Hey all, In Fedora, we used to use Eclipse Equinox initializer to extract all *.so files from the installation before the Eclipse was actually installed via rpm. This had some advantages: * Reduced disk usage for people with tight user.homes or using nfs. * Ability to run Eclipse when home is mounted as noexec (for security purposes).
This is no longer the case, because I can find those libraries find /usr/lib64/eclipse/configuration -name *.so /usr/lib64/eclipse/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/35/1/.cp/os/linux/x86_64/libunixfile_1_0_0.so /usr/lib64/eclipse/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/38/1/.cp/libgnomeproxy-1.0.0.so /usr/lib64/eclipse/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/153/1/.cp/libswt-glx-gtk-4235.so [...] in my home: find ~/.eclipse -name *.so ~/.eclipse/org.eclipse.platform_4.2.0_793567567/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/81/1/.cp/os/linux/x86_64/libspawner.so ~/.eclipse/org.eclipse.platform_4.2.0_793567567/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/143/1/.cp/os/linux/x86_64/libunixfile_1_0_0.so ~/.eclipse/org.eclipse.platform_4.2.0_793567567/configuration/org.eclipse.osgi/bundles/774/1/.cp/libswt-webkit-gtk-4235.so [...] The first thing that I've noticed is that bundle numbers had changed (and they do actually change if I call eclipse -clean, although not always). What may be the cause of this behavior? How to get back to the good ol' behavior where *.so files were not duplicated? Interesting documentation is: http://wiki.eclipse.org/EquinoxInitializer Bug 90535 - .so files installed in a strange location https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=90535 Best regards, Chris _______________________________________________ equinox-dev mailing list [email protected] https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/equinox-dev
