>
> I remember having created this bookmarklet when reading some SDM document, 
> but I never understood how to use it. Why should one use it to recompile 
> the app, instead of running the GWT compiler in eclipse? And what exactly 
> is the SDM code server (remember, I started my app in eclipse by calling 
> "run as web application"). Is it simply the embedded server in eclipse 
> called Jessie?
>

The code server is a process that uses the GWT compiler to recompile your 
app and serve the output (including SourceMaps) using an embedded Jetty 
server. The benefit is that the code server will configure the GWT compiler 
for maximum performance (by disabling all kinds of optimizations). Also the 
code server can hold the GWT compiler instance in memory to cache certain 
information and thus saving some work which also reduces compilation time. 
Caching will have an even greater effect once incremental compilation is 
supported.

Basically the code server should be faster at recompiles than if you would 
start the GWT compiler by hand in eclipse. Well and SourceMaps usually just 
work.


 

However, when I click on the "DevMode On" bookmarklet while my app is 
> running, I get the following message in the chrome console:
>
> GET http://localhost:9876/dev_mode_on.js net::ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED 
>
>
>
Thats because you never started the code server. Actually the Google 
Eclipse plugin has no built-in support for SDM so you have to start it 
manually using a Java Application run configuration or some build tool like 
maven/gradle. GWT 2.7 will make it a lot easier to launch the code server. 
To launch the code server manually put code-server.jar from your GWT SDK on 
class path and use com.google.gwt.dev.codeserver.CodeServer as main class. 
The class path for the code server should be the same as for classic 
DevMode and command line parameters are similar.



 

> In that case you probably only have compiled your app to JavaScript and 
>> used the embedded Jetty of classic DevMode (run as web application) to 
>> serve your app.
>>
>
> Should the app be started in a different way, other than "run as web 
> application"?
>

No thats fine if thats all you need.


 

>  My understandig at the moment looks like this:
>
>
>    1. Run "GWT compile" in eclipse.
>    2. Run "Run as Web Application" in eclipse.
>    3. Open "http://127.0.0.1:8888/index.html"; in the browser
>    4. Make changes to the code, because you saw that there is something 
>    wrong.
>    5. Click on "DevMode On".
>
> As already mentioned, 5. does not work for me. I don't understand why we 
> don't simply recompile with "GWT compile" command in eclipse.
>
 
You can use GWT compile in eclipse but then you have to make SourceMaps 
work. Also the code server should recompile faster (see above).

 

> And I also don't understand 1. and 2.: Calling "Run as Web Application" 
> always worked without running the GWT compiler. I always needed the GWT 
> compiler to create a war file...
>

Run as Web Application has started classic DevMode and an embedded Jetty 
server to serve your server side code. Classic DevMode was then responsible 
to execute your code. Now you don't use classic DevMode so the only way to 
execute your app is to compile it to JavaScript so that the browser can 
execute it.


-- J.

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