Hi I have just started using IntelliJ again and have version 9. I just installed the Mercurial plugin and now the ide won't start anymore.
Has an error of
Fatal error initializing class com.intellij.openapi.actionSystem.ActionManager:
java.lang.VerifyError: class com.dcx.hg.MercurialVcs overrides final method getName.()Ljava/lang/String;
I now know that I should be using the plugin hg4idea
Is there a way I can remove this plugin so I can start the ide, I am sure there must be..
Thanks in advance.
I am running on a Mac, the Plugin directory is located in ~/Library/Application Support/IntelliJIDEA60/ You can just delete the offending plugin. Note, depending on your edition of the IDE, the directory may be different. For example, IdeaIC2016.3
Version 11 for Windows stores plugins also in c:\Users\<username>\.IntelliJIdea11\config\plugins\ so delete plugins from that location as suggested by #duffymo.
If you look in the directory where you installed IntelliJ, you'll see a /plugins directory. Perhaps if you delete the Mercurial plugin folder you'll be able to restart the UI. Worth a try.
NOTE: Check here for OS/version related plugin path.
Ran into the same problem with another plugin. The solution was to remove the offending plugin folder or jar from the Plugins folder - see the exact location below for your OS.
The locations of the user plugins folder for different platforms are listed at https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/entries/23358108-Directories-used-by-the-IDE-to-store-settings-caches-plugins-and-logs:
OSX
Configuration:
~/Library/Preferences/<PRODUCT><VERSION>
# e.g.:
~/Library/Preferences/IntelliJIdea14
Caches:
~/Library/Caches/<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Plugins:
~/Library/Application Support/<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Logs:
~/Library/Logs/<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Linux/Unix
~/.<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Windows
Windows Vista, 7, 8:
<SYSTEM DRIVE>\Users\<USER ACCOUNT NAME>\.<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Windows XP:
<SYSTEM DRIVE>\Documents and Settings\<USER ACCOUNT NAME>\.<PRODUCT><VERSION>
Version 15 on Ubuntu:
cd ~/.IntelliJIdea15/config/plugins
rm -r <offending_plugin>
Just delete the plugin. In my MacOS, the path to the plugins folder is:
/Users/<username>/Library/Application Support/JetBrains/<your version>/plugins
Related
I downloaded the ultimate version of IntelliJ from the official website and when I do ./idea.sh in the .. /bin directory of the file I get this error message in the terminal:
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM warning: Option UseConcMarkSweepGC was deprecated in version 9.0 and will likely be removed in a future release.Error opening zip file or JAR manifest missing : /root/.jetbrains/jetbrains-agent-v3.2.0.de72.619 Error occurred during initialization of VM agent library failed to init: instrument
I don't know if I am supposed to have a .jetbrains file in my repersonel if so why I don't have it and if not how to get it?
Cordially...
What's the environment of your machine and I do not think you need to care about how to get .jetbrains manually by yourself. I've installed a IntelliJ idea on Ubuntu18.04, it works well. You can try run it as an administrative, also you can go to ./bin folder and then run ./idea.sh rather than ../bin folder
btw, as I said install, it does not indicate we need to compile it and get some executable binary file to run it. It's a green software that contains anything you need, you can run it directly
The Error opening zip file or JAR manifest missing : /root/.jetbrains/jetbrains-agent-v3.2.0.de72.619 error indicate that there is a problem with the distribution you have downloaded. It was corrupted or modified improperly.
Re-download it from https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/download and install into a new empty directory.
You can also try deleting the IDE's config and system directories.
I have the latest STS4. I am using installed java-1.8 JDK not embedded as the execution environment. My project just runs fine without any issue.
However when I launch the STS application itself I have a pop up saying
"Missing tools.jar"
I have already tried:
pointing JAVA_HOME to different JDK
added -vm args in the .ini file.
Yet I cannot get rid of this pop up.
I solved this same problem by modifying the file "eclipse.ini". First I tried to solve it by modifying the file SpringToolSuite4.ini, but nothing happened, because I previusly had installed the eclipse ide, and the change in SpringToolSuite4.ini didn't work. then I modified the file eclipse.ini; and it worked.
The changes that I did in eclipse.ini are detailed below:
To check with what Java version (JRE or JDK) Eclipse is running, do the following:
Open the menu item Help > About Eclipse. (On the Mac, it’s in the Eclipse-menu, not the Help-menu)
Click on Installation Details.
Switch to the tab Configuration
Search for a line that starts with -vm. The line following it shows which Java binary is used.
Depending on the name and location of the used Java binary one can figure out if a JRE or a JDK is used:
If the path contains “jre” (e.g. as in C:\Program Files\Java\jre6\bin\client\jvm.dll) it is a JRE
If the path contains “jdk” (e.g. as in C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_31\bin\javaw.exe) it is a JDK.
