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To create plug-ins using eclipse - a Quick-Start Guide
Eclipse (http://www.eclipse.org) makes it a lot easier to develop bundles. You can create a new project
as a plug in project, and it will give you wizards, etc. for development. see:http://www.vogella.de/articles/OSGi/article.html
(using eclipse Helios)
- check out IGB from https://genoviz.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/genoviz/trunk
into a new project in eclipse make a new IGB_HOME environment variable to point - we will refer to the IGB project (Ann's Note: What directory should it point to in the checked out code - maybe give an example?)directory below as IGB_HOME. - open a command prompt in IGB_HOME, and do an "ant clean" and "ant jar"
- in eclipse, project explorer, right click the IGB project and select "refresh"
- in eclipse, project explorer, right click on open space, and select "Import..."
- Select "Plug-ins and Fragments" under "Plug-in Development", click the "Next >" button
- under "Import From", select "Directory:",
- under "Plug-ins and Fragments to Import" select "Select from all plug-ins and Fragments",
- under "Import As" select "Binary Projects"
- for "Directory:", click the "Browse..." button and select the IGB_HOME/ext, click the "OK" button
- click the "Next >" button
- under "Plug-ins and Fragments Found:", select affx_fusion, colt, freehep, image4j, jlfgr, picard, and sam
- click the "Add -->" button to add these all to "Plug-ins and Fragments to Import:", click the "Finish" button
- Do the following for the directories under IGB_HOME, genometryImpl, genoviz_sdk, igb, plugins/igb_service, plugins/window_service
- in eclipse, project explorer, right click on open space, and select "Import..."
- Select "Existing Projects into Workspace" under "General", click the "Next >" button
- click "Select root directory:" and click the "Browse..." button on the right
- select the project under IGB_HOME, and click "OK"
- click "Finish"
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