Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Thanks for your reply concerning proxy settings in command line Now I have to say that the GWT compile button in eclipse is working for me since I changed the used JRE it was failing in with jdk5, now I am getting it work for me with JDK6 I have a question , why do not providing the google plugin as an archive for download so that we can install it if we don't have internet connexion Thank you all. On 22 mai, 02:24, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Hi, Unfortunately, there is no way to set authentication parameters for proxy servers on the command line. The settings http[s].proxyUser and http[s].proxyPassword do not work. They're actually an urban legend - these properties were never respected by Sun's JDK. The reason why the proxy works in Eclipse is because at some point it probably prompted you for your authentication credentials after you hit Deploy. Once you enter them once, the credentials are saved and re-used by the JDK. I'll file a bug for this issue. The ideal solution would be for the user to be able to pass in the proxy username and proxy passwords as command-line args to appcfg. There is a potential workaround, but it is pretty ugly. What you would need to do is write a new main class, and in that main class, you would register a default Authenticatorhttp://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/net/Authenticator.htmlwith your proxy username and password. Then, you would call AppCfg.main, passing as args the same exact args that were passed in to your main class. Of course, you'd then modify the appcfg script to invoke your class instead of AppCfg. As an FYI, if you want to set the http[s] proxy server and port, you can now do this via the command line if you're using version 1.2.1 of the App Engine SDK - you'll no longer need to edit the appcfg script and add -Dhttp[s].proxy... Run the appcfg script with the -h option for more information on the proxy options. Rajeev On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 5:18 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Hi, With regard to the proxy issue, I'll have to do some experimentation locally to see if there is actually a way to pass the username and password for an authentication-requiring proxy via the command line. I'll post back on this thread with my results shortly. Thanks, Rajeev 2009/5/21 Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com Let's split this issue into two. First, you want to be able to configure the proxy settings. I'll have one of our guys who knows the proxy issues pretty well follow up on this thread. Second, the compile button is not working? Could you provide more details as to how it fails? Is there a stack trace? On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
As of the 1.0.1 release, you can install the plugin from a zip file. http://code.google.com/eclipse/docs/install-from-zip.html . On Fri, May 22, 2009 at 5:11 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks for your reply concerning proxy settings in command line Now I have to say that the GWT compile button in eclipse is working for me since I changed the used JRE it was failing in with jdk5, now I am getting it work for me with JDK6 I have a question , why do not providing the google plugin as an archive for download so that we can install it if we don't have internet connexion Thank you all. On 22 mai, 02:24, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Hi, Unfortunately, there is no way to set authentication parameters for proxy servers on the command line. The settings http[s].proxyUser and http[s].proxyPassword do not work. They're actually an urban legend - these properties were never respected by Sun's JDK. The reason why the proxy works in Eclipse is because at some point it probably prompted you for your authentication credentials after you hit Deploy. Once you enter them once, the credentials are saved and re-used by the JDK. I'll file a bug for this issue. The ideal solution would be for the user to be able to pass in the proxy username and proxy passwords as command-line args to appcfg. There is a potential workaround, but it is pretty ugly. What you would need to do is write a new main class, and in that main class, you would register a default Authenticator http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/net/Authenticator.htmlwith your proxy username and password. Then, you would call AppCfg.main, passing as args the same exact args that were passed in to your main class. Of course, you'd then modify the appcfg script to invoke your class instead of AppCfg. As an FYI, if you want to set the http[s] proxy server and port, you can now do this via the command line if you're using version 1.2.1 of the App Engine SDK - you'll no longer need to edit the appcfg script and add -Dhttp[s].proxy... Run the appcfg script with the -h option for more information on the proxy options. Rajeev On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 5:18 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Hi, With regard to the proxy issue, I'll have to do some experimentation locally to see if there is actually a way to pass the username and password for an authentication-requiring proxy via the command line. I'll post back on this thread with my results shortly. Thanks, Rajeev 2009/5/21 Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com Let's split this issue into two. First, you want to be able to configure the proxy settings. I'll have one of our guys who knows the proxy issues pretty well follow up on this thread. Second, the compile button is not working? Could you provide more details as to how it fails? Is there a stack trace? On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) -- Miguel -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Let's split this issue into two. First, you want to be able to configure the proxy settings. I'll have one of our guys who knows the proxy issues pretty well follow up on this thread. Second, the compile button is not working? Could you provide more details as to how it fails? Is there a stack trace? On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Hi, With regard to the proxy issue, I'll have to do some experimentation locally to see if there is actually a way to pass the username and password for an authentication-requiring proxy via the command line. I'll post back on this thread with my results shortly. Thanks, Rajeev 2009/5/21 Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com Let's split this issue into two. First, you want to be able to configure the proxy settings. I'll have one of our guys who knows the proxy issues pretty well follow up on this thread. Second, the compile button is not working? Could you provide more details as to how it fails? Is there a stack trace? On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Hi, Unfortunately, there is no way to set authentication parameters for proxy servers on the command line. The settings http[s].proxyUser and http[s].proxyPassword do not work. They're actually an urban legend - these properties were never respected by Sun's JDK. The reason why the proxy works in Eclipse is because at some point it probably prompted you for your authentication credentials after you hit Deploy. Once you enter them once, the credentials are saved and re-used by the JDK. I'll file a bug for this issue. The ideal solution would be for the user to be able to pass in the proxy username and proxy passwords as command-line args to appcfg. There is a potential workaround, but it is pretty ugly. What you would need to do is write a new main class, and in that main class, you would register a default Authenticatorhttp://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/net/Authenticator.htmlwith your proxy username and password. Then, you would call AppCfg.main, passing as args the same exact args that were passed in to your main class. Of course, you'd then modify the appcfg script to invoke your class instead of AppCfg. As an FYI, if you want to set the http[s] proxy server and port, you can now do this via the command line if you're using version 1.2.1 of the App Engine SDK - you'll no longer need to edit the appcfg script and add -Dhttp[s].proxy... Run the appcfg script with the -h option for more information on the proxy options. Rajeev On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 5:18 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Hi, With regard to the proxy issue, I'll have to do some experimentation locally to see if there is actually a way to pass the username and password for an authentication-requiring proxy via the command line. I'll post back on this thread with my results shortly. Thanks, Rajeev 2009/5/21 Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com Let's split this issue into two. First, you want to be able to configure the proxy settings. I'll have one of our guys who knows the proxy issues pretty well follow up on this thread. Second, the compile button is not working? Could you provide more details as to how it fails? Is there a stack trace? On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 10:05 AM, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: I still need to know how to configure, command line proxy settings !!! once again the new release of the plugin does not offer any solution to my problem the compile button is still not compiling even if I specify -Xss8m where as it worked and compile successfully from hosted mode with the same lower stack parameter (just -Xss1024k) On 21 mai, 13:25, louatia...@hotmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: concerning the second case , it was a type mistake my proxy requires authentiification and that's whay I mentionned the second case -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttp.proxyPassword=me_crypted instead of proxyHost when adding these two params I got my self in the second case , concerning your question for eclipse setting , I configured eclipse to use the proxy with the same , for every body this is a tip that may help , I changed the VM type in jvm.cfg as -server (jvm ) that was helpful for some cases but not all the time coz I still have stack overflow problems with bigger project ( IE: if the code source of the project stay the same and I just include more image ressources to the war directory the I got into StackOverflow) -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
FYI, we released version 1.0.1 of the plugin yesterday. It allows you to specify the JVM args to use during a GWT compile which allows you to resolve the stack overflow. On Wed, Apr 8, 2009 at 11:11 AM, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me a stack overflow error. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
