Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On 11/28/2009 3:18 PM, Chuck Robey wrote: Several comments about answers here. First, to Marcus Wanner, yes, the first two eclipse packages work for 3.5, but they AREN'T eclipse, they are plugins for eclipse (plugins for what I really want). The 3rd is eclipse-sdk, the only one you don't cover and the only one I really need. Of course I know how to handle them, but without having eclipse itself, it's not useful. In that case, you would follow my instructions, except change the ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj command to ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-sdk and the emerge -av eclipse-ecj command to emerge -av eclipse-sdk However, if you have it working, you can disregard my advice entirely. Marcus Marcus
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On Saturday 28 November 2009 22:18:06 Chuck Robey wrote: > Alan McKinnon's response, below, seems to be telling me that I really > should go ahead and try to use the binary from the eclipse site, and not > to worry about getting into dependency problems with portage. Normally, > most package tools from any OS get truly destructive if you fail to their > tools ONLY, so I was hoping to find some way to effectively lie to > portage, keep portage from getting upset. Seeing as I've gotten no advice > on how to hoodwink portage, I just went ahead and used the 3.5.1 (x86-64) > version of their Linux(x86-64) binary eclipse package, and it's working > just fine. I had to get the sun-jdk installed (portage at least didn't > offer me any problems here) and (at least until I run into more eclipse > packages) it all seems to be working. > eclipse, netbeans, android-sdk and a few other development environments come with their own maintenance environments. If you install them into /usr/ they might cause some trouble (but this is most unlikely) If you install them into ~/ (where just you can use them) or /usr/local/ (where all users can use them), then you are almost certain to not cause any problems whatsoever. There is no need to try to fool portage in any way. All you are doing is the exact same principle as using Firefox to manage it's own plugins and extensions, just on a larger scale. This is why you got no responses on that matter - you are concerned about problem that does not exist. -- alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
Alan McKinnon wrote: > On Wednesday 25 November 2009 19:20:43 Chuck Robey wrote: >> I need to get an up-to-date version of eclipse working on my gentoo >> box. First question is, is there a Galileo (3.5+) version of eclipse >> available as a portage package? I can't find it, so I'd really appreciate >> a pointer. The only thing I can see is a fairly old eclipse version (I >> think a year or more out of date). >> >> Second question, at the eclipse website, I see a binary version of the >> latest Linux-eclipse (the version I'm after). If I *can't* get a portage >> package version of Galileo-eclipse, then if I install the binary package >> (non-portage) from the eclipse website, can I get (and how can I get) >> portage to consider this package as supplying any dependency which would >> be otherwise supplied by the latest (ganymede, 3.4+) portage version of >> the eclipse tool Several comments about answers here. First, to Marcus Wanner, yes, the first two eclipse packages work for 3.5, but they AREN'T eclipse, they are plugins for eclipse (plugins for what I really want). The 3rd is eclipse-sdk, the only one you don't cover and the only one I really need. Of course I know how to handle them, but without having eclipse itself, it's not useful. It *seems to me that Mark Knecht is telling me that there's no way the binary from the eclipse site would work, so he tells me how to install the two which do me no good. Again, this isn't helpful. The 3rd package is (in your own mail) still stuck at 3.4.x, and that's the real eclipse sdk. Alan McKinnon's response, below, seems to be telling me that I really should go ahead and try to use the binary from the eclipse site, and not to worry about getting into dependency problems with portage. Normally, most package tools from any OS get truly destructive if you fail to their tools ONLY, so I was hoping to find some way to effectively lie to portage, keep portage from getting upset. Seeing as I've gotten no advice on how to hoodwink portage, I just went ahead and used the 3.5.1 (x86-64) version of their Linux(x86-64) binary eclipse package, and it's working just fine. I had to get the sun-jdk installed (portage at least didn't offer me any problems here) and (at least until I run into more eclipse packages) it all seems to be working. If think that perhaps I can mask off everything from portage regarding any eclipse package, and maybe that will lessen my chances of having portage step on my system for me. This just occurred to me, and maybe it's the only thing I can do. > > Have you considered simply installing the binary eclipse into ~ and > maintaining it using the bundled eclipse tools? This removes portage out of > the equation entirely - no fooling around with *provided > > That is the method used by most Linux users and it's highly unlikely it won't > work - gentoo doesn't do weird things with where libs etc are stored. > > Plus, you have the advantage of being to install plugins directly from > eclipse > without having to become root and run emerge. It the same order of magnitude > as using Firefox to install it's own plugins. >
