Difference between revisions of "Development Environment Setup Guide"
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== Download Simantics == | == Download Simantics == | ||
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+ | === Simantics 1.4 Instructions === | ||
The only thing you absolutely need to have for developing at this point is the target platform. Download and install it as instructed in the following and you're ready to go. | The only thing you absolutely need to have for developing at this point is the target platform. Download and install it as instructed in the following and you're ready to go. | ||
− | + | Follow the instructions at [[Target Platform#Simantics_1.4]] and you should have Simantics 1.4 set up for development. | |
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=== Pre-Simantics 1.4 Instructions === | === Pre-Simantics 1.4 Instructions === |
Revision as of 06:56, 9 May 2011
Install Prerequisites
Register to access source code
Simantics is an open source software platform, licensed under Eclipse Public License EPL (more information in section Licensing). The source code for both semantic database engine Simantics Core and the client Simantics Workbench is available to registered users. To gain access to the complete Simantics SDK source code, go to the Simantics Members Wiki and request an account.
JDK
- JDK 6.0 (= Java Standard Edition 1.6) is required. The latest update should always work. Get it here.
- IMPORTANT: See this notice if using JDK 6 update 21. We suggest using update 25 at the moment if possible.
Eclipse IDE
- Get latest eclipse SDK Helios (3.6 series): http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/, choose Eclipse for RCP and RAP Developers
- Use either 32-bit or 64-bit Eclipse, depending on whether you want to develop 32-bit or 64-bit applications. Obviously, 64-bit Eclipse will require a 64-bit machine/operating system.
- If using both 32/64-bit, make sure that you do not re-use or share existing workspaces between 32-bit and 64-bit Eclipse instances. One of them will not work properly if you do. A workspace will only work with a 32-bit or 64-bit build of Eclipse that was initially used to create the workspace.
- Extract the installation package to your preferred location, e.g. d:\. The package already contains a directory called eclipse.
- Start Eclipse with a new empty workspace by launching the executable within the package. The program will query you for the workspace location.
- If you have multiple JRE/JDK versions installed, check that your Eclipse is using the the right one from Window/Preferences: Java/Installed JREs as shown below. For example in windows the active JRE and JDK locations should be something like:
- C:\Program Files\Java\jre6
- C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_<update number>
IMPORTANT: HTTP proxy
If you are on a network where the only way to access the internet via HTTP is through an HTTP proxy you need to make sure that Eclipse also uses this proxy. Corporate networks tend to be like this. If you do not do this, you cannot install anything using Eclipse's own plug-in installer.
Open the preferences dialog from main menu Window/Preferences. From the tree on the left go to General/Network Connections and modify the settings so that HTTP connections are checked to have a proxy.
Eclipse plug-in for Subversion
Simantics uses Subversion (SVN) as a version control system (VCS) for storing all of our source code. To access this data from neatly from Eclipse, you need to install some plug-ins into it. To install the plug-in, follow these instructions:
- Install Subversion plug-in: Eclipse Subversive. Update Site is a part of Helios Update Site. From the main menu, open Help > Install New Software...
- From the Work with selector, select Helios - http://download.eclipse.org/releases/helios
- From the Collaboration folder, select the following items:
- Subversive SVN Team Provider
- Subversive SVN JDT Ignore Extensions
- Select Finish and watch the installation proceed
- Click Restart Now after the installation completes
- From the Collaboration folder, select the following items:
- After restarting, open the SVN Repository Exploring perspective and Eclipse should open a dialog called Install Connectors. Select SVN Kit 1.3.x and press finish.
- From the Work with selector, select Helios - http://download.eclipse.org/releases/helios
- NOTE: if this installation process fails, this means that Eclipse is offering broken/incompatible packages at the moment. In this case you probably need to install the latest early access versions using http://www.eclipse.org/subversive/downloads.php#early_access
- Be warned that there has been a bug in Subversive which causes it to use the HTTP proxy for HTTPS addresses too. In order to get your SVN connection to www.simulationsite.net working, you may need to use direct connection proxy settings after installing the SVN plug-ins.
Simantics Tooling
Select menu Help/Install New Software and write http://www.simantics.org/update/utils into the Work with text field. Install the latest Ontology Development/Graph Feature. This provides the possibility to create Simantics Ontology Projects, i.e. allows IDE integrated development of the ontologies (data models) used in the Simantics application you are developing.
See org.simantics.graph for the component's documentation.
Setup IDE
- Import Simantics Java formatting rules into your Eclipse: save this XML file
- In Eclipse: Window/Preferences and the Java/Code Style/Formatter folder, select Import... and find the XML file you just downloaded.
- From the same preferences dialog also make sure that JDK 6.0 (or JRE 1.6) compliance is enabled:
- Optionally enable Save Actions: Java/Editor/Save Actions:
- enable Organize imports
- enable Additional actions
- enable Format source code (not always recommendable)
- Configure: Code Organizing: Enable Remove trailing whitespace and Correct indentation
Download Simantics
Simantics 1.4 Instructions
The only thing you absolutely need to have for developing at this point is the target platform. Download and install it as instructed in the following and you're ready to go.
Follow the instructions at Target Platform#Simantics_1.4 and you should have Simantics 1.4 set up for development.
Pre-Simantics 1.4 Instructions
Install Simantics target platform
The target platform is a set of Simantics and Eclipse features and plug-ins that constitute the components you can build your Simantics/Eclipse-based software out of. These are needed as base to get working on your own contributions on top of the Simantics platform.
