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How Do I Check Out an Eclipse Project from SVN?
To Check Out an Eclipse Project:
In Eclipse, go to the SVN Repositories window and:
- Go to idd-svn > projectyouwant > trunk
- Right-click trunk and select Check out
How Do I Deploy Locally?
">To Run an Eclipse Project Locally:
Before you run any project locally there are a few on one time only steps you must follow.
Once you have completed the one time only steps and checked out the project you will then need to configure the project's local site settings:
- Create a new directory called site under the project's top level. Make sure you are in Navigator view or the new site directory won't appear.
- Copy the files in site-template into it
- Edit site/ApplicationLocal.properties
- Change the authentication.user to your kerbname
- Set sf2_passwd value to your cert public key string:
- In your browser, go to https://mortar-dev-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/getcert.html
- Copy the text just after ----BEGINCERTIFICATE--- until you reach the last -----ENDCERTIFICATE----
- Paste this as the value for sf2_passwd (this is your cert public key)
- In your browser, go to https://mortar-dev-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/getcert.html
- Change c:/dev/mortar in r3props to your workspace directory, e.g. c:/dev/workspace/mortar/tools/GlobalResources.properties (but this might vary - check)
- Edit site/log4j.properties; Log4j will output to your eclipse console and to a file
- Since this is configuration for the local site, it should not be checked into SVN. Therefore, either mark it "Derived" via Properties or add it to SVN:ignore via Team->Add to SVN:ignore.
or
">How Do I Use sap2java to Generate Proxies for an SAP RFC?
- Check out or update the sap2java Eclipse project.
- In the sap2java project, open package src/com/sap/bapi/mapper. Right-click on class, testSAP2Java, and select Run As... Run... from the context menu.
- Create a new Java Application run profile for testSAP2Java or open its previously created profile, then select the Arguments tab.
- In the Program arguments text area, enter the following lines of information:
- target source code directory (wrapped in double-quotes), e.g., "${workspace_loc}/myproject/src"
- package into which the generated classes will be written, e.g., edu.mit.myproject.proxy
- name of the RFC for which Java data object classes will be generated, e.g., Z_UT_MY_RFC
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- Click the "Run" button. The Java data object classes are generated. You may need to refresh your project to see the change.
How Do I Find the Oracle application log?
- Find your Oracle directory (e.g., C:\dev\oc4j_extended_101320)
- Drill down into j2ee -> home -> application-deployments -> application of interest -> application.log