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On 11/26/2009 12:55 PM, David Relson wrote: Alternatively, one can use the autounmask command, for example: autounmask dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 On my AMD64 system, which has /etc/portage/package.keywords (as a directory, rather than a file) autounmask generated file: /etc/portage/package.keywords/autounmask-eclipse-ecj which contains: # --- # BEGIN: dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 # --- =dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 ~amd64 =dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 ~amd64 # --- # END: dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 # --- I wish I had known about that command :| Marcus
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On Wed, 25 Nov 2009 13:14:39 -0500 Marcus Wanner wrote: > On 11/25/2009 12:20 PM, Chuck Robey wrote: > > Mark Knecht wrote: > > > >> m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ eix eclipse > >> * dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj > >> Available versions: > >> (3.3) 3.3.0-r1 > >> (3.4) 3.4 > >> (3.5) ~3.5.1 > >> {elibc_FreeBSD} > >> Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > >> Description: Ant Compiler Adapter for Eclipse Java > >> Compiler > >> > >> > This shows that 3.5.1 is available, but is masked by a ~arch keyword. > This means that the ebuild for 3.5.1 is not stable yet, and is not > guaranteed to work (though it most likely will). > >> * dev-java/eclipse-ecj > >> Available versions: > >> (3.3) 3.3.0-r3 > >> (3.4) 3.4-r4 > >> (3.5) ~3.5.1 > >> {ant elibc_FreeBSD java6} > >> Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > >> Description: Eclipse Compiler for Java > >> > >> > Same for eclipse-ecj... > >> * dev-util/eclipse-sdk > >> Available versions: (3.4) 3.4-r2 > >> {doc elibc_FreeBSD java6} > >> Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > >> Description: Eclipse Tools Platform > >> > >> > But not eclipse-sdk. > >> dragonfly ~ # emerge -pv eclipse-ecj > >> > >> These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > >> > >> Calculating dependencies... done! > >> [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB > >> [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.4-r4 USE="-java6" 1,251 kB > >> > >> Total: 2 packages (2 new), Size of downloads: 1,251 kB > >> > Here, he shows what would be installed if you ran "emerge elipse-ecj". > >> dragonfly ~ # ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj > >> > >> These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > >> > >> Calculating dependencies... done! > >> [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 > >> kB [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB > >> [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" > >> 6,828 kB [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB > >> [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB > >> [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB > >> > >> Total: 6 packages (6 new), Size of downloads: 8,111 kB > >> > This is what would happen if you temporarily told the system to allow > the installation of ~arch packages. Temporarily setting ~arch is a > Bad Idea! > > I need to get an up-to-date version of eclipse working on my gentoo > > box. First question is, is there a Galileo (3.5+) version of > > eclipse available as a portage package? I can't find it, so I'd > > really appreciate a pointer. The only thing I can see is a fairly > > old eclipse version (I think a year or more out of date). > That is because the newer version is keyworded with ~arch. Emerge > will not tell you that there is a newer, keyworded version available. > > Second question, at the eclipse website, I see a binary version of > > the latest Linux-eclipse (the version I'm after). If I *can't* get > > a portage package version of Galileo-eclipse, > Don't worry, I'll show you how in a little bit! > > then if I install the binary package (non-portage) > > from the eclipse website, can I get (and how can I get) portage to > > consider this package as supplying any dependency which would be > > otherwise supplied by the latest (ganymede, 3.4+) portage version > > of the eclipse tool> > As far as I know of, that is not possible without ugly hacks. > > Unless I'm completely misreading your stuff, your examples tell me > > how to install the (too old) portage version, which is in all cases > > just too old for me, so my 2 questions boil down to (1) must I?, > > and (2) How do I? > I don't know what you mean by "must I?", but the answer to "How do > I?" is right here: > First, you need to create a folder called /etc/portage as root. Then, > create a file called package.keywords in that directory. When you > want to install a keyworded package (dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 in > this case), you run > > ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj > > to see what packages are needed for the keyworded version. Then, you > copy the the package names mentioned to package.keywords. In the > example above, the command outputted: > > [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" 6,828 > kB [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB > > So you would add this: > > dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 > dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 > dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 > app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 > dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 > dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 > > to the package.keywords file (note
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
