[yocto] Yocto 2.7 SDK Eclipse

Bert Böhne bert.boehne at systec.de
Mon Aug 26 23:51:47 PDT 2019


Hi,

I was able to get Eclipse IDE 2019 06 working together with http://downloads.yoctoproject.org/releases/eclipse-plugin/2.6.1/oxygen/. This together with my generated SDK lets me compile and debug (remotely). Maybe it helps someone else…

Thanks,

Bert

Von: Bert Böhne
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 21. August 2019 14:06
An: 'Alexander Kanavin' <alex.kanavin at gmail.com>
Cc: yocto at yoctoproject.org
Betreff: AW: [yocto] Yocto 2.7 SDK Eclipse

OK, thanks. We would like to use Eclipse because we are coming from Windows and it would give us the possibility to code and debug easier or in a more known way.

Von: Alexander Kanavin [mailto:alex.kanavin at gmail.com]
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 21. August 2019 12:03
An: Bert Böhne <bert.boehne at systec.de<mailto:bert.boehne at systec.de>>
Cc: yocto at yoctoproject.org<mailto:yocto at yoctoproject.org>
Betreff: Re: [yocto] Yocto 2.7 SDK Eclipse

On Wed, 21 Aug 2019 at 11:00, Bert Böhne <bert.boehne at systec.de<mailto:bert.boehne at systec.de>> wrote:
thanks for your reply. Do I need the plugins for writing and debugging code in Eclipse? The documentation says:

24.9.11. ADT Removed¶

The Application Development Toolkit (ADT) has been removed because its functionality almost completely overlapped with the standard SDK and the extensible SDK. For information on these SDKs and how to build and use them, see the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.

So would it work if I use Eclipse and maybe a plugin for CMake? Start Eclipse from the cmdline where I sourced the SDK environment setup script?

What is the ‘normal’ way or tool for writing applications? Is it weird to want to use Eclipse?

I do not want to define 'normal'; for me personally the way to work is to do everything from command line, with an extremely lightweight editor (e.g. nano). Since I have never used Eclipse, I do not know what the (now removed) plugins actually do. You can certainly still edit code using Eclipse but I can imagine that for building it, and running it and other things you would have to switch to the command line.

Alex
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