But why ask what type of project? I'm not going to change the type of
project...but with Subclipse I'll have to remember it.
I've got novices entering my projects every day, and it would be much
clearer if it checked it out as the same type of project in both cases.
Do I really want to check out a Java project as something else?
- Charlie
________________________________
From: Stephen Kestle [mailto:Stephen.Kestle@orionhealth.com]
Sent: Monday, April 25, 2005 4:40 PM
To: users@subclipse.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Checking out projects multiple times, problems importing a
large project
1)
Well, I tried this for the first time on Saturday, and it worked
perfectly. Sure, it asked me what type of project, but it found the
.project and .classpath files and organized the project as it should.
I'm on Eclipse 3.1M5 I think.
Cheers
Stephen
-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Nutter [mailto:cnutter@ventera.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 19 April 2005 4:44 a.m.
To: users@subclipse.tigris.org
Subject: Checking out projects multiple times, problems importing a
large project
Hello!
Issue 1:
I fully appreciate the ability of Subclipse to check out projects into
an appropriate dir/project within Eclipse based on the .project files (I
assume this is how it works). However, I very often need to check out
the same project multiple times within a given workspace (for branch
management or temporarily working on a branch, for example). It seems
that the "Check out as..." functionality does not do what I would
expect...where the CVS module allows me to check out the same module
with a different name (and no prompting to specify what type of project,
etc) the Subclipse module requires me to specify it as a Java project,
set build paths, etc.
The intelligence to automatically check out /myproject/trunk and
/myproject/branch1 both as "myproject" without further intervention is
very cool...but it seems an additional option is needed for me to
specify a project name. Is this possible in the current code?
Issue 2:
I have had some trouble with Subclipse importing projects. Yesterday,
the first operation I tried with Subclipse was to import a large project
(4000+ files) into Subversion. After initially giving me an error, my
second attempt caused the Eclipse java process to just chug and chug and
chug at 100% CPU. The same CPU metric on the server was nominal. An
import using command-line CVS did not have any problems, and imported
all 4000 files fairly quickly.
I am running the most recent subclipse with JavaSVN under Eclipse 3.0
and subversion 1.1-ish on Gentoo Linux. I have been evaluating
Subversion as a possible successor to CVS at our organization, but
things like this prevent us from adopting it. We really must have
seamless Eclipse integration on par with the built-in CVS module, or
it's a no-go.
Thoughts?
--
Charles Oliver Nutter, Senior Specialist, System Architect
Ventera Corporation
Office: 612-370-3061 Mobile: 612-710-1274
Received on Tue Apr 26 07:42:15 2005