Reputation: 43159
I am using Eclipse 3.3 ("Europa"). Periodically, Eclipse takes an inordinately long time (perhaps forever) to start up. The only thing I can see in the Eclipse log is:
!ENTRY org.eclipse.core.resources 2 10035 2008-10-16 09:47:34.801 !MESSAGE The workspace exited with unsaved changes in the previous session; refreshing workspace to recover changes.
Googling reveals this suggestion that I remove the folder:
workspace\.metadata\.plugins\org.eclipse.core.resources\.root\.indexes
This does not appear to have helped.
Short of starting with a new workspace (something which I am not keen to do, as it takes me hours to set up all my projects again properly), is there a way to make Eclipse start up properly?
Upvotes: 234
Views: 203841
Reputation: 1866
The freezing / deadlock can also be caused by this bug on GTK3 + Xorg
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=568859
Can be workarounded by using Wayland session, although in my case Eclipse fails to detect reasonable font for some reason and looks like this:
Related:
https://www.reddit.com/r/swaywm/comments/bkzeo7/font_rendering_really_bad_and_rough_in_gtk3/
https://www.reddit.com/r/swaywm/comments/kmd3d1/webkit_gtk_font_rendering_on_wayland/
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1141
JAVA VERSION COULD BE PROBLEM:
I tried few answers given above. But it didnot work. But meanwhile I was trying them it clicked to me that I switched the java version for some other stuff & forgot to switch back.
Once I jumped back to the previous version. Eclipse started working for me.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 116818
I did a lot of these solutions and none seemed to work for me. What finally did work was to restart my Mac. Duh. I noticed that my jconsole also seemed to be stuck which made me immediately go for a restart because it seemed to be Java related as opposed to Eclipse specifically.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1225
I used eclipse -clean -clearPersistedState
and that worked for me.
Warning: This may remove all projects from the workspace.
Upvotes: 31
Reputation: 364
What worked for me was this-- On Ubuntu
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 922
My freeze on startup issue seemed to be related to the proxy settings. I saw the username\password dialog on startup, but Eclipse froze whenever I tried to click ok, cancel, or even just click away from the dialog. For a time, I was seeing this authentication pop-up with no freeze issue.
To fix it, I started eclipse using a different workspace, which thankfully didn't freeze on me. Then I went to Window --> Preferences --> General --> Network Connections
. I edited my HTTP Proxy entry and unchecked "Requires Authentication"
. Then I started my original problematic workspace, which launched this time without freezing. Success!
I had no further issues when I re-opened my workspace, and was able to re-enable authentication without having a problem. I didn't see the username\password pop-up anymore on start-up, so there's a chance my authentication info was FUBAR at the time.
Using: MyEclipse, Version: 2016 CI 7, Build id: 14.0.0-20160923
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 117
Removing *.snap (mine is *.markers), --clean-data or move workspace folder seems all did not work for me.
As my eclipse stopped working after I installed and switched my keyborad input to HIME, I went back to fctix and it worked.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 677
my solution is to remove this dir:
workspace/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.e4.workbench
what is did was first remove (move it to a save place) all from .metadata. eclipse started all new (all my settings gone). then i added bit by bit back into the .metadata dir until it dit not work again. this way i found i only had to remove this dir. And now Eclipse started with all my settings still in place.
it seems that in the file in this dir the windows which should be opened on startup are listed and some how it could not find one off them so it hung. why i'm unclear because the file which in complained about in the logging was on my filesystem.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 85
UFT causing issues with RDz (Eclipse based) after install These suggestions will allow to work around this situation even with the environment variables in place and with corresponding values.
Note: Conflicting application will not be recognized in a java context because it is being excluded from the java support mechanism.
Instructions:
a. Locate the executable filename of the application conflicting with add-in(s) support. Either use the Task Manager or the Microsoft Process Explorer.
b. Open Windows Registry Editor.
c. Navigate to: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Mercury Interactive\JavaAgent\Modules For 32bits applications on Windows x64: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Mercury Interactive\JavaAgent\Modules
d. Create a DWORD value with the name of the conflicting software executable filenmae and set the value to 0.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2149
In my case deleting the .metadata folder of the workspace worked. I am using Eclipse Luna service Release 2.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 939
Well, I had similar behaviour while starting eclipse over X11. I forgot to tick the enable X11 forwarding in my putty.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 787
It can also be caused by this bug, if you're having Eclipse 4.5/4.6, an Eclipse Xtext plugin version older than v2.9.0, and a particular workspace configuration.
The workaround would be to create a new workspace and import the existing projects.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 9120
You can try to start Eclipse
first with the -clean
option.
On Windows you can add the -clean
option to your shortcut for eclipse. On Linux
you can simply add it when starting Eclipse
from the command line.
Upvotes: 39
Reputation: 121
I also had luck with removing the *.snap files. Mine were located in a different directory than mentioned in the posts (below).
