Hi All,

   I know it has been over a week now since I said that I'll put
together a document that describes how to debug postgres using Eclipse
IDE on Windows. I have finally completed the first draft and uploaded
it here:

http://www.geocities.com/gurjeet79/pg_on_eclipse.txt

   And here's a screenshot of the fruits it'd  bear if someone tries
to follow it and go through with it:

http://www.geocities.com/gurjeet79/pg_on_eclipse.jpg

   Hope it helps to get more people more familiar with the postgres code.

   Thomas, thanks a lot for the background. IMO, now Eclipse + CDT is
very close to MSVC / VS.Net in terms of the features that I was
looking for. The debugger is well integrated now, and I haven't had
any issues in this last one week.

   Since you said that you haven't tried debugging on Windows, I'd
request you to go through this document and see if you like what you
finally can do within Eclipse. Any inputs on the document will be
appreciated.

Thanks,
Gurjeet.

On 5/8/06, Thomas Hallgren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Gurjeet Singh wrote:
>    Thomas, I love the idea of eclipse; any platform, any language,
> one IDE. I am downloading it right now. Can you please send in the
> steps that you perform to setup the environment, including mingw
> toolkit; I will try to grow on that.

My setup is pretty basic. I can't give you an exact step by step instruction 
since it's been
a while since I last did it. I installed msys, mingw, Eclipse. and then, using 
the Eclipse
update manager and the 'Callisto' site, I installed the C/C++ plugin.

I also made sure that the PATH in effect for the Eclipse IDE contains entries 
for the
%MSYS_HOME%\bin and %MINGW_HOME%\bin. That's it basically.


> The idea of this effort is to
> have a GUI IDE, with a slew of features that MSVC offers: Memory
> window that allows you to edit memory inplace, call-stack window,
> watches, quick-expression evaluater with class/struct support, etc.
> etc. . If Eclipse can offer all these, then I dont think anyone would
> mind using it insead of MSVC.
>
Eclipse won't offer all of these. Not yet anyway. What you get is a fair C/C++ 
editor and
parsers for your make output that will annotate your files with errors and 
warnings. There's
said to be some debugging support too on top of gdb, but to be honest, I've 
never tried it
on Windows. I do my C-debugging using gdb on Linux. My attempts to use gdb on 
Windows have
been quite futile so far. Then again, I'm not using the latest MinGW version so 
perhaps
there's still hope.

All in all, Eclipse C/C++ has some way to go before it can match up with MSVC. 
My point was
that you can do Windows development without MSVC and you can do it fairly well. 
If you are a
Linux hacker, you might even prefer doing it that way. So as a platform, 
Windows is not by
any means "left alone".

I really think that what you and others are trying to accomplish is very 
valuable. If not
for me (since I'm mixing Java and C and work on multiple platforms) then 
certainly for many
others. Personally, I'd rather see a Visual Studio port than one for VC++6.0. I 
wish you the
best of luck.

Regards,
Thomas Hallgren



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