If no JDK is used for Eclipse, change it:
Quit Eclipse if it is running
Go to the Eclipse installation directory and open the file eclipse.ini in a text editor.
Search for the line -vmargs
Before the line -vmargs, add two lines:
On the first line, write -vm
On the second line, write the path to your JDK installation (usually something like: C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_31\bin\javaw.exe on Windows)*
source: https://matsim.org/docs/devguide/eclipse/jdk
The fix is in the -vm parameter. the order and the absolute path of the javaw.exe seems to be the issue.
the readme file mentions _
"To run Eclipse with an alternate Java runtime environment, the path to the Java virtual machine's binary must be identified. With an Eclipse installation from the distribution, altering the $PATH variable to include the path to the alternate Java runtime environment is often not enough as the Eclipse that Linux distributions package often performs a scan internally to pick up GCJ by itself whilst ignoring what's on the $PATH."
So I have edited now the SpringToolSuite4.ini and made this entry
-vm
C:\UserTemp\Softwares\java\jdk\oracle-jdk-1.8-64bit\bin\javaw.exe
Restarted my STS and it works perfect.
The reference to set the JVM Specifying the JVM was very useful in understanding this.
Don't spend too much time looking for tools.jar. If you get an error like that, don't be upset.
If you already have java JDK1.8, go to its lib folder, tools.jar should be available there. Copy and paste the same in JRE1.8 lib folder.
I have STS4 so I have modified SpringToolSuite4.ini
I changed from:
[...]
--launcher.defaultAction
openFile
-vmargs
-Dosgi.requiredJavaVersion=1.8
[...]
to exactly this
[...]
--launcher.defaultAction
openFile
-vm
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_152\bin\javaw.exe
-vmargs
-Dosgi.requiredJavaVersion=1.8
[...]
And the message dissapeared
SOLUTION :
Check your Path JAVA_HOME - system property "Environment Variables"
for example: JAVA_HOME:
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk-12.0.1\lib
usually you only need add \lib at JAVA_HOME
Just remove this line from variable "Path"
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Oracle\Java\javapath"
System Properties > Advanced > Environment Variables > Path > Edit > Reboot
Worked for me
In my case I had installed jre, and not jdk!
Observe that you have jdk installed!
I had the same issue when i upgraded to Java 11.
I simply edited SpringToolSuite4.ini and added
-vm
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk-11.0.4\bin\javaw.exe
For me, I had to do two things to make it work:
Remove vmargs:
vmargs
Dosgi.requiredJavaVersion=1.8
Setting the JDK:
vm
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_131\bin
By downloading the tool file and paste it in the jre\lib path. but make sure you should rename the pasted file as "tools.jar".
step 1
download the tool file.
download link http://www.java2s.com/Code/Jar/t/Downloadtools160jar.htm
step 2
extract the zip file.
step 3
you should rename the included .jar file as "tools".
step 4
then copy the renamed tools.jar file and paste in the C:\Program Files\Java\jre8\lib\ path.
then restart the STS ide.
I have fixed this from Window->preferences->Java->Installed JREs .
Then add the jdk bin path, uncheck other related jre paths
Copy JDK directory to your STS installation or extraction library and and rename JDK to jre. the directory structure of STS should look like this
.eclipseproduct
artifacts.xml
configuration
dropins
eclipsec.exe
features
jre
license.txt
META-INF
open-source-licenses.txt
p2
plugins
readme
SpringToolSuite4.exe
SpringToolSuite4.ini
Once STS open, initially its looking for tools.jar in jre\lib folder its not available in jre\lib folder.
so we need copy the tools.jar from jdk\lib folder and paste in jre\lib folder.
restart the STS, issue will resolve.
I have installed IntelliJ and I need to import a Gradle project.
I have build the gradle project using command prompt with the gradlew build command.
At the IntelliJ welcome page, I have proceeded with proper instructions, and when I choose "Finish". I get the following error:
Invalid Gradle JDK configuration found. Open Gradle Settings JAVA_HOME ennvironment variable not set.
When I click on "Open Gradle Settings" it pop up with error of Not found with a path under IntelliJ directory in Program files and searching in jre/jre/bin/....etc.
Deleting .gradle and .idea will likely solve the problem.
So:
Close the project
Go to the project dir and delete .gradle and .idea
Get back and re-open the project using the IDE
These two must be generated locally on your PC (Some content of .idea might be version controlled though) and not pulled from a remote or somewhere else (Also they should be in .gitignore).
In my case the reason was that these two folders were generated on another computer and I had opened a project with these two folders existing before.
