I have it down and mostly compiling except it complains about duplicate classes when compiling the examples? Do you normally setup examples as separate module per example or do you just remove the example source from module?
I'm so close now I can smell the oil.;-) (CASTOR OIL THAT IS) TIA --ekiM R&D Hummingbird Core Services 613.548.4355 x4535 -----Original Message----- From: Bruce Snyder [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 17, 2005 7:13 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [castor-user] Trying to upgrade from 0.9.5.3 to 0.9.6? On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 17:51:39 -0500, Mike Wannamaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > IntelliJ ROCKS.... I agree ;-). > Can I just create an empty project and then setup cvs to pull sources? > Or do I need to do something else? Any tips are helpful. I'm sure you could do it that way, but I usually do the opposite. I start by using the CVS command line client to check out a project's source tree and then create the IntelliJ project. I've just found it easier to work in this order. But that's because I'm a command line guy. I still do a lot of work on the command line including CVS and builds. The procedure to use from the command line can be found here: http://castor.codehaus.org/cvs.html#Anonymous-CVS-Access Just copy/paste these commands (without the dollar sign) into your command line. These two commands require the CVS binary to be in your PATH. These commands will create a dir named castor that contains the entire source tree. Once this is complete, create a new IntelliJ project and point it at the castor dir. When IntelliJ finishes the project creation and the project is open, go to the IntelliJ settings, click on Version Control, select CVS from the popup menu, click OK and click Close. The project is now CVS enabled. Notice the CVS menu between the Tools and Windows menus. All CVS related functionality is available here or in the context menu (right-click). This makes some of the CVS work easier like comparisons, annotations, commits, status, etc. But I find that I have to resort to the command line for creation of patches, CVS administrative functions or any complex CVS function. Once you've got the project CVS enabled in IntelliJ, installation of the CVS bar plugin is a must. But if you're looking for a much more rich CVS experience within IntelliJ, I suggest looking at TMate (http://www.tmatesoft.com/). I just started using it and so far I really like it. Bruce -- perl -e 'print unpack("u30","D0G)[EMAIL PROTECTED]&5R\"F)R=6-E+G-N>61E<D\!G;6%I;\"YC;VT*" );' The Castor Project http://www.castor.org/ Apache Geronimo http://geronimo.apache.org/ ----------------------------------------------------------- If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of: unsubscribe castor-user ----------------------------------------------------------- If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of: unsubscribe castor-user
