Well, you might be running out of file handles, try to increase the
allowed number.
There is a change in NetBeans 12.2, that it does not necessarily closes
the Gradle Project Connection on every Gradle invocation as in the
previous versions.
Also newer Gradle versions started to do a lot of
Best would be to start with a fresh user directory and when this problem
happens, provide the log files (where the user directory is is described in
the About box).
"No valid Java Platform found for key: 'JDK_11'"
For that, probably, go to the Project Properties dialog of your project and
"No valid Java Platform found for key: 'JDK_11'"
For that, probably, go to the Project Properties dialog of your project and
register the JDK you're using there.
Gj
On Thu, Dec 3, 2020 at 5:30 PM Mark A. Flacy
wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> We've all played internet guy, so don't worry about it.
>
>
Greetings,
We've all played internet guy, so don't worry about it.
Macbook Pro (15-inch, 2018). 32GB RAM.
OpenJDK 15.0.1 and OpenJDK 11.0.2 both show the same issue.
1 gradle project that contains 3 gradle subprojects. Since this is a work
project, I can't provide a copy of it. I'll say
I don’t like being internet guy, but come on, how is this helpful?
You could try giving us some idea of your machine specs, JDK, how many projects
and size you have open or maven indexed repos? Are any errors in the
notifications?
I am using 12.2 on the very same macOS version and I have
Greetings,
I've been attempting to use the projected 12.2 version in my work projects
under MacOS Catalina (10.15.7).
In my experience, it is a pile of dung (GUI freezes. Background scanning
doesn't happen but when it does, you have to force quit the Netbeans process).
I haven't tried it on