I have used the Quickstart JavaFX archetype from the JavaFX Maven Plugin to create a Maven JavaFX project.
When running this project from the command line with "mvn jfx:run" everything works fine, but when I try to run it from IntelliJ (12.1.6) by creating a run configuration with "jfx:run" in the command line I get an UnsatisifedLinkError:
java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: com.sun.glass.ui.win.WinApplication._submitForLaterInvocation(Ljava/lang/Runnable;)V
at com.sun.glass.ui.win.WinApplication._submitForLaterInvocation(Native Method)
at com.sun.glass.ui.win.WinApplication.submitForLaterInvocation(WinApplication.java:215)
at com.sun.glass.ui.InvokeLaterDispatcher.run(InvokeLaterDispatcher.java:101)
Any advice for how to fix this?
Adding the JRE /bin directory to the java.libary.path system property seems to work. This property used by the JVM for locating DLLs with native code.
Edit run/debug configuration and set the VM Options of the runner configuration to something like:
-Djava.library.path="C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_45\jre\bin"
Related
I have build a JavaFX application which can be executed by its jar file. However if i try to run it using the native exe bundle i am receiving two popups:
Error Invoking method
Failed to launch JVM
and the application fails to start.
The Javafx application is build with intellij ide.
The project structure looks as follows;
when launching the application following popup shows..
The config file looks as follows:-
The packaged jar file is executing properly...
the problem occurs when starting application with launching exe file.
kindly tell me what could went wrong?
UPDATE:
It seems that the build output runtime/bin directory does not contain java.exe file therefore i think the application does not launches.
the output when try to run the application is as follows:
i have build the application with intellij idea, i think there is a problem with that. Kindly look into this matter.
UPDATED:-
Run it from the command line using the runtime that was bundled for you:
If you made an executable Jar (with a proper manifest specifying the classpath and main class)
cd firecap
runtime\bin\java -jar app\libs\your-main.jar
If you don't have an executable jar use something like
cd firecap
runtime\bin\java -cp app\libs\*.* your.main.class.name
Since java.exe is a console program you should be able to see the full error output to get a better idea of what is going wrong.
You very likely have missed including a needed module in the runtime.
It is also possible you ran into a bug that I discovered recently: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8254920
I created my runtime image with this command:
"C:\Program Files\BellSoft\LibericaJDK-15-Full\bin\jlink.exe" --no-header-files --no-man-page, --compress=1 --add-modules java.management,java.logging,javafx.controls,java.xml,java.desktop --output C:\MyProject\build\image\runtime
But yours may be different depending on what modules you need. Note also that I used a JDK from BellSoft that included the JavaFX modules to make it easier.
The Error:
Failed to sync Gradle project '-'
Error:Unable to find method 'org.gradle.internal.logging.progress.DefaultProgressLoggerFactory.(Lorg/gradle/internal/logging/progress/ProgressListener;Lorg/gradle/internal/time/TimeProvider;)V'.
You can see, a constructor inside a class, which is found in the logging jar (gradle_home/lib/grade-logging-version.jar) is missing.
So, I think the Class-Path does not contain this jar file.
Gradle Version: 3.5
Running using the Command Line works.
I have already tried this:
Gradle sync failed: Unable to find method
to-find-method, it does not work for me.
I have tried to use different versions.
I can't see any difference when enabling
"Use default gradle wrapper"
"Use gradle wrapper task configuration"
"Use local gradle distribution".
I had the exact same problem today.
The only way I was able to get it to work was to remove my IntelliJ IDEA IDE, get the latest from the website (with JDK) and put it in a new folder (i.e. no overwriting existing files).
After that, I deleted the .idea folder from the project and reimported it cleanly into the "new" IntelliJ.
I suspect upgrading IntelliJ from Version <= 2016.x caused the issue, since a new installation / clean extraction from archive caused it to work on the fly.
I'm running unit tests in Intellij 14.1.2 with the Gradle plugin. I have external config and test data that is in environment specific in a set of directories (directory for each env). I want to load the config and data via the classpath.