Just found the solution :
Create an empty Gradle project, then go to "Project Structure" and check the path to JDK (it should be valid, if it isn't you can add your own path).
Then build this empty project, wait and once done, close IntelliJ.
Relaunch it and try to import/open your Gradle project, now it should work.
You don't need to create a new project to fix this. You can do it from the main window (Configure -> Project Defaults -> Project Structure):
Then, on SDKs, set the appropriate JDK home path:
If you are on a Mac, click on the button with 3 dots and select the folder /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_141.jdk/Contents/Home.
I've found this here:
https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/115000266650-invalid-gradle-jdk-configuration-found
Mac OS X Solution:
I had the same issue and fixed it by setting the JAVA_HOME environment variable using the command:
launchctl setenv JAVA_HOME /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_45.jdk/Contents/Home/
Refer to this answer on how to set environment variables in Mac OS X:
Setting environment variables in OS X?
Close the project
Go to the project dir and delete
.gradle
.idea
Get back and re-open the project using the IDE
I recently had the same problem while importing a Gradle project. The trick was the remove the quotes from the JAVA_HOME variable. So instead of "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_66" my path now contains only the plain path C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_66.
To add to the previous responses, if you want to prevent this problem when cloning a repository in Git, you can simply remove .idea/misc.xml from your .gitignore file. This contains information about the project jar. For example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project version="4">
<component name="ProjectRootManager" version="2" languageLevel="JDK_10" default="false" project-jdk-name="1.8" project-jdk-type="JavaSDK" />
</project>
For my case, I just restart the IDE and it works. It automatically download Gradle to suit the project version.
I had the same problem on the fresh installed Windows OS.
I did not have a JDK at all and forgot to check it invalid JDK configuration .
By default, you can check the Project configuration. If it is empty NO_SDK_ProjectStructure try to download JDK from Oracle web site and configure your project structure
I have faced same problem for tomcat 9 with my project based on Gradle.
You can easily rectify the problem by configuring the application.properties file with the following code.
location - src/main/resources/application.properties
server.port = 9090
spring.security.user.name= admin
spring.security.user.password= password
My issue was not addressed by the above solution, instead root cause was that I've imported settings from my old system and internal Intellij configuration was invalid because first jdk that it had in the list in jdk.table.xml pointed to a wrong path.
To fix this you should find this file in the intellij config folder and then simply open it with an editor and remove whole block related to the bad jdk version.
Close the project you are working on and then create another new project and build it and then close it and go back to your old project and it will work.
Comment this code on gradle.properties, the Issue was gone.
#org.gradle.java.home=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_141.jdk/Contents/Home
I was getting:
Invalid JDK: /home/sz97/idea-IC-223.7571.182/jbr/bin/jlink is not a file!
Ensure JAVA_HOME or buildSettings.javaHome is set to JDK 15 or newer
As mentioned by Mahdi-Malv, delete .gradle & .idea folders from the project directory.
Then delete other SDKs from File > Project Structure > Platform Settings > SDKs keeping the only required one.
Finally change the SDK version from Project Structure > Project Settings > Project.
This may solve the problem.
So, I downloaded Gradle but I don't know how to set it up correctly. After I unzipped the zip file, what do I do next? I want to use Gradle in IntelliJ IDEA. From a livestream I've seen I know that there's a settings.gradle and a build.gradle file in the project folder in IntelliJ.
Also, I've seen that they used the windows console.
First of all, how do I access gradle through the windows console and tell it to generate a new project for IntelliJ?
As you can see, I don't have any experience with Gradle. Unfortunately I can't really find out how to use it.
I want the IntelliJ project then to have LWJGL and Slick.
Additionally, I know what it says in the build.gradle file I've seen on the livestream (I only want to create my project with the same structure like theirs).
Can anybody give a detailed description of what to do to achieve all this?
Lets' say you unpacked gradle to d:\tools\gradle.
To add its bin directory it to the PATH in a console window, execute the following command:
set PATH=d:\tools\gradle\bin;%PATH%
The above prepends the bin path to the current value of the PATH environment variable. This will only change the path for this specific command window.
If you want to add it to the PATH globally, then go to your control panel and choose System, then Advanced parameters (it might be something a little bit different: I'm translating from my French version of Windows). Then in the Advanced system parameters tab, click the button Environment variables.... Find the Path environment variable in the list, and add the directory, separated from the others using a semicolon (;).
Note: you can also define a new environment variable called GRADLE_HOME:
set GRADLE_HOME=d:\tools\gradle
or globally, as explained above, and reference it inside the PATH variable:
set PATH=%GRADLE_HOME%\bin;%PATH%
Just intall homebrew.
Then you can just open the terminal and install easy like:
brew install gradle
Done! It's installed!