When you're deploying using the command line, you have to make sure that you set ALL of those arguments. That is, you need to edit the appcfg script and put these arguments before the classpath argument: -Dhttp.proxyHost=your http proxy host -Dhttp.proxyPort=your http proxy port -Dhttps.proxyHost=your https proxy host -Dhttps.proxyPort=your https proxy port In the second case, where you got the 407 return code, I noticed that you were using a different value for https.proxyHost than in the first case - why is that? Another question - does your proxy server require authentication? You mentioned that you don't have any problems when deploying in Eclipse. How are you setting your proxy settings in that case? On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 1:16 PM, louatia...@gmail.com louatia...@gmail.comwrote: settings are below -Dhttp.proxyHost=myProxy.mydomain -Dhttps.proxyHost=myProxy.mydomain with these setting it just can't reach appengine.google.com in the second case when I add -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttps.proxyHost=me_crypted it returns an 407 exceptionnn this is really blocking , also I want to mention that the eclipse plugin contains a kind of proxy.jar ( containing an implementation for proxy ) may be the default appcfg misses this helper On 11 mai, 20:37, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Also, a fix to allow you to specify -Xss for the GWT Compile when deploying will be available in the upcoming plugin release. On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Those settings for the command line should definitely work. If you don't mind, can you tell me exactly which flags you're adding to the command line to enable the proxy? On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 11:59 AM, louatia...@gmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: the plugin (deploy GAE application makes me avoid proxy problems ) because I still can't deploy with command-line when using proxy even if I specify -Dttp.proxyHost or whatever so it will be nice to be able to set the VM parameter -Xss or else when using thse plugin On 7 mai, 00:55, Sumit Chandel sumitchan...@google.com wrote: Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi.. ., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
settings are below -Dhttp.proxyHost=myProxy.mydomain -Dhttps.proxyHost=myProxy.mydomain with these setting it just can't reach appengine.google.com in the second case when I add -Dhttp.proxyUser=me -Dhttps.proxyHost=me_crypted it returns an 407 exceptionnn this is really blocking , also I want to mention that the eclipse plugin contains a kind of proxy.jar ( containing an implementation for proxy ) may be the default appcfg misses this helper On 11 mai, 20:37, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Also, a fix to allow you to specify -Xss for the GWT Compile when deploying will be available in the upcoming plugin release. On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Those settings for the command line should definitely work. If you don't mind, can you tell me exactly which flags you're adding to the command line to enable the proxy? On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 11:59 AM, louatia...@gmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: the plugin (deploy GAE application makes me avoid proxy problems ) because I still can't deploy with command-line when using proxy even if I specify -Dttp.proxyHost or whatever so it will be nice to be able to set the VM parameter -Xss or else when using thse plugin On 7 mai, 00:55, Sumit Chandel sumitchan...@google.com wrote: Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
the plugin (deploy GAE application makes me avoid proxy problems ) because I still can't deploy with command-line when using proxy even if I specify -Dttp.proxyHost or whatever so it will be nice to be able to set the VM parameter -Xss or else when using thse plugin On 7 mai, 00:55, Sumit Chandel sumitchan...@google.com wrote: Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Also, a fix to allow you to specify -Xss for the GWT Compile when deploying will be available in the upcoming plugin release. On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Rajeev Dayal rda...@google.com wrote: Those settings for the command line should definitely work. If you don't mind, can you tell me exactly which flags you're adding to the command line to enable the proxy? On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 11:59 AM, louatia...@gmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: the plugin (deploy GAE application makes me avoid proxy problems ) because I still can't deploy with command-line when using proxy even if I specify -Dttp.proxyHost or whatever so it will be nice to be able to set the VM parameter -Xss or else when using thse plugin On 7 mai, 00:55, Sumit Chandel sumitchan...@google.com wrote: Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Those settings for the command line should definitely work. If you don't mind, can you tell me exactly which flags you're adding to the command line to enable the proxy? On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 11:59 AM, louatia...@gmail.com louatia...@gmail.com wrote: the plugin (deploy GAE application makes me avoid proxy problems ) because I still can't deploy with command-line when using proxy even if I specify -Dttp.proxyHost or whatever so it will be nice to be able to set the VM parameter -Xss or else when using thse plugin On 7 mai, 00:55, Sumit Chandel sumitchan...@google.com wrote: Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Hi Denis, If the command line workaround works for you, you can proceed to deploy your GWT application to Google App Engine by invoking the uploader utility with the command below: ..