Is there a way to start an instance of eclipse, passing it some sort of parameter telling it to use a specific workspace?
The problem I\'m trying to solve is that I
note that you can use UNIX-style relative path names such as
-data ../workspace
even under Windows, in case something doesn't like colons or backslashes in parameters, like Jumplist Launcher
We set the default workspace for students at a high school by modifying the shortcut properties. In this case, we operate a Windows 7 environment. The default workspace is on a student's network share mapped as the H: drive so we added -data h:\workspace. The screenshot shows exactly where.
Old question, I know, but just wanted to point out that you may need to add quotes around the target workspace path. For example; I tried C:\Eclipse\eclipse.exe -data E:\Eclipse Projects2
and it would open a blank, default, workspace while doing C:\Eclipse\eclipse.exe -data "E:\Eclipse Projects2"
allowed it to use the existing workspace. I'm guessing this varies based on OS and/or Eclipse version, but I'm not sure exactly what factors into this, so just try both ways until you get one to load the correct/existing workspace.
Creating a shortcut file with target :
Create a shortcut of your eclipse. Open the properties of the shortcut file and set the target as follows,
E\STS.exe -data "WORKSPACE_LOCATION"
For launching from .bat file :
cd ECLIPSE_LOCATION
start STS.exe -data "WORKSPACE_LOCATION"
Example:
cd /D D:\IDE\sts-bundle\sts-3.7.0.RELEASE
start STS.exe -data "D:\My Workspace\workspace1"
From https://help.eclipse.org/topic/org.eclipse.platform.doc.isv/reference/misc/runtime-options.html
It is also possible to specify the workspace location using the osgi.instance.area
JVM arg as -Dosgi.instance.area=../workspace
This can be specified in the eclipse.ini file along with existing/other JVM args such as -Xms, -Xmx
.
This option may be convenient for those who just want to append to the eclipse.ini file (which already contains other JVM args) without worrying to ensure that JVM args appear at the end.
From http://help.eclipse.org/help21/topic/org.eclipse.platform.doc.user/tasks/running_eclipse.htm:
Use the following command-line argument:
-data your_workspace_location
For example,
-data c:\users\robert\myworkspace
you can also use UNIX-style relative path names such as
-data ../workspace
even under Windows, in case something doesnt like colons or backslashes in parameters, like Jumplist Launcher