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I'm creating an eclipse plug-in and I'm having trouble with external jars. In my plug-in I start an application which requires some external jars. What do I have to do to export them automatically with the rest of the plug-in?

Thanks in advance :)

6 Answers 6

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  1. Open your plugin.xml
  2. Go to Runtime tab and add your JAR in the classpath section
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  • 2
    Important: Only adding the containing folder is not enough. Also, adding a dependency in the plugin's project setup (instead of MANIFEST/plugin.xml) does nothing but "hide" errors at compile time. Dec 29, 2013 at 15:53
  • this will only add jars from the current project. It is not possible to add external jars (located somewhere on the disk), yet it is non portable, but when you need it you need it.
    – ACV
    Jan 26, 2016 at 8:05
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By following the steps below, the external JARs will be included when you export your plug-in:

  1. Copy the required external JAR files into a folder in your plug-in project; I like to call this folder lib, but whatever works for you.
  2. Open the build.properties in your plug-in project and check the JARs you want to include in the build in the Binary Build section on the left.
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    Although combining the jars in the same bundle is possible, it is not the 'proper' way to do it in an OSGi environment - stackoverflow.com/questions/3013583/…
    – Robin
    Dec 5, 2011 at 15:58
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    @Robin Absolutely, what I described above was the quick and dirty solution for the problem at hand. Dec 5, 2011 at 16:12
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This is an easy way, though it does create an additional plug-in.

In Eclipse:

  • Choose New>Other, then Plug-in Development>Plug-in from existing JAR archives.
  • Choose the jars you want to include.
  • On the next page, configure the plug-in.
  • In your plug-in's manifest, add the new plug-in as a dependency.
  • In your plug-in's Properties, add the new project under Java Build Path on the Projects tab.

Edit: You may be able to combine the jars into your plug-in by instead combining both suggestions of Zsolt and user714965 below.

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    If combining multiple jars, you also need to make sure their license allows it. Dec 5, 2011 at 15:34
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This is what has worked for me. If they are truly external, and this is a project for your company that is not going to be in the "wild" and you control the environment, and you have them out on the file system say at /opt/java/lib/somedir/some.jar you can tell the bundle where to find them by adding them to the Bundle-ClassPath entry in the MANIFEST.MF under META-INF. The syntax is: Bundle-ClassPath: ., external:/opt/java/lib/somedir/some.jar, external:/opt/java/lib/someotherdir/someother.jar

Also it would be prudent to use these in your build path so that you are working with the same jars in both build and runtime environments.

I have done this where the Jars are multi-purpose (such as apache-commons) on our file systems and again we control the environment.

Reference the following: http://www.eclipsezone.com/eclipse/forums/t51870.html

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  • Thank you!!! This is the actual answer and it works!. Just note that *.jar won't work.
    – ACV
    Jan 26, 2016 at 8:22
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  1. Copy the required external JAR files into a folder in your plug-in project; I like to call this folder lib, but whatever works for you.
  2. ..but as apposed to Zsolt Török (his solution did not work for me) I double-clicked on the plugin.xml, went to the build tab, at the bottom, I clicked Add JARs..., and hey presto, it showed my project, and I then navigated to lib and included the external jar, as per step 1.
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The approach from Andy Thomas mostly works, but you also need to export the packages needed by the existing plugin in the new wrapper plugin so that they can be accessed by the plugin at runtime.

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  • this answer is more suitable for a comment. Also welcome to SO :). Jul 4, 2014 at 22:28

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