Tom,

Please try setting Eclipse to start another JVM. If you dont do this any security manager or security policy settings will most likely have no effect.

On Oct 7, 2009, at 1130AM, Tom Hobbs wrote:

Dennis...
I probably could get Eclipse to start another JVM. One of my current goals though is to make River more approachable from the point of view of /application/ developers who don't necessarily care (right now) about all the River nuts and bolts. Starting any tutorial with "now hack about with your IDE" would, I think, drive them away.

Patrick...
I could do. That just smacks of way to much effort though. :-) Now I know the code works and the service is okay, I can start getting more heavy handed with Eclipse. I had thought that my Eclipse setup was pretty standard. Has anyone else had any trouble lookup services from inside Eclipse?

Jeremy...
Now you mention it, I've heard the same thing to; Eclipse does use a non-Sun JVM by default. I vaguely recall that I changed my IDE to use the Sun one, but I'll have to check.

Thanks for all the advice. I'll report back as soon as I get somewhere - or I get another head ache.

Cheers,

Tom


-----Original Message-----
From: Jeremy Easton-Marks [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 06 October 2009 18:30
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Finding Service Registrars on Linux

Here is a way shot in the dark and one that probably has nothing to do with
it.

I remember a couple of years ago I was working at a company that used
eclipse as its main development platform. We implemented some new features that worked great inside of eclipse but would fail on the build. I was told (take with a grain of salt) that eclipse uses the IBM implementation of the JVM and not the Sun version. The two version don't always work the same.

As I write this it seems to be more of a configuration issue that probably
involves a simple setting hidden 25 menus down that will fix it.

Jeremy R. Easton-Marks

"ĂȘtre fort pour ĂȘtre utile"


On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 12:22 PM, Patrick Wright <[email protected]> wrote:

Tom

Why not run jstack against Eclipse (or the JVM process it is spawning
when you are running your tests)? You could also use VisualVM to do
the same thing--a bit more comfortable to capture and review more
stack traces. You should be able to see where the process is hanging.


Regards
Patrick


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