for Java Developers or the Eclipse Classic version.
What I would like to do is use Eclipse for
Java based Web Application Development
Ant Builds
Deploy using Tomcat
including HTML, CSS Editing
Please help me decide which version I should choose? I would like to upgrade my Eclipse setup from whatever version it is now to a version that supports all the above. Should I go for Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers?
Should I download a totally new version from Eclipse site or can I just ADD necessary features/plugins to my current Eclipse setup.
Please suggest.
See Compare Eclipse Packages for a nice chart
What I would like to do is use Eclipse for (...)
The Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers allows to do what you're asking for out of the box.
Should I download a totally new version from Eclipse site or can I just ADD necessary features/plugins to my current Eclipse setup.
Both would work, although it would be simpler to just get directly the Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers (especially if you don't know exactly what plugin(s) you're looking for). Personally, I don't use the version you can get from the repository but download Eclipse from the official website and install it in user mode.
If you are using Eclipse for only Enterprise Development, then as everybody has recommended I would use the Eclipse Java EE version. If you plan on occasionally using it for other development purposes then I would consider downloading a separate classic version as well.
The reason for this is that everybody is well aware of eclipse's plugin capabilities. Unfortunately, Eclipse can get bogged down with too many plugins or add on tools. What I have experienced is that if you are using it for Enterprise Development(J2EE) it might be a good idea to keep that as a separate environment then your other Java Development. That way you can download the plugins,tools,libraries,etc for your enterprise development, and you can use your classic version for any other development you might need.
The downside is you will have two versions, but this is not a problem granted you do not run them simultaneously.
If you want to play with Web development, then the Eclipse java EE for Developers is for you. It is shipped with components to make Java Enterprise applications to create Enterprise Applications (and bundle it in an Enterprise ARchiver, known as EAR file or Web ARchive, known as WAR file).
The default Eclipse shipping with Ubuntu is the Classic version, and you can add more plugins.
I would recommend, however, to download th eJEE version manually and unzip it and run. Then you have a local installation outside the system files.