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https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/JBIDE-3670?page=com.atlassian.jira.plu...
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Kris Verlaenen commented on JBIDE-3670:
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Jeff,
Thanks for the feedback. What would you suggest as a solution for this? I can easily
modify the Drools runtime to not only search for jar files in the runtime directory
itself, but also in its sub-directories (and so on). This would solve the problem here,
but wouldn't this create the risk of adding jars that we actually didn't want to
add,, just because they are in a sub-directory somewhere? Another option would be to only
look for a lib dir in the runtime directory, this would solve the problem if you use a
binary Drools download of some sort (as that adds external dependencies in a lib jar and
the drools jars in the top-level directory).
By the way, the easiest solution for the end user at this point is to just let the IDE
create a runtime for him (it will extract the necessary jars from the plugin itself to the
selected runtime directory), as described here:
https://hudson.jboss.org/hudson/job/drools/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/t...
Kris
Drools Runtime unclear how to correctly define
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Key: JBIDE-3670
URL:
https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/JBIDE-3670
Project: Tools (JBoss Tools)
Issue Type: Bug
Components: drools
Affects Versions: 3.0.0.cr1
Environment: jbdevstudio-linux-gtk-2.0.0.CR2-R200901250322.jar on RHEL 5, jdk
1.5.11
Reporter: Jeff DeLong
I tested out the Drools IDE in JBDS. I used the Drools icon to create a new Drools
project, and ran the DroolsTest class the wizard created as a Java Application. I got the
following exception:
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: org/antlr/runtime/CharStream
The problem is with defining the "Drools Runtime". As part of the setup for
creating a Drools Project for the first time, the user is asked to create a "Drools
Runtime". This is new (in the past Drools IDE new which set of jars to use), to be
consistent with other tools and allow user to select different Drools Runtimes. The
challenge for the user is how to define a Drools Runtime. You can either find the jars in
JBDS plugins, explode them into a folder, and point to them, or download Drools
engine/expert (in this case I had decided to try jboss-brms-engine-5.ea.zip, since this is
the .com version). However when this is unzipped, some jars are in the root of the folder
and some are in a lib directory. At least four of the ones in the lib directory are
required for runtime (antlr-runtime-3.1.1.jar, core-3.4.2.v_883_R34x.jar, mvel2-2.0.5.jar,
xstream-1.3.1.jar), and the jars in a subdirectory are not added to the runtime
classpath.
It should be easier for the user to define a Drools Runtime. They should not have to know
about which jars to move around. They should just be able to download and unzip.
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