Debugging a Plugin Using the Eclipse Workbench
To debug problems in the code of the plugin without having to re-bundle the Java classes of
the plugin in a JAR library, follow these steps:
- Download and unpack an all platforms standalone version of Oxygen XML Editor.
- Set up the oXygen SDK following this set of instructions.
- Create an Eclipse Java Project (for example, MyPluginProject) from one of the sample plugins (the Workspace Access plugin, for example).
- In the MyPluginProject folder, create a folder called
myPlugin. In this new folder copy the
plugin.xml from the sample plugin. Modify the added
plugin.xml to add a library reference to the directory where
Eclipse copies the compiled output. To find out where this directory is located, invoke
the contextual menu of the project (in the Project view), and go to . Then inspect the value of the Default output folder
text box.Example: If the compiled output folder is classes, then the you need to add in the plugin.xml the following library reference:
<library name="../classes"/> - Copy the plugin.dtd from the [OXYGEN_INSTALL_DIR]/plugins folder in the root MyPluginProject folder.
- In the MyPluginProject build path add external JAR references to all the JAR libraries in the [OXYGEN_INSTALL_DIR]/lib folder. Now your MyPluginProject should compile successfully.
- In the Eclipse IDE, create a new Java Application configuration for
debugging. Set the Main class box to
ro.sync.exml.Oxygen. Click the Arguments tab and add the following code snippet in the VM arguments input box, making sure that the path to the plugins directory is the correct one:-Dcom.oxygenxml.app.descriptor=ro.sync.exml.EditorFrameDescriptor -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=384m -Dcom.oxygenxml.editor.plugins.dir=D:\projects\MyPluginProjectNote: If you need to configure the plugin for , set thecom.oxygenxml.app.descriptortoro.sync.exml.AuthorFrameDescriptororro.sync.exml.DeveloperFrameDescriptor, respectively. - Add a break point in the source of one of your Java classes.
- Debug the created configuration. When the code reaches your breakpoint, the debug perspective should take over.