Building JOGL in Eclipse: Difference between revisions

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* Go to your Eclipse installation directory, and edit the <tt>eclipse.ini</tt> file.
* Go to your Eclipse installation directory, and edit the <tt>eclipse.ini</tt> file.
* If it doesn't exist already, add these lines before the <tt>-vmargs</tt> line.
* If it doesn't exist already, add these lines before the <tt>-vmargs</tt> line.
: Windows:
Windows:
<pre>
<pre>
-vm
-vm
<your JAVA_HOME directory>\jre\bin\javaw.exe
<your JAVA_HOME directory>\jre\bin\javaw.exe
</pre>
</pre>
: Linux:
Linux:
<pre>
<pre>
-vm
-vm

Revision as of 01:37, 24 December 2011

Why build in Eclipse?

Building JOGL inside Eclipse lets you use the Eclipse debugger, profiler, and unit test framework. It also gives you useful editing features like auto-complete and red underlines for syntax errors.

Prerequisites

Before you can build JOGL in Eclipse, make sure you can build it from the command line. Then double-check these things:

  • Make sure you've got a JDK installed and set up properly.
    • Make sure JAVA_HOME is set to your JDK directory. You must use a JDK, not a JRE, because Ant needs $JAVA_HOME/lib/tools.jar (on Windows and Linux).
    • Make sure the $JAVA_HOME/bin directory is on your PATH. You must use a JDK bin directory, not a JRE bin directory, because Ant needs $JAVA_HOME/bin/javac.
  • Delete the CLASSPATH variable from your system environment variables, .cshrc, .bash_profile or other location.
    • Having this set with random old JARs on it is one of the leading causes of build problems.
  • Make sure you've got Ant 1.8.0 or later installed.
  • Make sure ANT_HOME is set to your Ant installation directory.
  • Make sure ANT_HOME/bin is on your PATH.

Overview

To build JOGL in Eclipse, we'll set up Eclipse's JRE and Ant version, create Eclipse projects for the gluegen and jogl projects, then add Ant builders to those projects to invoke the JOGL command-line Ant build.

Set up Eclipse's workbench VM

The workbench VM is the version of Java that Eclipse uses to launch itself. Eclipse can find a Java VM on its own by looking in your system's default locations, but we don't want that, because it might pick a JRE instead of a JDK, which won't work with the JOGL Ant build.

  • Go to your Eclipse installation directory, and edit the eclipse.ini file.
  • If it doesn't exist already, add these lines before the -vmargs line.

Windows:

-vm
<your JAVA_HOME directory>\jre\bin\javaw.exe

Linux:

-vm
<your JAVA_HOME directory>/jre/bin/javaw
  • Save and close the file.
  • If Eclipse is running, you must restart it for the setting to take effect.

If you haven't done this step, the javah task may fail in the Ant build.

Switch workspace to the parent of gluegen and jogl

You need to set your Eclipse workspace to the parent directory of the gluegen and jogl projects. This tells Eclipse where to create its .metadata directory, where it will store your settings for this group of projects.

  • Click "File > Switch Workspace > Other...".
  • Click the "Browse..." button.
  • Navigate to the parent directory of the gluegen and jogl projects, select it, and click "OK".
  • Click "OK" to dismiss the Workspace Launcher dialog.

Set up Eclipse's project JRE

This is the version of Java that Eclipse runs and debugs your projects with. Eclipse will already have some project JRE installed, but we need to make sure that it's set up properly.

  • Click "Window > Preferences" (it's "Eclipse > Preferences..." on Mac OS X), then select "Java > Installed JREs" on the left.
  • Select the checked JRE on the right, then click the "Edit..." button.
  • Make sure the JRE home is set to the same directory that you've got JAVA_HOME set to in your environment. If it's not, click "Directory..." to change it.
    • This should be a JDK directory.
    • The list of JRE system libraries should show a list of $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/*.jar entries (on Windows and Linux) or a list of $JAVA_HOME/../Contents/Classes/*.jar entries (on Mac OS X).
  • Click "Finish" to close the Edit JRE dialog, and "OK" to close the Preferences dialog.

Update and customize Eclipse's Ant version

Ant comes bundled inside Eclipse, but we need Ant 1.8 or later to build JOGL, and Eclipse 3.6 still contains Ant 1.7. So we tell Eclipse to use your local Ant installation when it launches Ant.

  • Click "Window > Preferences" (it's "Eclipse > Preferences..." on Mac OS X), then select "Ant > Runtime" on the left.
  • Look inside "Ant Home Entries" on the "Classpath" tab. If it shows files for Ant 1.8 or later, you don't need to change the Ant home. But if your Ant is older than 1.8, click the "Ant Home..." button, navigate to your Ant home directory and click "Open".

