This document is about configuring Gerrit Code Review into an Eclipse workspace for development and debugging with GWT.
Java 6 or later SDK is also required to run GWT’s compiler and runtime debugging environment.
Project Setup
In your Eclipse installation’s eclipse.ini
file, add the following line in
the vmargs
section:
-DmaxCompiledUnitsAtOnce=10000
Without this setting, annotation processing does not work reliably and the build is likely to fail with errors like:
Could not write generated class ... javax.annotation.processing.FilerException: Source file already created
In Eclipse, choose 'Import existing project' and select the gerrit
project
from the current working directory.
Expand the gerrit
project, right-click on the buck-out
folder, select
'Properties', and then under 'Attributes' check 'Derived'.
Note that if you make any changes in the project configuration
that get saved to the .project
file, for example adding Resource
Filters on a folder, they will be overwritten the next time you run
tools/eclipse/project.py
.
Code Formatter Settings
Import tools/GoogleFormat.xml
using Window → Preferences →
Java → Code Style → Formatter → Import…
This will define the 'Google Format' profile, which the project settings prefer when formatting source code.
Site Initialization
Build once on the command line with Buck and then follow Site Initialization in the Developer Setup guide to configure a local site for testing.
Testing
Running the Daemon
Duplicate the existing launch configuration:
-
In Eclipse select Run → Debug Configurations …
-
Java Application →
gerrit_daemon
-
Right click, Duplicate
-
Modify the name to be unique.
-
Switch to Arguments tab.
-
Edit the
-d
program argument flag to match the path used during 'init'. The template launch configuration resolves to../gerrit_testsite
since that is what the documentation recommends. -
Switch to Common tab.
-
Change Save as to be Local file.
-
Close the Debug Configurations dialog and save the changes when prompted.
Running GWT Debug Mode
The gerrit_gwt_debug
launch configuration uses GWT’s
Super Dev Mode.
-
Make a local copy of the
gerrit_gwt_debug
configuration, using the process described forgerrit_daemon
above. -
Launch the local copy of
gerrit_gwt_debug
from the Eclipse debug menu. -
If debugging GWT for the first time:
-
Open the codeserver URL and add the
Dev Mode On
andDev Mode Off
bookmarklet to your bookmark bar. -
Activate the source maps feature in your browser. Refer to the Chrome and Firefox developer documentation.
-
-
Load the Gerrit page.
-
Open the source tab in developer tools.
-
Click the
Dev Mode On
bookmark to incrementally recompile changed files. -
Select the
gerrit_ui
module to compile (theCompile
button can also be used as a bookmarklet). -
In the developer tools source tab, open a file and set a breakpoint.
-
Navigate to the UI and confirm that the breakpoint is hit.
-
To end the debugging session, click the
Dev Mode Off
bookmark.
-
Hitting
F5
in the browser only reloads the last compile output, without recompiling. -
To reflect your changes in the debug session, click
Dev Mode On
thenCompile
.
Running GWT Debug Mode for Gerrit plugins
A Gerrit plugin can expose GWT module and its implementation can be inspected in the SDM debug session.
codeserver
needs two additional inputs to expose the plugin module in the SDM
debug session: the module name and the source folder location. For example the
module name and source folder of cookbook-plugin
should be added in the local
copy of the gerrit_gwt_debug
configuration:
com.googlesource.gerrit.plugins.cookbook.HelloForm \ -src ${resource_loc:/gerrit}/plugins/cookbook-plugin/src/main/java \ -- --console-log [...]
After doing that, both the Gerrit core and plugin GWT modules can be activated during SDM (debug session)[http://imgur.com/HFXZ5No].
Part of Gerrit Code Review