For test just type in your terminal:
gradle -v
And you'll have something like this:
------------------------------------------------------------
Gradle 2.7
------------------------------------------------------------
Build time: 2015-09-14 07:26:16 UTC
Build number: none
Revision: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Groovy: 2.3.10
Ant: Apache Ant(TM) version 1.9.3 compiled on December 23 2013
JVM: 1.8.0_60 (Oracle Corporation 25.60-b23)
OS: Mac OS X 10.11.1 x86_64
Then, open your IntelliJ and create a new gradle project as normal, just setting the gradle's path when necessary (normally in /usr/local/Cellar when installed with homebrew or /opt when installed other ways).
Good luck!
For linux Users,
User SDK Man to easily manage your gradle installation and path settings for development as well as gradle update
GET SDK MAN HERE
(for mac os users) Let's assume, you unpacked zip file into /Users/onuryilmaz/gradle-3.3 folder. Then open terminal and define a new environment variable called GRADLE_HOME:
export GRADLE_HOME=/Users/onuryilmaz/gradle-3.3
After that reference it inside the PATH variable:
export PATH=$PATH:$GRADLE_HOME/bin
just update the brew and install and set path that's all
brew update && brew install gradle
export PATH=$PATH:/opt/gradle/gradle-5.1.1/bin
https://gradle.org/install/
I've just installed IntelliJ on Windows 8 (and 7). I then use the 'Java Hello World' Sample as my project.
I then selected the JDK that was installed (C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_10). Project creates successfully and I can see all the classes associated with the project etc. When I "make the project" I get the following error:
Compilation completed with 1 error and 0 warnings in 2 sec
1 error
0 warnings
java: Cannot find JDK '1.7' for module 'TEST'
No matter what I do I cannot compile any Java code under Windows8/IntelliJ
I have tried the following:
Invalidating cache.
Switching to 32bit JDK instead of 64bit
Idea64.exe instead of idea.exe
Installing 1.6 incase it was a 1.7 issue??
Changed the JAVA_HOME to point to different versions (ie currently C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_10)
I'm lost as to why this is happening.
project structure > project > choose correct jdk
or ctrl+alt+shift+s > project> choose correct jdk
also platform settings > SDK's >and make sure 1.7 is there.
Found the root of the problem. Turns out Windows 8 under parallels shares the same Desktop as OSX. This confused IntelliJ somehow and as a result it couldn't compile properly.
In parallels by removing the "Desktop" shared under Configure this then resolves the issue.
In case you want to still share the documents & desktop, the solution is to modify the idea.properties file (for instance, under C:\Program Files (x86)\JetBrains\IntelliJ IDEA 12.1\bin\idea.properties ), and change the following properties to point to different a location that is specific to the OS in which you are working:
idea.config.path=
idea.system.path=
idea.plugins.path=
idea.log.path=
I also copied the previous folder (on my computer it was under
\\psf\Home\.IntelliJIdea12
) to the new location to preserve all settings.
Update: I had the same problem after I installed IntelliJ Idea 13. I moved the .IntelliJIdea13 folder to c:\Users\costa from \\psf\Home, then I modified the C:\Program Files (x86)\JetBrains\IntelliJ IDEA 13.0\bin\idea.properties file:
idea.config.path=C:/Users/costa/.IntelliJIdea13/config
idea.system.path=C:/Users/costa/.IntelliJIdea13/system
idea.plugins.path=C:/Users/costa/.IntelliJIdea13/config/plugins
idea.log.path=C:/Users/costa/.IntelliJIdea13/system/log
I made the error while editing idea.properties to leave a whitespace at the end of my personally added idea.config.path=../.IdeaIC/config line.
This resulted exactly in the Cannot find JDK '...' for module error message.
I needed to "trim" the line manually, just deleted the whitespace, restarted IntelliJ and everything worked fine again.
I found this while scanning the idea.log file where I found java.io.FileNotFoundException: C:\Software\IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition 14.1.3\.IdeaIC\config \tasks\root.contexts.zip
In my case, Idea said "Failed to save settings" (probably due to a lot of projects being open. After that, it could not run tests with "Cannot find JDK '1.8' for module XXX" message. Idea restart solved the issue for me.
I believe this is an IntelliJ bug.
This isn't a fix, but you can work around this by going to Settings > Compiler, and disabling 'Use External Build'.
It seems that sometimes Intellij (or the user:-)) is getting confused when importing settings, especially if you change the paths where the jdk resides (for me it happened during a migration to a new Linux environment).
The only way I could correct this was to delete the user's settings folder.
In Linux :
I removed the folder (and subfolders): ~/.IntelliJIdea12/
Of course this would remove the saved settings, licenses e.t.c.