In Eclipse I'd just add the env specific path to the run-config and save the config as:
'Test-XYZ-UAT1'
for example.
In intellij, it seems my application config classpath is tied to my 'module' classpath:
https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/2016.3/run-debug-configuration-application.html
how to add directory to classpath in an application run profile in intellij idea?
..which is bad enough but for the Gradle run configs I don't even have the option to add the module classpath.
Run/Debug Configurations window has no:
'Use classpath of mod...'
section.
Question:
How can I set the classpath of the run config when running a Gradle Task within Intellij ?
..and if someone could tell me how to get application run config specific classpaths setup that would be even better.
(please tell me I'm missing something ingenius about Intellij..)
Based on quite a bit of research and trial and error, here is the solution that works for my Kotlin based Spring Boot project.
Background:
My Spring Boot project run configuration is configured to use Run Gradle task in place of the standard IDEA build as its Before launch configuration (see screen shot below).
My Spring Boot project uses src/main/resources/application.properties for JPA and logging properties.
gradle build uses the following output directories for the build. These are the default gradle build output directories for a Kotlin project.
build/classes/kotlin/main for the main class files.
build/classes/kotlin/test for the test class files.
build/resources/main for the main resource files. This is where application.properties is copied during a build.
When I attempted to run this project inside IDEA using the run configuration above, it would fail during Spring Boot start up because it could not find application.properties inside the classpath. When I inspected the classpath used during application startup, build/resources/main was missing.
My Solution
Use the information from: Gradle Goodness: Delegate Build And Run Actions To Gradle In IntelliJ IDEA to delegate IDEA build and execution to Gradle.
When IDEA is configured to delegate build and execution to Gradle, the main and test modules should be configured as follows: On the Paths tab, select Inherit project compile output path.
I have an IDEA 2016.1 Enterprise and a Gradle 2.12 multi-module project. In one of the modules, in src/main/resources, I have a file which I would like Gradle to 'expand', here is my configuration:
processResources {
filesMatching('my.properties') {
expand(project.properties)
}
}
(I would like to expand just this single file, and just copy the rest.)
It all works fine when built on the command line, but not by default in IDEA - when I clean and build the project, the file lands in build/resources/main but the placeholders are not replaced. I have to manually invoke the Gradle processResources task using the Gradle pane in IDEA and double clicking on the task.
Is this something I should report to Jetbrains (i.e. a bug) or has anybody have it working and I should change something in my configuration?
When you build from command line, you are using gradle. However, when you build the project from intellij, by default intellij doesn't use gradle to build, but use its internal build system which doesn't understand your gradle's processResources.
One way to solve it is to check "Delegate IDE build/run actions to gradle" as shown below:
If you don't want to use gradle build in intellij, there's another workaround - add processResources as a gradle task to run after build in your "Run/Debug Configurations":
Try adding the dependency in your build.gradle file, eg.
assemble.dependsOn processResources
This should work if you have java plugin applied.
I'm trying to create an executable jar from IntelliJ.
First I got the Java Security Exception and I changed sqljdbc4-4.0 to unsigned. First problem solved.
Then I got Manifest not found. Added META-INF dir to output. Second problem solved.
Next I got the BeanCreationException (unsolved):
Caused by: org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Cannot determine embedded database driver class for database type NONE. If you want an embedded database please put a supported one on the classpath.
In IntelliJ it is working.
I think the resources are not in the output. (application.properties, ...)
In which way do I add the resources or where are they stored in the jar.
I'm using gradle and on the spring boot homepage are only instructions for maven.
You should use spring-boot-maven-plugin or spring-boot-gradle-plugin, depending on your preferred build system.
EDIT:
Just run ./gradlew build
I suggest to dive into this getting started guide. It clarifies a lot of stuff for beginners.
A typical Spring boot project is a Maven project or a Gradle-Project (I only know how to do it with Maven, for Gradle see [luboskrnacs answer][1]). So you just need to run the maven targetpackageand pick the jar form the (created)target` folder
use a shell, go to the project root directory (where the pom.xml file is) and type
mvn clean package
cd target
the there is the xxx.jar file.