On Windows, we also need to tell Ant where the JDK directory is, so it can find jni.h and other files in the JDK.

  • On Windows, click the "Properties" tab, click "Add Property...", set the name to "java.home", and set the value to your $JAVA_HOME/jre directory. This is needed to get some paths in the Ant build correct.
  • Click "OK" to exit Preferences dialog.

Create an Ant user library

We've told Eclipse which version of Ant to launch for external builds, but JOGL also contains code that uses classes in the Ant JARs. So we also need a way to tell our projects where those JARs are.

  • Click "Window > Preferences" (it's "Eclipse > Preferences..." on Mac OS X), then select "Java > Build Path > User Libraries" on the left.
  • Click the "New..." button, type "Ant" for the library name, and click "OK".
  • Click the "Add JARs..." button, navigate to your $ANT_HOME/lib directory, select all the JARs inside, and click "Open".
  • Click "OK" to exit Preferences dialog.

Create an SWT user library

To build the SWT tests in JOGL, Eclipse needs to know where the SWT JAR files are.

  • Click "Window > Preferences" (it's "Eclipse > Preferences..." on Mac OS X), then select "Java > Build Path > User Libraries" on the left.
  • Click the "New..." button, type "SWT" for the library name, and click "OK".
  • Click the "Add JARs..." button, navigate to your jogl\make\lib\swt\your-platform directory, select swt-debug.jar, and click "Open".
  • Click "OK" to exit Preferences dialog.

Import the gluegen and jogl projects

The Eclipse project files for gluegen and jogl should have been checked out along with the source code, so you should be able to import the two projects.

  • Click "File > Import...", then select "General > Existing Projects into Workspace".
  • Click "Next".
  • Click "Browse", then select your workspace directory and click "OK".
  • Uncheck any projects in the list except gluegen and jogl.
  • Click "Finish".

Create the gluegen project (optional)

Since the gluegen project files are checked out along with the code, you shouldn't have to create them yourself. But just for reference, if you did have to create them for some reason, here's how to do it.

First we create the new gluegen project with default settings.

  • Select "File > New > Project...".
  • Expand "Java", click "Java Project", and click the "Next" button.
  • Set "gluegen" as the project name and click the "Next" button.
  • To the "Remove all generated resources" dialog, click "Yes".
  • Click "Finish". This creates the .project and .classpath files in the gluegen directory.

Next we set up the source paths for the project so Eclipse knows which Java files to build. When we created the project, Eclipse automatically found these, but it doesn't have all the properties set like we want them.

  • Right-click the "gluegen" project and select "Properties".
  • Select "Java Build Path", then click the "Source" tab.
  • Click "Allow output folders for source folders". This allows the Java files in each source folder to be compiled to a different output folder, which we need to match the Ant build.
  • Set the default output folder to gluegen/build/classes.
  • Set the output folders, excluded patterns, and native library locations to the values in this table. Remove any source path entries that are not in this list.
source native output excluding
build/gensrc/java gluegen/build/obj build/classes
build/test/build/gensrc/classes gluegen/build/obj build/test/build/classes
src/java gluegen/build/obj build/classes com/jogamp/gluegen/runtime/BufferFactoryInternal.java
src/junit gluegen/build/obj build/test/build/classes
test/junit gluegen/build/obj build/test/build/classes com/jogamp/gluegen/StructValidator.java

Now we set up the libraries that are needed to build the project.

  • Click the "Libraries" tab.
  • Remove all the JARs except gluegen/make/lib/antlr.jar from the list.
  • Click "Add Library...", select "JUnit", click "Next", select "JUnit 4", and click "Finish".
  • The JRE System Library should already be on this list. If it's not, click "Add Library...", select "JRE System Library", click "Next", and click "Finish".
  • Click "Add Library...", select "User Library", click "Next", check "Ant", and click "Finish".
  • Click "OK" to dismiss the Properties dialog.

Finally we can set up the Ant builder. This lets Eclipse invoke our command-line Ant build.

  • Right-click the "gluegen" project, select "Properties".
  • Click the "Builders" tab on the left.
  • Uncheck the "Java Builder". Click "OK" when it asks you to confirm. This is needed to prevent Eclipse from rebuilding class files that the Ant builder is responsible for.
  • Click the "New..." button, select "Ant Builder", and click "OK".
  • Type "gluegen builder" as the name.
  • Set the buildfile to ${workspace_loc:/gluegen/make/build.xml}
  • Set the base directory to ${workspace_loc:/gluegen/make}
  • Click the "Refresh" tab, check "Refresh resources upon completion", click "The project containing the selected resource".
  • Click the "Targets" tab.
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "Auto Build". Then check "all" and click "OK".
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "During a "Clean"". Then uncheck "all", check "clean", and click "OK".
  • Click "OK" to dismiss the Edit Configuration dialog.
  • Click "OK" to save and dismiss the Properties dialog. This creates the .externalToolBuilders directory in the glugen project.

