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This is a walkthrough on how to develop for OSCAR on Eclipse.


This page has been imported from http://www.oscarmanual.org and has not yet been reviewed by OSCAR EMR.


Preface

There is no standard development environment.  After all you can develop OSCAR entirely at the command line with vi and git.  For a project of this scope an IDE makes it that much easier. These basic instructions are adequate for developing Oscar on Eclipse.  You can install Eclipse on any modern OS, but we encourage the better Open Source ones.  

These instructions do not cover the where why and how of the Git content system, the wonders of Gerrit, nor how to actually use Eclipse: topics which are better covered elsewhere, and/or discovered on your own.

Document Version History

  • v1.0 – initial public release to oscarmanual.org– Feb 12, 2011
  • v1.1 – Maven step added – July 29, 2011
  • v1.2 – Added committing details – Sept 6, 2011
  • v1.3 – Added warning about serial commits – May 12, 2013
  • v1.4 – Reviewed installation against Eclipse version 4.3 Kepler – Dec 10, 2014
  • v1.5 – Revised for Eclipse version 4.4 Luna, initial release – Dec 10, 2014
  • v1.6 – Revised for Eclipse version 4.6.2 Neon – Jan 3, 2017

The document is based on older instructions for OSCAR 12 and is copyright © 2011-17 by Peter Hutten-Czapski under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License

We encourage every developer to sign up, even if you don't commit code right now, gerrit will give you the ability to view and comment on other committed patches etc.  Just navigate to (https://source.oscartools.org:8080/).  You need a git hub account.Register for Gerrit

gerrit page

On the Gerrit main screen you should see a register option on the top right of the screen, you should be able to register using your github id

On the main registration screen :
    - For "Full Name" enter the persons name and click "save changed" (yes you actually need to click that now).
    - For "select a unique username" this will become your ssh access username, We'll use your email address (before the @ sign) as a standard. You need to click "select username" now.
    - For "Register an SSH public key" : if you already know or have SSH keys you can just provide it, otherwise do the following : 

~$ ssh-keygen -t rsa
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/peter/.ssh/id_rsa): 
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): 
Enter same passphrase again: 
Your identification has been saved in /home/peter/.ssh/id_rsa.
Your public key has been saved in /home/peter/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.

Do not enter a passphrase when it asks. This means it will be easier for you to sign in AND... if you machine is compromised, your gerrit user is compromised and the corresponding server key should be deleted, you'll need to tell the gerrit administrator and or login to the gerrit web site and delete this key.

 Now cut and paste the contents of "~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub" into the text area on the web page.

SSH key

Click add and it should list it as an added key on the screen.
    - now on the bottom of the screen there's a link that says "continue" click that, now you should be at the your "code review dashboard" screen.

At this point, if your Eclipse was already running, you need to stop it and start it again. Eclipse caches ssh key information.

Installing Eclipse 

The latest eclipse can be obtained directly from their official site at the downloads section

http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/index.php

now you will see the latest versions available

when this was written it was eclipse neon (Jan 2017)

if you go to the above link from linux then you will be presented with the linux versions by default. if you go to the website within other OS, make sure you select the right platform.

then download the right choice for you ( for me its eclipse IDE for Java EE)

you can select any mirror you like (I downloaded from the main site in Canada)

after downloading

you will see a archive named like eclipse-inst-linux64.tar.gz

1. extract installer

tar xf eclipse-inst-linux64.tar.gz

2. change to the extraction directory

cd eclipse-installer

3. run the installer as regular user (unless you want to install it in /opt/eclipse when you must invoke the installer with sudo)

./eclipse-inst

4. Install the version you want into your home directory. it's in the directory /home/user/eclipse-version/eclipse

To run eclipse from the install directory

go to the directory /home/user/eclipse/java-neon

and double click the file "eclipse" and that's it.

alternately add it to the desktop menu with a file called /usr/share/applications/eclipse-neon.desktop

with the following content (replace peter in the paths below with the appropriate user)

[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Version=1.0
Type=Application
Name=Eclipse IDE
Comment=Eclipse Integrated Development Environment
Icon=/home/peter/eclipse/java-neon/eclipse/icon.xpm
Exec=/home/peter/eclipse/java-neon/eclipse/eclipse
NoDisplay=false
Categories=Development;IDE;
Name[en]=Eclipse
Terminal=false

 

Configuring the Git Plugin

You will need a file in your home directory calls .gitconfig, which has a standard ini or property file structure.  Eclipse will generate it for you. 

  • Click Window > Preferences > Team > Git > Configuration
  • Click New Entry... and enter the key value pair user.email and your email that you registered on the gerrit site with 
  • Click New Entry... and enter the key value pair user.name and your name
  • Other options such as core.editor can also be added
  • when you are done it should look like this:

EGit preferences

 

Cloning Oscar into Eclipse

Click File > Import... > Projects from Git > clone.