\appengine-java-sdk\bin\appcfg.cmd update war The GWT compiler will generate output in a standard war structure, which you can then directly deploy to Google App Engine to host your application. If you're using the AppEngine SDK that came with the Eclipse plugin, you can find it in the directory below: \eclipse\plugins\com.google.appengine.eclipse.sdkbundle_1.2.0.v200904062334\appengine-java-sdk-1.2.0\bin You can read more about deploying your application to Google App Engine at the link below: http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/gettingstarted/uploading.html Hope that helps, -Sumit Chandel On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 6:10 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp:// code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Instead of using the regular Google Eclipse Plugin launchers, you could use a regular Eclipse launcher and pass the arguments there. For a more detailed explanation, look at this post: http://blog.salvadordiaz.fr/2009/04/29/keep-your-source-tree-clean-gwt/ The last bullet point in the section Eclipse project configuration Hope that helps, Salvador On May 5, 8:43 am, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, see http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebugging.html , and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Thanks. I understand that I can avoid the button. I will try the workaround with line mode. As I said, my purpose is to export a GWT application to Google App Engine. GWT Eclipse plugin invokes the GWT compiler leading to the stack overflow. Denis On 5 mai, 14:40, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We have a fix that allows you to specify the VM args for both the GWT Compile toolbar action as well as the GWT Compilation that takes place during deploy. As a work around, you can invoke the GWT compiler manually, seehttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/1.6/DevGuideCompilingAndDebuggi..., and then deploy from the command line. We should be pushing a plugin update very shortly. On Tue, May 5, 2009 at 2:43 AM, denis denis.at...@gmail.com wrote: I have the same issue. With the regular compiler, I can avoid stack overflow error thanks to -Xmx512m -Xms128m -Xss8M in the VM arguments box. But, with GWT compiler, I have not found a way to set these arguments, and the compiler is stopped with the stack overflow error. Using GWT compiler is automated for App Engine deployment. What shall I do? Denis On 30 avr, 18:06, Vitali Lovich vlov...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 10:25 AM, mounier.flor...@gmail.com mounier.flor...@gmail.com wrote: I'm waiting for it too and its starting to take time just for two options... Why does deploying force compilation (which fails so badly) ? Because that's what deployment is? Maybe I'm not understanding your question. Hosted mode (which runs the Java code in a JVM) is just for debugging. For deployment, you compile the Java code into actual Javascript. BTW what does it change to use GWT trunk ? From what I could tell, not much. But there could be more unknown bugs whatnot. However, it should compile - according to the Google developers, they have other internal teams working against trunk. I'm using it and I still have the issue... (and I can't deploy and oophm doesn't have a compile button yet, fortunately i can compile with ant) So what's the issue? What do you mean you can't deploy? You just said you can compile with ant. OOPHM should get the compile button eventually - I never found a particular need to use it. Just run your ant script. On 23 avr, 15:59, Miguel Méndez mmen...@google.com wrote: We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
The problem has already been fixed in trunk. Maybe you could convince the developers to make a point release given the visibility frequency this issue has occured. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
We've updated the compile UI to allow you to tweak the -Xss and -Xmx settings. It will be part of the upcoming point release of the plugin. In the meantime, the compile button in hosted mode is one work around. You can also compile a version of the GWT trunk and have the plugin use that SDK for the project. On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 3:51 AM, mihai007 mihai@gmail.com wrote: oh well add me to the list. this should have priority as it turns the use of plugin useless if I can't compile any workarounds? On 8 Abr, 16:11, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
On Apr 8, 4:11 pm, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the GooglepluginforEclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me astackoverflowerror. Prior to using theplugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/DebugEclipseconfiguration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in theeclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked theplugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. I'm having the same problem as you. --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me a stack overflow error. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---
Re: Eclipse Plugin Compile Button Stack Overflow
On Wed, Apr 8, 2009 at 11:11 AM, Brian hibr...@gmail.com wrote: Just installed the Google plugin for Eclipse, and hit the Compile button on my project. It gave me a stack overflow error. Prior to using the plugin, I'd compile by hitting the Compile button in the hosted mode browser. In the Run/Debug Eclipse configuration, I have -Xss4k -Xmx256M Compiles worked fine with those flags and the Compile button from hosted mode. How do I set the Xss flag for use by the Compile button in the eclipse toolbar? I tried putting it in the Advanced section, but this just informed me it wasn't an appropriate gwt compiler option. The advanced section just passes the arguments to the GWT compiler. There is no way to bump those up right now. We'll need to include this in the next update of the plugin (still no timeframe on that). This isn't stopping me from doing anything, as I can still compile from hosted mode, just curious how to set it up. I checked the plugin faq, but couldn't find anything there. -- Miguel --~--~-~--~~~---~--~~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups Google Web Toolkit group. To post to this group, send email to Google-Web-Toolkit@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit?hl=en -~--~~~~--~~--~--~---