Chuck Robey schrieb: > I was checking to see what version of eclipse seems to have a portage package, > and I was kinda shocked that the package seems a bit outdated. 3.4 is the > current portage package, but eclipse has been at 3.5 for a good while now. > Seeing as the eclipse website has a linux binary 3.5+ package, unless I've > overlooked something available from gentoo (I would be overjoyed to have made > that mistake) then I'm going to be forced to see how to coax portage to allow > me > to use that eclipse site binary package to sub for ALL eclipse packages. > > Anyone know how to get portage to make externally supplied binaries to supply > portage eclipse dependencies? All of the huge number of eclipse plugins can > be > done without using portage just fine, but the eclipse itself, that I would > really rather use a portage ebuild for installation. > > While I totally buy into the whole package managing and distribution system and consider it the best thing since sliced bread, I suggest you make an exception for eclipse. The problem is that eclipse contains its own package management for its plugins. This doesn't work very well with a global installation in /opt or /usr where a normal user should not have write rights. It is much better to have every user download and install eclipse into their home-directories. This has the advantage that every user can contain its own set of plugins and extensions. I personally have several versions of eclipse installed: One for J2EE and a much leaner version for C++. Having one version with all plugins would make eclipse unbearably slow. Hope this helps Florian Philipp signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On Wednesday 25 November 2009 19:20:43 Chuck Robey wrote: > I need to get an up-to-date version of eclipse working on my gentoo > box. First question is, is there a Galileo (3.5+) version of eclipse > available as a portage package? I can't find it, so I'd really appreciate > a pointer. The only thing I can see is a fairly old eclipse version (I > think a year or more out of date). > > Second question, at the eclipse website, I see a binary version of the > latest Linux-eclipse (the version I'm after). If I *can't* get a portage > package version of Galileo-eclipse, then if I install the binary package > (non-portage) from the eclipse website, can I get (and how can I get) > portage to consider this package as supplying any dependency which would > be otherwise supplied by the latest (ganymede, 3.4+) portage version of > the eclipse tool Have you considered simply installing the binary eclipse into ~ and maintaining it using the bundled eclipse tools? This removes portage out of the equation entirely - no fooling around with *provided That is the method used by most Linux users and it's highly unlikely it won't work - gentoo doesn't do weird things with where libs etc are stored. Plus, you have the advantage of being to install plugins directly from eclipse without having to become root and run emerge. It the same order of magnitude as using Firefox to install it's own plugins. -- alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On 11/25/2009 12:20 PM, Chuck Robey wrote: Mark Knecht wrote: m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ eix eclipse * dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj Available versions: (3.3) 3.3.0-r1 (3.4) 3.4 (3.5) ~3.5.1 {elibc_FreeBSD} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Ant Compiler Adapter for Eclipse Java Compiler This shows that 3.5.1 is available, but is masked by a ~arch keyword. This means that the ebuild for 3.5.1 is not stable yet, and is not guaranteed to work (though it most likely will). * dev-java/eclipse-ecj Available versions: (3.3) 3.3.0-r3 (3.4) 3.4-r4 (3.5) ~3.5.1 {ant elibc_FreeBSD java6} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Eclipse Compiler for Java Same for eclipse-ecj... * dev-util/eclipse-sdk Available versions: (3.4) 3.4-r2 {doc elibc_FreeBSD java6} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Eclipse Tools Platform But not eclipse-sdk. dragonfly ~ # emerge -pv eclipse-ecj These are the packages that would be merged, in order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.4-r4 USE="-java6" 1,251 kB Total: 2 packages (2 new), Size of downloads: 1,251 kB Here, he shows what would be installed if you ran "emerge elipse-ecj". dragonfly ~ # ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj These are the packages that would be merged, in order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" 6,828 kB [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB Total: 6 packages (6 new), Size of downloads: 8,111 kB This is what would happen if you temporarily told the system to allow the installation of ~arch packages. Temporarily setting ~arch is a Bad Idea! I need to get an up-to-date version of eclipse working on my gentoo box. First question is, is there a Galileo (3.5+) version of eclipse available as a portage package? I can't find it, so I'd really appreciate a pointer. The only thing I can see is a fairly old eclipse version (I think a year or more out of date). That is because the newer version is keyworded with ~arch. Emerge will not tell you that there is a newer, keyworded version available. Second question, at the eclipse website, I see a binary version of the latest Linux-eclipse (the version I'm after). If I *can't* get a portage package version of Galileo-eclipse, Don't worry, I'll show you how in a little bit! then if I install the binary package (non-portage) from the eclipse website, can I get (and how can I get) portage to consider