Chapter 6. Installing JBoss Developer Studio Integration Stack in Eclipse when Offline
To install JBoss Developer Studio Integration Stack in Eclipse when offline:
Locate and download the following files at JBoss Developer Studio Software Downloads:
- Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio 10.2.0 Update Site Zip
- Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio Integration Stack 10.1.0 Update Site Zip
- Start Eclipse Neon for Java EE Developers.
- Click Window → Preferences → Install/Update → Available Software Sites.
-
Click Add, click Archive to locate the JBoss Developer Studio Update
.zipfile, select the file and click OK. - Click OK again to close the Preferences window.
- Click Help → Install New Software.
- Next to the Work with field, click Add and click Archive to locate the Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio Integration Stack 10.1.0 Update Site Zip file.
From the table of categories, select the JBoss Developer Studio Integration Stack functionality you want to install:
- For JBoss Fuse, select JBoss Fuse Development.
- For JBoss BRMS and JBoss BPM Suite, select JBoss Business and Rules Development.
- For JBoss Fuse Service Works, select JBoss Integration and SOA Development.
- For JBoss Data Virtualization, select JBoss Data Virtualization Development (Teiid Designer).
- Click Next.
- Follow the on-screen instructions to complete the installation process.
During the installation process, you may receive warnings about installing unsigned content. If this is the case, review the details of the content and if satisfied click OK to continue with the installation.
Once installation is complete, you are prompted to restart the IDE. Click Yes when any changes to open projects are saved and you are ready to restart the IDE immediately. If the IDE is not restarted, the unapplied changes can make the IDE unstable.
The embeddable version of Xulrunner works with GTK2, but not with GTK3. As a result, the SWT (Standard Widget Toolkit) Browser, which is used for documentation in JBoss Fuse tooling and Javadocs in the Java Editor, does not work.
The workaround for this issue is to install WebKitGTK when using GTK3. An additional workaround is to enable GTK2 and use it instead of GTK3. Note that the browser widget does not work with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 or supported Fedora version because they do not have WebKitGTK installed by default.
Further information on what SWT Browser does in Eclipse is available here: https://www.eclipse.org/swt/faq.php#browserlinux

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