<eclipse workspace>/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.core.resources/.projects
Consequently, the following unix cmd did the trick:
find <eclipse_workspace>/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.core.resources/.projects -name "*.snap" -exec rm -f {} \;
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 1838
I had a similar problem with a rather large workspace in 3.5 and no .snap-files anywhere to be seen. "Windows
-> Preferences
-> General
-> Startup and Shutdown -> Refresh workspace on startup" seems to be a workspace-related setting and so I couldn't change it for the workspace that was causing the hang.
Running eclipse
with the command line parameter -refresh and then changing the setting seems to do the trick.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 21384
This one works for me:
Another, and a bit better workaround which apparently works:
Eclipse
.Eclipse
, wait for workspace to load (it should).Eclipse
again.Source: Eclipse hangs while opening workspace after upgrading to GWT 2.0/Google app engine 1.2.8
Upvotes: 35
Reputation: 306
This may help
In your eclipse,
1) Go to Help
2) Click Eclipse marketplace
3) search - optimizer
install "optimizer for eclipse"
Upvotes: 0
Reputation:
try:
Upvotes: 242
Reputation: 590
Also look at http://www.lazylab.org/197/eclipse/eclipse-hanging-on-startup-repair-corrupt-workspace/
99% Recommended Solution works.... (i.e. Removing .snap file) But if it did not worked then we have to try to remove indexes folder and further workbench folder.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2987
This may not be an exact solution for your issue, but in my case, I tracked the files that Eclipse was polling against with SysInternals Procmon, and found that Eclipse was constantly polling a fairly large snapshot file for one of my projects. Removed that, and everything started up fine (albeit with the workspace in the state it was at the previous launch).
The file removed was:
<workspace>\.metadata\.plugins\org.eclipse.core.resources\.projects\<project>\.markers.snap
Upvotes: 269
Reputation: 29729
On Mac OS X, you start Eclipse by double clicking the Eclipse application. If you need to pass arguments to Eclipse, you'll have to edit the eclipse.ini file inside the Eclipse application bundle: select the Eclipse application bundle icon while holding down the Control Key. This will present you with a popup menu. Select "Show Package Contents" in the popup menu. Locate eclipse.ini file in the Contents/MacOS sub-folder and open it with your favorite text editor to edit the command line options.
add: "-clean" and "-refresh" to the beginning of the file, for example:
-clean
-refresh
-startup
../../../plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_1.3.0.v20130327-1440.jar
--launcher.library
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 51
I had a similar problem after I updated eclipse on Mavericks. Eventually I found that in the eclipse plugins directory the com.google.gdt.eclipse.login jar had version numbers at the end. I removed the version number from the name and it all started fine :)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1310
In my case similar symptoms were caused by some rogue git repository with a ton of junk system files.
Universal remedy, as mentioned above, is to use Process Monitor to discover offending files. It's useful to set the following 2-line filter:
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3154
Watch out for zero-byte .plugin files in the {WORKSPACE-DIR}/.metadata/.plugins folder. I just deleted one in there and it fixed my freezing issues.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1365
no need to delete entire metadata file. just try deleting the .snap file from org.eclipse.core.resources on your workspace folder
ex. E:\workspaceFolder\.metadata\.plugins\org.eclipse.core.resources
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 872
I had a very similar problem with eclipse (Juno) on Fedora 18. In the middle of debugging an Android session, eclipse ended the debug session. I attempted to restart eclipse but it kept haning at the splash screen. I tried the various suggestions above with no success. Finally, I checked the adb service (android debug bridge):
# adb devices
List of devices attached
XXXXXX offline
I know the android device was still connected but it reported it offline. I disconnected the device and shut down the adb service:
# adb kill-server
Then I waited a few seconds and re-started the adb service:
# adb start-server
And plugged my android back in. After that, eclipse started up just fine.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 321
I tried all of the answers in this thread, and none of them worked for me -- not the snap files, not moving the projects, none of them.
What did work, oddly, was moving all projects and the .metadata folder somewhere else, starting Eclipse, closing it, and then moving them all back.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 1447
In my case (Juno) I had to do this:
find $WORKSPACE_DIR/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.core.resources/.projects \
-name .indexes -exec rm -fr {} \;
That did the trick.
Initially I thought it was a problem with Mylyn (I experienced these freezes after I started using its generic web connector), but the problem appeared even after uninstalling the connector, and even deleting the .mylyn directories.
Edit: I also managed to restart eclipse by deleting just one file:
rm $WORKSPACE_DIR/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.e4.workbench/workbench.xmi
That worked fine, without any indexes involved. Only the workbech, which I personally don't mind that much.
Upvotes: 57
Reputation: 2999
Unfortunately, none of these solutions worked for me. I ended up having to create a new workspace, then imported the existing projects into the new workspace. Unfortunately, you lose your preferences when doing so (so, remember to export your settings anytime you change them!)
Upvotes: 0