eclipse C++ remote compilation using cmake - c++

Till now we are compiling our C++ project in CentOS using cmake files. Everything is working fine, now instead of putty we are looking for an IDE which will do the job from windows.
I tried with eclipse but not getting step by step documents which will do. I tried in eclipse neon and eclipse for C++ development. All works fine for local but when I say build should happen on Centos nothing works.
Using ssh remote system explorer able to view all the files.
selected the folder in system explorer and "Create remote project".
Able to see the project in the project explorer and all my files/folders are present and .project files also present.
in the .project file apart from name rest other tags are empty.
All the source folder has CMakeList.txt but how to use that in eclipse is question?
When I say build on eclipse it should build the src code on Centos.
Not sure which version of eclipse and additional tools needs to be installed.
If anyone have done already do let me know the execution steps.
Thanks
Vj

Related

Source environment variables before running cmake in VSCode

I am trying to build a large C++ framework in VSCode using CMakeTools and C/C++ Extensions in Visual Studio Code. I am browsing stackoverflow/github issues/any google suggestion and it looks like I am not the first person to encounter this, but I can not figure out for the life of me what am I doing wrong.
Here is the problem. I want to setup VSCode in a way to be able to build the framework (it is C++) right from VSCode using the built-in tools/extensions. Here is the process I was using up until now (in standard terminal in linux) and it also works in terminal run in VSCode:
cd /path-to-project-main-folder
source scripts/env.sh
cmake .
make -j 10
Now the problem is that when I set up VSCode, open the folder where the framework is, VSCode recognizes it is cmake project and gives me the opportunity to build it. Problem is that when I try to build it, it does not set up the environment first and therefore uses wrong cmake (not the sourced one but the default one build in server) and also wrong libraries and some of them are not even recognized.
The problem is in the first line:
source scripts/env.sh
where the environment variables are set and also PATHs to some libraries and programs. This line is not ran by VSCode before cmake and build.
Does anyone know a solution on how to configure CMakeTools extension to run:
source scripts/env.sh
line before running cmake and then make?
Thank you
I was looking into some solutions using tasks.json, settings.json files or creating my own kit. But no solution worked for me or I did not completely undestood the solution:
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-cmake-tools/blob/HEAD/docs/tasks.md
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-cmake-tools/issues/2243
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-cmake-tools/pull/995
VSCode: Set environment variables via script
and man pages of CMakeTools, VSCode,...
VScode remote development: How can I run a build task to source environment variables before running the real build task? ---> but I use cmake
VSCode, how to source environment variable files like setup.bash?

Via Windows command line, how can we compile a Netbeans C/C++ application?

Let's take this simple C/C++ application Netbeans project folder.
In Netbeans IDE, we just hit build button on the toolbar to build the application.
I want to do that automatically via Windows command line, how can I do that?
I did google, and found some related posts though not very helpful for me except telling me to call ant dist - though I don't have the build.xml in my Netbeans 8 project.
p.s. I have hundreds of student submissions and need to verify which one is compilable.
I also post on Netbeans forum here.
I want to do that automatically via Windows command line, how can I do that?
NetBeans uses Makefile-based projects as default for C/C++ projects, so you can use make to build your project:
cd <Project dir>
make
It's also possible to build other make-targets (eg. make all or make test (builds / runs tests)).
Note: The Cygwin bin dir (CYGWIN_HOME\bin) must be in system PATH - same applies to other environments (MinGW, Gcc etc).

Eclipse C/C++ not finding compiler include directories - cannot even build hello world

Do I need to install Eclipse as an administrator to get it to run correctly? I currently am in my user account on my work laptop. Eclipse C/C++ is not properly configuring itself when I start it: doesn't know where the MinGW and MSYS files are. (And yes, I included the links to the binaries in the system path).
I got it to work, here's what I did:
Opened MinGW setup as administrator
Set permissions for C:\MinGW to read and write for all users (didn't have this before).
Used 7-Zip to extract Eclipse to C:\eclipse
Also gave that folder full read-write privileged
Upon startup, I enabled auto discovery in the new project makefile settings. See pic below:

"Launch failed. Binary not found." error on CDT Kepler Eclipse

Running or debugging anything gives me an extremely frustrating "Launch failed. Binary not found" error. I'm using Eclipse with a CDT plugin installed (specifically, I have the MinGW package installed).
I already tried setting both the user and system PATH variables to include my (MinGW directory)/bin
I also tried building the program before running it.
I also made sure that PE Windows Parser under the project's settings was enabled.
I went to Project Properties > Run/Debug Settings > New > C/C++ Application > Environment > Select > and I selected the Path
I also tried setting the C/C++ Application in the Main tab to the executable file that is made from building the program, but no such file is made when I do build my program. I seriously doubt that this is what's causing the problem, though.
I'm running out of options, and the problem still persists. What else needs to be done? What am I doing wrong?
When I was looking through the install instructions for MinGW, the tutorial referenced the mingw base package as the package to install after installing MinGW. But mingw base was not available to me. Instead, I saw mingw32 base. Could it be that Eclipse, a 64 bit program, is trying to run 32 bit code? Is that what's going on? If that's the problem, how do I fix it?
Build
Refresh the project. A new folder named Binaries will appear now in project explorer.
Now Run :)
It took me 3 days to figure out my problem. My Hello World C program would compile in eclipse using the Windows PE Parser, but there was NO EXE FILE!!!! AVAST Antivirus was identifying the exe file as a false positive and removing it....grrrrr. The solution was to add the eclipse workspace folder to the exclusions list. Voila!! Eclipse generated my test.exe file.
save the file first before you build and run... it works with me
Check the compiler you set while you created the project . If that is MINGW or Visual Studio ; check whether they are downloaded or not . If not do so and start a new project by closing the old one . Build the new project by pressing Ctrl + B and a new file 'Binaries' is created in the package explorer . Now you can use the run option to run the project .
First the solution: install "make"
I had the same issue.
I also tried the steps you did with no luck.
After some time i found a the solution!
The problem was that i did not have the application "make".
Apparently its not installed by default on Cygwin and eclipse doesn't give any indication for that...