this package as supplying any dependency which would be otherwise supplied by the latest (ganymede, 3.4+) portage version of the eclipse tool> As far as I know of, that is not possible without ugly hacks. Unless I'm completely misreading your stuff, your examples tell me how to install the (too old) portage version, which is in all cases just too old for me, so my 2 questions boil down to (1) must I?, and (2) How do I? I don't know what you mean by "must I?", but the answer to "How do I?" is right here: First, you need to create a folder called /etc/portage as root. Then, create a file called package.keywords in that directory. When you want to install a keyworded package (dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 in this case), you run ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj to see what packages are needed for the keyworded version. Then, you copy the the package names mentioned to package.keywords. In the example above, the command outputted: [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" 6,828 kB [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB So you would add this: dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 to the package.keywords file (note that this will probably be different for your system, you should run the command yourself and use that output to find out what you should put in the file). I would also put a note above the lines to say why and when they were added, in case I forget. Then you can run "emerge -av eclipse-ecj" and see if it lists the new versions of everything. Marcus
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
Mark Knecht wrote: > On Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 7:52 PM, Chuck Robey wrote: >> I was checking to see what version of eclipse seems to have a portage >> package, >> and I was kinda shocked that the package seems a bit outdated. 3.4 is the >> current portage package, but eclipse has been at 3.5 for a good while now. >> Seeing as the eclipse website has a linux binary 3.5+ package, unless I've >> overlooked something available from gentoo (I would be overjoyed to have made >> that mistake) then I'm going to be forced to see how to coax portage to >> allow me >> to use that eclipse site binary package to sub for ALL eclipse packages. >> >> Anyone know how to get portage to make externally supplied binaries to supply >> portage eclipse dependencies? All of the huge number of eclipse plugins can >> be >> done without using portage just fine, but the eclipse itself, that I would >> really rather use a portage ebuild for installation. >> >> >> > > I don't know about installing binary stuff - probably wouldn't work > unless you have exactly the right libraries and what not. Anyway, I > seem to see a 3.5 version masked with ~ . Note that I would unmask it > in portage.keywords and not the way I'm showing it below. > > HTH, > Mark > > m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ eix eclipse > * dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj > Available versions: > (3.3) 3.3.0-r1 > (3.4) 3.4 > (3.5) ~3.5.1 > {elibc_FreeBSD} > Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > Description: Ant Compiler Adapter for Eclipse Java Compiler > > * dev-java/eclipse-ecj > Available versions: > (3.3) 3.3.0-r3 > (3.4) 3.4-r4 > (3.5) ~3.5.1 > {ant elibc_FreeBSD java6} > Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > Description: Eclipse Compiler for Java > > * dev-util/eclipse-sdk > Available versions: (3.4) 3.4-r2 > {doc elibc_FreeBSD java6} > Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ > Description: Eclipse Tools Platform > > Found 3 matches. > m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ > > > dragonfly ~ # emerge -pv eclipse-ecj > > These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > > Calculating dependencies... done! > [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.4-r4 USE="-java6" 1,251 kB > > Total: 2 packages (2 new), Size of downloads: 1,251 kB > dragonfly ~ # ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj > > These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > > Calculating dependencies... done! > [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" 6,828 kB > [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB > [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB > > Total: 6 packages (6 new), Size of downloads: 8,111 kB > dragonfly ~ > Mark, I could be responsible for this (the fact that it seems that neither of the things I really wanted to know are covered) because sometimes I am not clear in what I'm asking, so let me try again. I need to get an up-to-date version of eclipse working on my gentoo box. First question is, is there a Galileo (3.5+) version of eclipse available as a portage package? I can't find it, so I'd really appreciate a pointer. The only thing I can see is a fairly old eclipse version (I think a year or more out of date). Second question, at the eclipse website, I see a binary version of the latest Linux-eclipse (the version I'm after). If I *can't* get a portage package version of Galileo-eclipse, then if I install the binary package (non-portage) from the eclipse website, can I get (and how can I get) portage to consider this package as supplying any dependency which would be otherwise supplied by the latest (ganymede, 3.4+) portage version of the eclipse tool . Unless I'm completely misreading your stuff, your examples tell me how to install the (too old) portage version, which is in all cases just too old for me, so my 2 questions boil down to (1) must I?, and (2) How do I? Thanks for your time, Mark.