14 Eclipse Project Git

 

Add the Clone...

14 Eclipse Clone URI

 

The repository details should be provided for your git/gerrit installation, 

You will want to use "ssh://xxxx@source.oscartools.org:29418/oscar". 

Just replace xxx with your Gerrit repository user name
Note that you do not need to enter a password. 

You can uncheck "Store in Secure Store" and you won't have to sign in every time you open Eclipse.

14 Eclipse Git Repo

Add the RSA key that the site will provide

Authenticity Prompt Eclipse

 You can select any branch,  but scroll down to find "master".

14 Eclipse Git Selecting Master


You will be asked for the local destination.  You should accept the default unless you already have a directory of that name

14 Eclipse select a Local Destination

 

Then you will be asked for a secure password if you left the checkbox "store in a secure store" earlier (not suggested or shown)

and then you will be cloning Oscar from master into your local repository

14 Eclipse Cloning Source

 

Almost there

14 Eclipse Import Project

 

[Next >] will determine how to share the imported project.  Select oscar and Finish.

14 Eclipse Import Type

 

Identify the imported project by clicking on the checkbox

 

Click the [Finish]  button and add Maven to your classpath

Window > Preferences > Java > Build Path > Classpath Variables > [New...]

Prior to adding the M2_REPO to Eclipse, you need to open a terminal and run mvn install command to create  /home/yourHomeDirectoryName/.m2

Add the M2_REPO and point it to your  /home/yourHomeDirectoryName/.m2/repository folder

Maven Classpath

 

and here you have it, Oscar in Eclipse

14 OSCAR in Eclipse Luna

For other Oscar projects  create a new workspace and repeat the above steps starting at "ssh://xxxx@source.oscartools.org:29418/{project}"

where {project} is taken from the available repositories such as

  • hhr
  • integrator
  • myoscar_client
  • myoscar_client2
  • myoscar_server
  • myoscar_server2
  • oscar_patient_portal
  • oscar
  • oscar_apps
  • oscar_documents
  • signature_pad
  • test
  • utils

HINT: If you have never used the Eclipse/Gerrit/Git combination you are STRONGLY suggested to load the test repository. The test repository shown below is just that.  Its a sandbox that you can use to get used to the "fetch" and "push" of it without worrying about anyone noticing.

Making Changes


Now say you've created new files in the project and altered some existing ones.

As a note, you should try to do a "team -> pull" before doing a commit, this will help ensure there are no commit conflicts, if there are your commit will not be mergable by gerrit and you'll have to go through a rebase of your commit before it can be merged. If you right click on the project, go to team > pull.

Team Pull


If you right click on the project, go to team > commit. You'll see the commit screen. Notice on eclipse it will list the tracked and untracked file and by default they will be "git added" and "git commited" at the same time. Now when you commit, it's commited locally. This means no one else except you has these changes still.
Team Commit

Add the information needed to identify the commit.

IMPORTANT: Commits should be labelled with the ID of the bug or Feature Request from Sourceforge that reflects the OSCAR Change request or Oscar bug that is being addressed.

Eclipse Commit

Now to share these changes with everyone else, i.e. committed to the main repository... (You must have committed locally first) 

Right click on the project, go to team -> push to upstream

Team Push to Upstream

A boring screen will show the uploading of file(s).

Eclipse is Pushing

If this is the first time you've pushed, you'll need to fill in a push specification according to if its going to the trunk or an established branch as below.

  • source ref="HEAD", destination ref="refs/for/master", 
  • source ref="HEAD", destination ref="refs/for/RELEASE_12_1",

select add spec, check the box on the bottom saying save spec... so you don't have to do this again. Just click "finish" (next doesn't show anything interesting).

Pushing details etc

Assuming you are pushing as above to the trunk (the "master" branch) after you have pushed the commit

If you go back to the gerrit web page you should see the change is pending review now as listed in Open.

Open pending Review in Gerrit

Note that at this point, you and the central repository are NOT in sync, the files at the central repository must be approved first.

  1. First the system will check the style of your code and attempt to build.  
  2. When that passes a check-mark will appear under the 'V'.  Without this the commit will be blocked from passing
  3. Then humans will review the code.  Regular users are usually able to +1 review.  Only those responsible for the repository can +2. 
  4. Once +2 approved a check-mark will appear under the 'R' and the code will be merged into the central repository

Next Steps

Unless Gerrit is old hat to you, most experienced programmers make several errors that prevent their code from being in a condition to be reviewed, or to successfully merge into OSCAR.  Read the tips section.


 copyright © 2012-2017 by Peter Hutten-Czapski MD under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License ©

 

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