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Eclipse Community ForumsUnable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874169/#msg_874169
A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following message
to the console during the import of my MSpec:
Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
Cheers
/Eike
---- http://www.esc-net.de http://thegordian.blogspot.com http://twitter.com/eikestepper]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-20T04:53:43-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874182/#msg_874182
It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
after the message.
Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
> Hi,
>
> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>
> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>
> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>
> Cheers
> /Eike
>
> ----
> http://www.esc-net.de
> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>
>
>]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-20T05:13:42-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874186/#msg_874186
It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
after the message.
Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
> Hi,
>
> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>
> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>
> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>
> Cheers
> /Eike
>
> ----
> http://www.esc-net.de
> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>
>
>]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-20T05:13:42-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874189/#msg_874189
It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
after the message.
Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
> Hi,
>
> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>
> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>
> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>
> Cheers
> /Eike
>
> ----
> http://www.esc-net.de
> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>
>
>]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-20T05:13:42-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874191/#msg_874191
It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
after the message.
Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
> Hi,
>
> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>
> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>
> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>
> Cheers
> /Eike
>
> ----
> http://www.esc-net.de
> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>
>
>]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-20T05:13:42-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874262/#msg_874262
optimization only (it's used for materialization, not for resolution), an error should't cause problems.
- thomas
On 05/20/2012 07:13 AM, Eike Stepper wrote:
> Correction:
>
> It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
> after the message.
>
> Cheers
> /Eike
>
> ----
> http://www.esc-net.de
> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>
>
>
> Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
>> Hi,
>>
>> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
>> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>>
>> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>>
>> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
>> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
>> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>>
>> Cheers
>> /Eike
>>
>> ----
>> http://www.esc-net.de
>> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
>> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>>
>>
>>]]>Thomas Hallgren2012-05-20T10:21:21-00:00Re: Unable to load runtime repository
https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/mv/msg/353413/874519/#msg_874519
> That's definitely a bug. The runtime repo should be found regardless of location and since using it is meant to be an
> optimization only
I've filed https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=380097
> (it's used for materialization, not for resolution),
Sorry, that's indeed true.
> an error should't cause problems.
I can no longer reproduce that the operation stops at that point. The console message is reproducible, though.
>
> - thomas
>
> On 05/20/2012 07:13 AM, Eike Stepper wrote:
>> Correction:
>>
>> It seems that the console message is in fact an indication for a fatal problem. The import operation does not continue
>> after the message.
>>
>> Cheers
>> /Eike
>>
>> ----
>> http://www.esc-net.de
>> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
>> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>>
>>
>>
>> Am 20.05.2012 06:53, schrieb Eike Stepper:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> A while back I started to use a bundle pool for my various IDE installations. Now Buckminster logs the following
>>> message to the console during the import of my MSpec:
>>>
>>> Unable to load runtime repository: No repository found at file:/C:/develop/bin/eclipse-cdo/.
>>>
>>> I guess that is because my IDE installation does not contain features/plugins folders anymore. It ssems that this
>>> doesn't lead to severe problems but it strikes me that the usage of the bundle pool could make the resolution/download
>>> phases much faster. Would that be right? Is there something I can do?
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>> /Eike
>>>
>>> ----
>>> http://www.esc-net.de
>>> http://thegordian.blogspot.com
>>> http://twitter.com/eikestepper
>>>
>>>
>>>
>]]>Eike Stepper2012-05-21T04:32:21-00:00