To get the platform one must perform a checkout from the SVN repository. You can use Eclipse's SVN Repository Exploring perspective for this task. You can also use other tools, such as TortoiseSVN or the SVN command line client.
How do I check out from SVN in Eclipse in general?
- Switch to the SVN Repository Exploring perspective.
- In the SVN Repositories view, from the context menu, select New → Repository Location.
- Enter the SVN repository location in the URL field and enter your repository credentials in the authentication fields.
- Browse the added repository tree, select the directory/project you want to access and edit, and select Check out from the context menu.
- Checkout the target platform for your version into a directory of your choice. See Target Platform for available versions.
- Updating your target platform is now a matter of updating your target platform working copy.
- Upgrading to newer versions of the target platform requires switching to/checking out another branch of the target platform.
- Import the target platform into your eclipse IDE:
- If you checked out the target platform using another tool besides Eclipse, first import the target platform into your workspace:
- File/Import: General/Existing Project into Workspace: Select target platform location as root directory. Deselect Copy projects into workspace if selected. Press Finish.
- Select menu item Window/Preferences from your Eclipse IDE.
- Open the preference page Plug-in Development/Target Platform.
- Activate your target platform definition by checking it and press OK.
- If you checked out the target platform using another tool besides Eclipse, first import the target platform into your workspace:
Download Simantics Components
Add Simantics repositories
- Switch to SVN Repository Exploring perspective in Eclipse.
- Add the main Simantics repository location in the SVN Repository view:
- General tab:
- URL = https://www.simulationsite.net/svn/simantics/
- Authentication =
- Committers: your username and password
- General tab:
Checkout Simantics sources
- Checkout the proper project sets into your workspace. Eclipse will check it out as ProjectSets:
- Simantics development version: project-set/trunk
- Switch to Java perspective.
- To speed up the download, disable automatic building from menu toggle Project/Build Automatically.
- From the Package Explorer view, pick simantics.psf file from the ProjectSets folder and select Import Project Set from the popup menu.
- Re-enable automatic building
- IMPORTANT: If checked out code does not compile/work, consult the maintainers of the non-working module.
Troubleshooting
- If the project set import fails or does not do anything, please update your SVN plug-ins to the latest versions available.
Start Development
To get started on development, continue to Tutorial: Ontology Development.
Basic IDE Usage
Running Products from the IDE
- Create a Product Configuration (.product) for your own product.
- You can use sysdyn.product as a starting point for your own product configuration. To get sysdyn.product, import the sysdyn.psf project-set.
- Be sure to only include the components that you want to have in your product, nothing more.
- Launch the product from the links under the Testing section
- When launching the Simantics Workbench application from the IDE, i.e. in development mode, the application will make sure that your application workspace will contain a Simantics database that contains the transferable graphs contained by the ontology project bundles that are included in your product's plug-in configuration.
- Be warned that the application can't handle all cases of modified database contents. This means that sometimes the easiest way to get your application running is clearing your application's workspace and starting with a fresh database.
- IMPORTANT DEVELOPER NOTICE
Remember to always launch your application using the .product configuration editor as described above when you want to make sure that your IDE's application launcher configuration is up-to-date. The launcher configurations contain the set of plug-ins that are installed into the launched application which means which is not updated when the application is launched through the menu or (Ctrl+)F11.
The launcher configurations will most likely require updating when you
- take new plug-ins into use (add them to features included by the product)
- remove plug-ins from use
- plug-ins are moved from the workspace to the target platform or vice versa
- the target platform is updated
Testing your own contributions with Simantics
- Scenario - Testing a set of new plug-ins
Prerequisites:
- Some of the added plug-ins may contain ontologies.
- You've created your own set of plug-ins based on the Simantics SDK.
- You've defined features that include your plug-ins.
- You've followed the instructions at #Building
Steps to follow:
- If you have not already created a product definition for yourself:
- Optionally create a new plug-in project with the name product in it
- Add a new Product Configuration to an existing or a new plug-in with basic settings
- Open the new .product file with Product Configuration Editor
- From the Overview tab, Product Definition section, select org.simantics.workbench.application as the application and create a new product extension with the New button beside the product selector. Also mark the product definition feature based.
- Configure the product to your liking, i.e. add the features you need to it
- Launch your product from the product configuration editor Overview tab
Product Deployment
Deploying a product in this context means taking a certain set of features and plug-ins and packaging into an installable and executable application.
- Things to ensure before deploying your product
- Ensure correctness of your build.properties files
- For each of your own bundles (plug-ins and features), check that their build.properties files contain all the necessary files within each bundle. For example adapters.xml is often forgotten from the build since there is currently no automation that would add it to the build.
- Ensure validity of .product definition:
- Open your .product file in the Eclipse IDE (use Ctrl-Shift-R for searching)
- On the Launching page:
- Set Launcher Name to set the name of your product executable.
- Under Program Arguments:, add -fixerrors. This ensures that your product will initialize all new workspaces with a database instead of assuming that a database must already pre-exist.
- Under VM Arguments: add at least -ea to enable VM assertions.
- Deploying Executable Product
- Open .product file in the Eclipse IDE (use Ctrl-Shift-R for searching)
- On the Overview page of the product editor, select Eclipse Product export wizard from under Exporting
- Fill in any missing details in the dialog and select Finish.
- To create a directly executable product, you need to deselect Generate metadata repository.
- To create a product deployable with SPM, you need to select Generate metadata repository. This will generate an Eclipse P2 repository.