Thanks Adam,
I did all those steps , and as I said I can start the debugger , I have the menu , I
can
set breakpoints.
What I cannot is actuall to step through the program and see the application runnig.
At the beggining I thought that that's it is working , but basically it is useless. I
remember a few weeks ago
someone said that it is working ,but basically never used it but just installed it
and
had the menu working.
I know that I repeat myself ,but I am really curios if you can step through the
program
and run the program
with JDEbug on Linux.
If the answer to all these questions is yes , then the application I'd like to know
if
the application was based
on Swing, AWT or console based.
Is anyone else USING succesfully JDEbug on Linux
Thanks again for your attention, any help is very appreciated,
Bogdan
Adam Ambrose wrote:
> I can tell you the steps I took, which I got from reading the release
> notes document from back to front. Let me try to recall... <rummaging
> around in dusty corners>
>
> OK, it's starting to come back..I've got menus turned on, I'll tell the
> steps I went through using that interface.
>
> o Brought up a java file so that the JDE menu appears.
> o Selected JDE->Project->Options->General
> o For "Jde Db Debugger", selected the "Class" radio button and typed in
> "jdebug" in the Name field.
> o Set other general settings for my project, such as "Jde Db Source
> Directories", global classpath, and the like.
> o Saved the settings.
> o I believe the next time I brought up a java file, the "JDEbug" menu
> appeared. Selected JDEbug->Preferences
> o Set "Jde Bug Jpda Directory" and "Jde Bug Jdk Directory" to be the dir
> where I put the JDK (/usr/local/lib/jdk)
> o Saved those settings as well.
>
> o On the JDK side, I symlinked everything from $JAVA_HOME/lib to
> $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib and from $JAVA_HOME/lib/i386 to
> $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/i386.
>
> ..and that's it, I believe. (If anyone else notices anything I've
> missed, don't hesitate to point it out)
>
> -Adam
>