Re: [gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
On Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 7:52 PM, Chuck Robey wrote: > I was checking to see what version of eclipse seems to have a portage package, > and I was kinda shocked that the package seems a bit outdated. 3.4 is the > current portage package, but eclipse has been at 3.5 for a good while now. > Seeing as the eclipse website has a linux binary 3.5+ package, unless I've > overlooked something available from gentoo (I would be overjoyed to have made > that mistake) then I'm going to be forced to see how to coax portage to allow > me > to use that eclipse site binary package to sub for ALL eclipse packages. > > Anyone know how to get portage to make externally supplied binaries to supply > portage eclipse dependencies? All of the huge number of eclipse plugins can > be > done without using portage just fine, but the eclipse itself, that I would > really rather use a portage ebuild for installation. > > > I don't know about installing binary stuff - probably wouldn't work unless you have exactly the right libraries and what not. Anyway, I seem to see a 3.5 version masked with ~ . Note that I would unmask it in portage.keywords and not the way I'm showing it below. HTH, Mark m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ eix eclipse * dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj Available versions: (3.3) 3.3.0-r1 (3.4) 3.4 (3.5) ~3.5.1 {elibc_FreeBSD} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Ant Compiler Adapter for Eclipse Java Compiler * dev-java/eclipse-ecj Available versions: (3.3) 3.3.0-r3 (3.4) 3.4-r4 (3.5) ~3.5.1 {ant elibc_FreeBSD java6} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Eclipse Compiler for Java * dev-util/eclipse-sdk Available versions: (3.4) 3.4-r2 {doc elibc_FreeBSD java6} Homepage:http://www.eclipse.org/ Description: Eclipse Tools Platform Found 3 matches. m...@dragonfly ~/Desktop $ dragonfly ~ # emerge -pv eclipse-ecj These are the packages that would be merged, in order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.4-r4 USE="-java6" 1,251 kB Total: 2 packages (2 new), Size of downloads: 1,251 kB dragonfly ~ # ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -pv eclipse-ecj These are the packages that would be merged, in order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild N] dev-python/pyxml-0.8.4-r2 USE="-doc -examples" 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/javatoolkit-0.3.0-r3 17 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-core-1.7.1-r4 USE="-doc -source" 6,828 kB [ebuild N] app-admin/eselect-ecj-0.3 0 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 USE="ant" 1,268 kB [ebuild N] dev-java/ant-eclipse-ecj-3.5.1 0 kB Total: 6 packages (6 new), Size of downloads: 8,111 kB dragonfly ~
[gentoo-user] eclipse portage package
I was checking to see what version of eclipse seems to have a portage package, and I was kinda shocked that the package seems a bit outdated. 3.4 is the current portage package, but eclipse has been at 3.5 for a good while now. Seeing as the eclipse website has a linux binary 3.5+ package, unless I've overlooked something available from gentoo (I would be overjoyed to have made that mistake) then I'm going to be forced to see how to coax portage to allow me to use that eclipse site binary package to sub for ALL eclipse packages. Anyone know how to get portage to make externally supplied binaries to supply portage eclipse dependencies? All of the huge number of eclipse plugins can be done without using portage just fine, but the eclipse itself, that I would really rather use a portage ebuild for installation.