Create the jogl project (optional)

Since the jogl project files are checked out along with the code, you shouldn't have to create them yourself. But just for reference, if you did have to create them for some reason, here's how to do it.

To create the jogl project, we do exactly what we did to create the gluegen project, but with different names and paths substituted. First we create the new jogl project with default settings.

  • Select "File > New > Project...".
  • Expand "Java", click "Java Project", and click the "Next" button.
  • Set "jogl" as the project name and click the "Next" button.
  • To the "Remove all generated resources" dialog, click "Yes".
  • Click "Finish".

Next we set up the source directories for the project.

  • Right-click the "jogl" project and select "Properties".
  • Select "Java Build Path", then click the "Source" tab.
  • Click "Allow output folders for source folders".
  • Set the default output folder to jogl/build/jogl/classes.
  • Set the output folders, excluded patterns, and native library locations to the values in this table. Remove any source path entries that are not in this list.
source native output excluding
build/jogl/gensrc/classes jogl/build/jogl/obj build/jogl/classes
build/nativewindow/gensrc/classes jogl/build/nativewindow/obj build/nativewindow/classes
src/jogl/classes jogl/build/jogl/obj build/jogl/classes com/jogamp/audio/windows/waveout/TestSpatialization.java, jogamp/opengl/gl2/fixme/
src/nativewindow/classes jogl/build/nativewindow/obj build/nativewindow/classes
src/newt/classes jogl/build/newt/obj build/newt/classes
src/test build/test/build/classes

The jogl project depends on the gluegen project being built first, so we need to set the dependency between them.

  • Click the "Projects" tab, click "Add...", check "gluegen", click "OK".

Now we set up the libraries that are needed to build the project.

  • Click the "Libraries" tab.
  • Remove all the JARs from the list.
  • Click "Add Library...", select "JUnit", click "Next", select "JUnit 4", and click "Finish".
  • The JRE System Library should already be on this list. If it's not, click "Add Library...", select "JRE System Library", click "Next", and click "Finish".
  • Click "Add Library...", select "User Library", click "Next", check "Ant" and "SWT", and click "Finish".
  • Click "OK" to dismiss the Properties dialog.

Finally we can set up the Ant builder.

  • Right-click the "jogl" project, select "Properties".
  • Click the "Builders" tab on the left.
  • Uncheck the "Java Builder". Click "OK" when it asks you to confirm. This is needed to prevent Eclipse from rebuilding class files that the Ant builder is responsible for.
  • Click the "New..." button, select "Ant Builder", and click "OK".
  • Type "jogl builder" as the name.
  • Set the buildfile to ${workspace_loc:/jogl/make/build.xml}
  • Set the base directory to ${workspace_loc:/jogl/make}
  • Click the "Refresh" tab, check "Refresh resources upon completion", click "The project containing the selected resource".
  • Click the "Targets" tab.
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "After a "Clean"". Then uncheck "all", check "all.ide", and click "OK".
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "Manual Build". Then uncheck "all", check "all.ide", and click "OK".
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "Auto Build". Then check "all.ide" and click "OK".
  • Click the "Set Targets..." button to the right of "During a "Clean"". Then uncheck "all", check "clean", click "OK".
  • Click "OK" to dismiss the Edit Configuration dialog.
  • Click "OK" to save and dismiss the Properties dialog.

Now we can clean and build both projects in Eclipse.

  • Select "Project > Clean", click "Clean all projects" and click "OK".

Install EGit in Eclipse (Eclipse 3.6 and earlier)

After the build works we can install EGit in Eclipse. This lets you perform Git source control operations from inside Eclipse, though it doesn't yet support every feature of the command line version. EGit is pre-installed in Eclipse 3.7 and later, so check your Eclipse version before doing this.

Associate Eclipse projects with Git

After we install EGit, we have to tell Eclipse that gluegen and jogl are Git projects.

  • Right-click "gluegen", select "Team > Share Project...", select "Git", click "Next", select the .git repository, and click "Finish".
  • Do the same thing for the "jogl" project.

Now when you right-click projects or files in the Package Explorer, you can see the Git operations in the "Team" menu.