IDE Setup - jfederico/openhab GitHub Wiki
This page is out of date. Please check here for the latest info. |
How to set up a development environment for openHAB
If you are a developer and not a pure user yourself, you might want to setup your Eclipse IDE, so that you can debug and develop openHAB bundles yourself. There are (at least) two options for getting the IDE running: pure eclipse and vagrant.
- Create a local clone of the openHAB repository by running "git clone https://github.com/openhab/openhab" in a suitable folder.
- Download and install oracle jdk 1.7
- Download and install the Eclipse for RCP and RAP Developers.
- Create a new workspace.
- Choose
File
→Import
→General
→Existing Projects into Workspace
, enter your clone repository directory as the root directory and press "Finish". - After the import is done, you have to select the target platform by selecting
Window
→Preferences
→Plug-in Development
→Target Platform
→openHAB
from the main menu. Ignore compilation problems at this step. On this step Eclipse needs some minutes to load all the files for the target platform. I'ts very important to wait with the next step until Eclipse is finished with this step. - Download and install Maven 3. Set
MAVEN_OPTS
to-Xms512m -Xmx1024m -XX:PermSize=256m -XX:MaxPermSize=512m
in order to avoid memory problems during the build process. - Execute
mvn clean install
from the repository root. You will find the (binary) results in the folder distribution/target. On the very first code generation, you are asked on the console to download an ANTLR file, answer with "y" and press enter on the console. (See https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/openhab/QgABTJAkHOg if you're getting "Could not find or load main class org.eclipse.emf.mwe2.launch.runtime.Mwe2Launcher"). - All your project in the workspace should now correctly compile without errors. If you still see error markers, try a "clean" on the concerned projects. If there are still errors, it could be that you use JDK 1.6 instead of JDK 1.7, or the JDK compliance is set to 1.4 or 1.5 instead of at least 1.6.
- To launch openHAB from within your IDE, go to Run->Run Configurations->Eclipse Application->openHAB Runtime (resp. openHAB Designer). Switch to "Plug-in Development" perspective first (Windows->Open Perspective->Other->Plug-in Development).
After the first successful local build it might be a good idea to build with maven -o (offline) afterwards. This option accelerates the project dependency resolution by 10-20x since it lets maven search it's local repository. Normally, snapshot-enabled projects are using external repositories to find latest built packages.
Note that the IDE being installed by the above mentioned method does not contain any code generation facilities (MWE, Xtext) itself since that setup caused difficulties on certain machines. The code generation is accomplished through the maven build though.
Alternatively, you may wish to use vagrant to get a pre-configured, running IDE.
- Install VirtualBox and vagrant first.
- Create a new directory for vagrant and
cd
into it - Run
vagrant init rub-a-dub-dub/openhabdev32
- Execute
vagrant up
(this will take some time as a ~3GB virtual image needs to be downloaded) - Execute
vagrant ssh
to access your machine
To turn off the vagrant machine, run vagrant halt
in the vagrant directory you created. Run vagrant suspend
to just suspend the machine. To get rid of the VM and its resources, run vagrant destroy
. For more information on the setup and use of the IDE with vagrant, look here.