Launch Failed. Binary not found. CDT on Eclipse Helios

I'm using Eclipse Helios on Ubuntu 10.04, and I'm trying to install CDT plugin on it. I download it from here here.
And then I go to Install New Software and select the zip file (I don't extract it, just select the zip file). And its ok, it installs, everything works fine, it shows optional features, blah blah blah.
And then I create a new HelloWorld project. And when I try to run it, it shows an error and says:
Launch failed. Binary not found.
Can anyone explain me how to fix it?
Thanks.
You must build an executable file before you can run it. So if you don't “BUILD” your file, then it will not be able to link and load that object file, and hence it does not have the required binary numbers to execute.
So basically right click on the Project -> Build Project -> Run As Local C/C++ Application should do the trick
First you need to make sure that the project has been built. You can build a project with the hammer icon in the toolbar. You can choose to build either a Debug or Release version. If you cannot build the project then the problem is that you either don't have a compiler installed or that the IDE does not find the compiler.
To see if you have a compiler installed in a Mac you can run the following command from the command line:
g++ --version
If you have it already installed (it gets installed when you install the XCode tools) you can see its location running:
which g++
If you were able to build the project but you still get the "binary not found" message then the issue might be that a default launch configuration is not being created for the project. In that case do this:
Right click project > Run As > Run Configurations... >
Then create a new configuration under the "C/C++ Application" section > Enter the full path to the executable file (the file that was created in the build step and that will exist in either the Debug or Release folder). Your launch configuration should look like this:
Go to the Run->Run Configuration-> now
Under C/C++ Application you will see the name of your executable + Debug (if not, click over C/C++ Application a couple of times). Select the name (in this case projectTitle+Debug).
Under this in main Tab -> C/C++ application -> Search your project -> in binaries select your binary titled by your project....
You must "build" before "run", otherwise "Binary not found". You can set up "Auto build", so that it will build and run. Check this post to set up "Auto build" http://situee.blogspot.com/2012/08/how-to-set-eclipse-cdt-auto-build.html
I had this problem for a long while and I couldn't figure out the answer. I had added all the paths, built everything and pretty much followed what everyone on here had suggested, but no luck.
Finally I read the comments and saw that there were some compilation errors that were aborting the procedure before the binaries and exe file was generated.
Bottom line: Do a code review and make sure that there are no errors in your code because sometimes eclipse will not always catch everything.
If you can run a basic hello world but not your code then obviously something is wrong with your code. I learned the hard way.
If you still have an error even after building the project then try to do this:
click on Binaries in Project Explorer with the left button
click on green "Play" button (Run Debug)
I was having this same problem and found the solution in the anwser to another question:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/1951132/425749
Basically, installing CDT does not install a compiler, and Eclipse's error messages are not explicit about this.
I faced the same problem. I have Eclipse Indigo and Eclipse Luna on Ubuntu. I tried many solutions, but none worked. Here's how you can try :)
Try it in order :)
Either do Build All and then compile :)
Install G++ Compiler
Windows->Preferences->NEW CDT PRoject-> Makefile-> Binary Parsers-> Choose Cywin or Window PE depending on your Os :)
Change your toolchain to cywin gcc
Project->Properties->Environment-> Release Active
After 1,2, 3, and 4, I tried changing paths, and other stuff, but nothing worked. In the end, I noticed that it mentioned Debug Active was not configured. So when I changed it to Release Active, it worked. Do note that change in environment and path is not required.
I faced the same problem while installing Eclipse for c/c++ applications .I downloaded Mingw GCC ,put its bin folder in your path ,used it in toolchains while making new C++ project in Eclipse and build which solved my problem.
Referred to this video
Seems like having "Build Automatically" under the Project menu ought to take care of all of this. It does for Java.
make sure you have GDB installed on your system...
If your using Linux based OS simply in a terminal type:
sudo apt-get install gdt
when finished downloading extract the file and install.
close your IDE (in this case eclipse and open it again and run your project.
Adding the compiler to the PATH fixed the problem for me...
export PATH="$HOME/opt/cross/bin:$PATH"
My problem was the same as one commenter above. I had to change the binary parser to the correct one (PE for windows, ELF for Linux, mach for mac)