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  1. In the Package Explorer find the Main class, which should be located in org.apache.servicemix/Main.java under servicemix-core/src/main/java/ and double click on the main() method. 


     
  2. From the Run menu select "Run..." 


     
  3. You will get a "Run" window pop-up, from there select "Java Application".
    1. Click on New button in botton left (Eclipse <v3.2) or the icon in the top left (Eclipse v3.2)
    2. Name the Project: any name you like, for example if you want to run the FilePoller / FileBinding application call it "filepoller", so it's easy for you to remember what this run configuration does.
    3. Click on "Arguments" tab:
      1. In the "Program Arguments" box enter servicemix.xml
      2. In the Working Directory enter the path of your example. Such as S:\apache-servicemix\src\main\release\examples\file-binding where S:\ is assumed as to be your servicemix root directory.
        Note

        For ServiceMix 3.1 S:\ is assumed to be <servicemix_root>\distributions

        You can use the "File System..." button to browse for your directory.
         

         
    4. Click on the tab "Classpath" to give Eclipse needed information on where to search for executable files.
      This description sticks to the file-binding example, but a similar procedure will be needed for most examples and your own code as well.
      There are three main ways to add classes to the classpath:
      1. You can add other projects of the workbench. Doing this will make the file-binding example run.
        1. Click "User Entries"
        2. Click "Add Projects" and click the checkbox(es) in front of the project(s) that are required. For convenience reasons you may click "Select All".
           

           
        3. Click "OK". Now your Run-dialog shall look similar to this screenshot:
           

           
      2. You can add JARs and classes that are stored within a path contained in the classpath environment variable. This is not required for the file-binding example, but possible, e.g. if you want to run a specific ServiceMix version from a JAR for bug reproduction - this case is used for the following description. Often, this way is used to reference dependencies Maven downloads automatically for you.
        1. Click "User Entries"
        2. Click "Advanced", "Add Classpath Variables" and "OK"
           

           
        3. Check M2_REPO and click "Extend"
           

           
        4. Choose the JAR containing the bytecode for the missing classes. If you want to run SOME_VERSION of ServiceMix, choose /org/apache/servicemix/servicemix-core/SOME_VERSION/servicemix-core-SOME_VERSION.jar
           
          In case you want to reference a dependency, proceed in the same way. In case you do not know which package you shall select, see below at #Troubleshooting.
           

           
        5. Click "OK"
      3. You can add arbitrary folders to the classpath. This is usually only needed for your own code. To explain the workflow, let's assume you did not add any projects, thus your file-binding example does not run but thows errors and the console window contains this message:
        No Format
        Error 'Bean class [org.apache.servicemix.components.file.FileWriter] not found'
        
        1. Click "User Entries"
        2. Click "Advanced", "Add External Folder" and "OK"
           

           
        3. When S:\ is your servicemix root directory, select/enter S:\servicemix-components\target\classes
           
          Why this directory? Well, have a closer look at the error message presented above. The package org.apache.servicemix.components indicates the location of the missing bean FileWriter is servicemix-components, and as we need an executable file, the target\classes subdirectory is where to look. Of course we shall proof that FileWriter really is located here, so execute dir /s FileWriter.class in the given directory and watch the output. For further hints, see below at #Troubleshooting.
           

           
        4. Click "OK".
  4. Click Apply.
  5. Click Run.

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