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This morning I wanted to go try out the latest Eclipse Luna nightly.

It is actually very easy to do.

You simply goto Eclipse Downloads.

Eclipse Nightly Builds

Scroll to the bottom where you should fine the last two weeks worth of nightly downloads. Take the newest one where the tests completed indicate the build should be mostly working.

The annoying bug in Kepler

Why was I trying out the latest nightly anyway ? Well, I heard a rumor from Lars Vogel that one of my least favorite "improvemnts" in Kepler have now been properly fixed.

It turns out it is true, the Quick access feature no longer requires the toolbar!

Toolbar free Luna!

You could do this is in Eclipse Kepler too but when using the Quick Access feature via Cmd+3 (or Ctrl+3 on Linux/Windows) the toolbar would pop up again disturbing your toolbar free Zen state.

With this fix we can finally get back to utilizing the full screen with what matters - the content I want to see, not what a toolbar want me to push.

Still a few things to fix

While testing this I did find a few bugs, but that is all good. This helps the Eclipse Platform team to know about the issues and makes it more likely the issues will be fixed. Maybe someone even comes up with a patch.

I can only encourage you to try out the nightlies of both Eclipse and JBoss Tools to give early feedback.

It is how we all get a better IDE and hey, you might find that your biggest annoyance have been fixed!

Have fun!

Max Rydahl Andersen
@maxandersen

We have been working for a while on doing a refresh of our website, and today we are happy to announce tools.jboss.org.

Goals

We had a few goals for the website:

  1. Make it simple and clear how to download the plugins

  2. Explain what features are in the tools

  3. Include New and noteworthy

  4. Make it easier to update/fix the content

and I think we reached all of them.

Make it simple and clear how to download the plugins

Our old download page had grown organically over the last 7 years and, despite all good intentions, we had ended up with a download page with way too many options presented by default. With the new site, we went for simplicity first, and so the Downloads page now simply presents you with two options: Download either latest stable JBoss Tools or Developer Studio.

newsite downloads

If you want other versions, combinations, add-ons etc. you can follow the Overview link which will give all the dirty details.

Explain what features are in the tools

For this we created the Features page. This page gives an overview over all of the various projects and technologies we support and if you click on the images you get more information about each feature.

newsite features

Try it out - you might be surprised how much we actually do.

Include New and noteworthy

For every release/milestone, we get the JBoss Tools team to write up what is New and noteworthy for their components. We use that when doing blogs and sharing with the whole community what changes are coming up. In the past, that was a very tedious process of getting multiple people to submit changes to a bunch of html files that then needed to be manually cleaned up and published. It was a chore, and it took longer and longer as we added or updated more and more features.

That is now a story of the past - in the new site, component developers just add a single document for their release and the magic of publishing the site does all the right wiring. Removing all the chore and reducing the actual lines of code needed substantially. Asciidoc for the win.

newsite whatsnew

You can go look at what is new and improved over at What is new - it currently gives you a sneak preview of upcoming JBoss Tools 4.2.0 Beta1.

Make it easier to update/fix the content

The old website was "hidden" behind a magnolia CMS system. It has served us well and it does what it is supposed to do. In the age of github and pull-requests though it was more a burden than a help. The new system uses a simple github repo which uses Awestruct to render the page automatically via Travis when we push to certain branches.

The content is primarily Asciidoc making it so the content is very compact - no additional boiler plate markup to worry about and best of all, you do not need to even run awestruct locally to get an idea of the rendering. Github’s rendering of asciidoc is close enough to make it trivial for anyone with a github account to help do fixes to this site.

If you find some errors (we left some in for you to find) just open a PR on https://github.com/jbosstools/jbosstools-website :)

Thanks

The design and launch of this website have been long under way - we started 1+ year ago but we are finally here :)

The primary person to thank for this is Xavier Coulon who helped on the initial design of the site and then fought, battled and sometimes cried over having to implement and play with Ruby and Haml. But he persevered and today we are here with his great help!

But he and I were not alone in this; we got help from a bunch of other people to write and update content, give feedback, find bugs and help setup the infrastructure. Here they are in random importance, but ordered alphabetically:

  • Alexey Kazakov - for contributing to Features

  • Andre Dietisheim - for contributing to Features

  • Aslak Knutsen - for inspiration and help with Awestruct

  • Barry LaFond - for contributing to Features

  • Bob Brodt - for contributing to Features

  • Bob McWhirter - for reacting at weird hours on #awestruct and for not caring how his name is spelled

  • Brian Fitzpatrick - for contributing to Features

  • Cheyenne Weaver - for design help

  • Dan Allen - for help with asciidoc and especially for including the video support we made

  • Daniel Florian - for contributing to Features

  • Fred Bricon - for contributing to Features

  • Gorkem Ercan - for contributing to Features

  • Ilya Buziuk - for contributing to Features

  • James Cobb - for design help and bugfixing

  • Jason Porter - for awestruct fixes and especially finding that nasty performance bug we had made

  • Koen Aers - for contributing to Features

  • Kris Verlaenen - for contributing to Features

  • Lars Heinemann - for contributing to Features

  • Mark Newton - for enabling the infrastructure

  • Michelle Murray - for bugfixes!

  • Nick Boldt - for helping setup downloads and bugfixing!

  • Paul Leacu - for contributing to Features

  • Pete Muir - for review!

  • Rob Cernich - for contributing to Features

  • Rob Stryker - for contributing to Features

  • Rysiek Kozmik - for help with jboss.org theme

  • Snjezana Peco - for contributing to Features

  • Vineet Reynolds - for contributing to Features

  • Vladimir Vasilev - for setting up redirects to ensure we didn’t break the internet!

In case I missed someone - let me know or submit a PR on https://github.com/jbosstools/jbosstools-website

I hope you like it and please leave a comment below to test the new commenting system too :)

Have fun!

Max Rydahl Andersen
@maxandersen

JBoss Tools 4.29.1.Final for Eclipse 2023-09

by Stéphane Bouchet on Jun 13, 2024.

JBoss Tools 4.29.0.Final for Eclipse 2023-09

by Stéphane Bouchet on Nov 02, 2023.

JBoss Tools 4.28.0.Final for Eclipse 2023-06

by Stéphane Bouchet on Jul 03, 2023.

JBoss Tools for Eclipse 2023-06M2

by Stéphane Bouchet on Jun 05, 2023.

JBoss Tools 4.27.0.Final for Eclipse 2023-03

by Stéphane Bouchet on Apr 07, 2023.

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