JaMoPP is a set of Eclipse plug-ins that can be used to parse Java source code into EMF-based models and vice versa. JaMoPP consists of:
a complete Java5 Ecore Metamodel,
a complete Java5 EMFText Syntax, and
an implementation of Java5's static semantics analysis.
Through JaMoPP, every Java program can be processed as any other EMF model. JaMoPP therefore bridges the gap between modelling and Java programming. It enables the application of arbitrary EMF-based tools on full Java programs. Since JaMoPP is developed through metamodelling and code generation, extending Java and embedding Java into other modelling languages, using standard metamodeling techniques and tools, is now possible. To ensure the quality of JaMoPP, it has been successfully tested on a large code base.
Eclipse Icon Archive Tool
The Eclipse Icon Archive Tool allows an Eclipse user to browse and export icons from the Eclipse Project. Download the plug-in and place it into the Eclipse plug-in directory. The plug-in and documentation is available on the download page.
Lack of Progress Bar (Lopb) is an Eclipse plugin that tracks how long developers wait for background jobs to complete. By benchmarking the performance of background jobs, Lopb provides developers with metrics on how much of their day was wasted due to overhead introduced by the development tools and infrastructure that they depend on or access through their IDE.
Eclipse RCP forms are very limited for business application demands; this project aims at enhancing UI Forms, Data Binding and puts them together to offer a profound framework for creating, binding and validating forms in Eclipse.
It will be tested against RCP and RAP platforms; thus all Forms created with RCP Forms will run without changes in a Web Browser or in an RCP Application/Eclipse Workbench.
Papyrus is aiming at providing an integrated and user-consumable environment for editing any kind of EMF model and particularly supporting UML and related modeling languages such as SysML and MARTE. Papyrus provides diagram editors for EMF-based modeling languages amongst them UML 2 and SysML and the glue required for integrating these editors (GMF-based or not) with other MBD and MDSD tools.
Papyrus also offers a very advanced support of UML profiles that enables users to define editors for DSLs based on the UML 2 standard. The main feature of Papyrus regarding this latter point is a set of very powerful customization mechanisms which can be leveraged to create user-defined Papyrus perspectives and give it the same look and feel as a "pure" DSL editor.
# Direct manipulation of heterogeneous dependency information in an Eclipse RCP environment.
# Analysis and visualization of very large applications.
# For Java, dependency discovery at the class member level.
# Import of FileSystems as source of dependency information.
# Collapse child dependency into parent entities to reveal class level interactions.
# Selection of nodes by type, edge-count, and paths.
The Workspace Mechanic automates maintenance of your Eclipse environment by tweaking preferences, adding extension locations, and so on. You can use it to:
* Create a consistent environment among groups as large as the entire company, your local team, or even among your own many workspaces
* Save time setting up new workspaces
* Create tasks that ensure your favorite new preferences are applied to all your current and future workspaces. (This is one of our favorite features!)
(See more in Overview.)
The Workspace Mechanic has been used extensively on Linux and tested on OSX.
Eclipse Plug-in for tailing log files and eclipse consoles (e.g. SVN, Java Stack Trace, CDT), including syntax coloring with either a regular expression or a word match. It allows you to have multiple logs open concurrently.