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Re: [ptp-dev] Developing Photran (and running PTP) with Juno development version
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Thanks for the tips, Beth. I am surprised I missed the RSE, but yes
that made all of the PTP problems go away. Now, I am at the
remaining CDT problems having to deal with a couple of LPG packages
not be found. I don't see any reference to them in the setup page.
They are referenced in the CDT source... As you can see I got one
lpg package (lpg.runtime.java) from the sourceforge project, but
that seems like something I should not have not needed to do.

Dave Alexander
On 1/3/2012 12:08 PM, Beth Tibbitts wrote:
FWIW... setting up a (new)
development set of source codes can be complicated, and all of
this is normal :-)
> "No rule to make target 'all'" error for
ptp.rm.slurm.proxy (which is some C code in PTP)
I ignore all those C projects
myself, I'm not developing them, only running them. Your
mileage may vary and I'm sure some others disagree
>below is my Problems view.
I notice the first ones I see
are probably because you don't have RSE installed.
How do you tell? Double-click
on one of those errors and it will take you to the line in the
source code in the error.
e.g. blahblah cannot be
resolved .... will probably match an import at the top of that
source file that can't be found.
The package name of the import
it's looking for should help narrow it down.
In http://wiki.eclipse.org/PTP/environment_setup_60
under Setup_for_development_of_PTP_6.0 one of the things I
mentioned you need to install is RSE (step 4)
If you install that it should
force a restart of your eclipse and a rebuild and those should
go away (and expose the next set :-) )
>I am bit confused when you get a package from both
"Install New Software" and "clone of Git repo".
Basically yes.. "Install new
software" installs stuff into your eclipse installation, and
"clone of Git repo" checks out the projects (source code) into
your workspace.
Some installing will include an
"SDK" which usually means they include a jar? of source code
so you can find the source code anyway, without having it as
source code projects in your workspace.
Try fooling around with e.g.
hyperlinking from a java source code file (ctrl-click) to
something you don't have in your workspace. I think all the
CDT source is like this. Others probably too.
At the moment I don't know what
we do with PTP... we *should* include source code as an SDK
feature...
Hope this helps...
...Beth
Beth Tibbitts
Eclipse Parallel Tools Platform http://eclipse.org/ptp
IBM STG - High Performance Computing Tools
Mailing Address: IBM Corp., 745 West New Circle Road,
Lexington, KY 40511
David Alexander ---01/03/2012
01:08:02 PM---Hi Jeff, Thanks for the answer. I saw the
photran docs, but they all say indigo
Hi Jeff,
Thanks for the answer. I saw the photran docs, but they all say
indigo and I am trying to work with the juno code, so I wasn't
sure if it directly applied. I am not developing any PTP code
at this point, but I would like to run remotely to test my
Photran development. So I need at the jars, but I am also just
interested in learning the source, so I want to build it as
well.
Anyway, I reset all (CDT, PTP, Photran) to the master branch;
ran a "clean", then re-built. I am now getting a "No rule to
make target 'all'" error for ptp.rm.slurm.proxy (which is some C
code in PTP) and below is my Problems view. Lots of PTP error,
some CDT, but no Photran. By the way, I am bit confused when
you get a package from both "Install New Software" and "clone of
Git repo". Without thinking much, I guessed that the first gets
you the jar files and the second gets you the source, but then I
wondered what happened when the Git code is compiled, which byte
code used in the resulting runtime app?

--
David Alexander
On 12/30/2011 9:48 AM, Jeffrey Overbey wrote:
Hi David,
The master branches should be fine.
For Photran, the first couple of appendices in the Photran
Developer's Guide at http://www.eclipse.org/photran/contributorinfo.php describe how to check out the sources,
set up an API baseline, etc. -- they should be (more or less)
up to date. Hopefully those will help you get rid of the
errors in the Photran-related projects. FWIW, if you're just
doing Photran development, you don't need the PTP sources, so
you should be able to follow those instructions (starting from
a fresh workspace) and be done.
If you did want all of the PTP sources, I can't say for sure
what the errors are... they should show up in the Problems
view with more detail... you might have to select the project
in the Package Explorer before its errors will appear... (?)
Jeff
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