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<h1> Eclipse Platform<br>
          Update Packaging Conventions</h1>
          <font size="-1">Revision Date: 01/15/2003 9:33AM - Version: 2.0.17</font><br>
         <a href="../../../../../hglegal.htm"><img src="ngibmcpy.gif"
 border="0" height="12" width="195">
         </a>           
<p><b>Change History:</b> </p>
                 
<ul>
           <li><small>2.0.17</small></li>
  <ul>
    <li><small>added $os$,$ws$,$arch$ and $nl$ for copyright, description
and license URL tag in feature.<br>
      </small></li>
  </ul>
  <li><small>2.0.16</small>     <small><br>
          </small>                              
    <ul>
            <li><small>added &lt;site&gt;&lt;feature&gt; os,arch,nl,ws support
   "*"</small></li>
                                   
    </ul>
        </li>
        <li><small>2.0.15</small>                              
    <ul>
            <li><small>added &lt;site&gt;&lt;feature&gt; os,arch,nl,ws,patch
  tag</small></li>
                                   
    </ul>
                            </li>
         <li><small>2.0.14<br>
            </small>                                        
    <ul>
              <li><small>added &lt;site&gt;&lt;feature&gt; label tag</small><br>
              </li>
                                               
    </ul>
          </li>
          <li><small>2.0.13<br>
           </small> </li>
                                 
  <ul>
             <li><small>added &lt;includes name,optional,match,search_location</small> 
    &gt;</li>
             <li><small>added &lt;import feature,patch&gt;</small></li>
                                               
  </ul>
                         <li><small>2.0.12<br>
      </small></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">added reference to the <a
 href="http://www.eclipse.org/legal/updatemanager.html"> Eclipse.org Update
    Manager Agreement</a>       </font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.11</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">&lt;feature&gt; &lt;license&gt; is required</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.10</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">&lt;feature colocation-affinity=""&gt;</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.9</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">&lt;site&gt; &lt;feature&gt; changes - additional
    markup to optionally expose feature identification information to speed
  up  searches</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">removed obsolete text</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">web-triggered update not in 2.0</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">no assist in 2.0 for license/ "key file"
handling     (individual application/ plugin responsibility)</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.8</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">&lt;feature&gt; &lt;includes&gt;</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.7</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">support explicit xml markup for primary features</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.6</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">install handler markup changes</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.5</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">updates to security section</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> <font size="-1">2.0.4</font></li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> <font size="-1">general text cleanup</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">&lt;feature&gt;&lt;group&gt; support removed
  (will   not be in Eclipse 2.0)</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">arch= support added to &lt;feature&gt; and
 &lt;feature&gt;&lt;plugin&gt;</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">os=/ arch=/ ws=/ nl= added to &lt;fetaure&gt;&lt;data&gt;</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">&lt;site url=""&gt; new semantics</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">corrected errors in native installer link 
support</font></li>
           <li> <font size="-1">defined callback query strings for browser-triggered 
    processing</font></li>
                                     
  </ul>
                   
</ul>
                    
<h3> <font size="+2">Table of Contents</font></h3>
          <a href="#Introduction">Introduction</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Changes_from_R1.0">Changes     from 1.0</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Concepts">Concepts</a>
    <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Framework">Framework</a> 
    <br>
         <a href="#Packaging_Conventions">Packaging Conventions</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Feature_Archive">Feature
    Archive</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Plug-In_Archive">Plug-In
    Archive</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Packaging_NL">Packaging 
   NL</a>   <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Translated_Feature_Information"> Translated Feature Information</a> 
     <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Translated_Plug-In_Information"> Translated Plug-In Information</a> 
     <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Packaging_Target-Specific_Support"> Packaging Target-Specific Support</a> 
     <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
 href="#Packaging_Attribution_Information">  Packaging Attribution Information</a> 
     <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
 href="#Packaging_Attribution_Information">  Packaging Non-Plug-In Files</a> 
     <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
 href="#Packaging_Attribution_Information">  Custom Install Handling</a> 
<br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Security_Considerations">Security  Considerations</a>  <br>
         <a href="#Update_Server">Update Server</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#Site_Map">Site Map</a>
    <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Default_Site_Layout">Default    Site Layout</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Controlling_Access">Controlling     Access</a>  <br>
         <a href="#Eclipse_Install">Eclipse Install</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Default_Install_Layout">Default   Install Layout</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Unmanaged_Plugins">"Unmanaged"     Plug-Ins</a>  <br>
         &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <a
 href="#Using_Native_Platform_Installers"> Using Native Platform Installers</a> 
              
<h2> <a name="Introduction"></a> Introduction</h2>
          This document outlines the support for managing the delivery of 
function     within the Eclipse platform. Also refer to the "<a
 href="http://www.eclipse.org/legal/updatemanager.html"> Eclipse.org Update
    Manager Agreement</a> " for additional legal information governing the
 use   of the Eclipse update manager function.          
<h3> <a name="Changes_from_R1.0"></a> Changes from R1.0</h3>
          This section describes the major design changes from the R1.0 Installation
     and Update support and supplies rationale for each design change.  
       
<ul>
          <li> <b>extendable framework</b></li>
           <br>
         In R2.0 Eclipse defines an extendable framework for installation 
and   update,   allowing the support for alternate packaging and site management 
  schemes.   R2.0 supplies a default concrete implementation of this framework. 
    <li>     <b>  feature support</b></li>
           <br>
         In R2.0 the concept of a <i>component</i> and <i>configuration</i> 
 is  merged  into <i>feature</i>. Features define the packaging structure 
for a group of related plug-ins, plug-in fragments, and optionally non-plug-in
  files. Features are treated purely as an installation and packaging construct.
  They do not play a role during Eclipse plug-in execution. Features do not
  nest. They are simply an inclusive "manifest" of the plug-ins, fragments
 and other files that make up that feature. If features are logically made
 up of plug-ins from "sub-features", the top-level feature "manifest" must
 be fully resolved at packaging time. <li> <b>default feature archive format</b></li>
           <br>
         R1.0 components were packaged as a single Java .jar containing the 
 component    manifest as well as the actual plug-in files. The problem with 
 this approach    is lack of granularity at download time. In R2.0, the feature 
 archive consists    of multiple separate .jars - one .jar per plug-in and 
 fragment, plus one   .jar for the actual feature information. The Installation 
 and Update support   selectively downloads only those jars required for the
 installation. <li>    <b>site map</b></li>
           <br>
         Default Eclipse update server must contain a <i>site map</i> file
 (site.xml).     This is an evolution of the R1.0 install.index support.
The  rationale for    using a structured site defined by the map rather than
a  "free form" web   site, is the ability to present a consistent installation
 experience for  the user. Also, this provides the necessary structure for
 discovery of available   updates. Additional support for "free form" browsing
 may be considered in   future work.    <li> <b>using native install/ uninstall</b></li>
           <br>
         The primary mechanism for installing and updating Eclipse features 
 is  the  built-in installation and update support. Some products may instead
  choose  to use native installer technology (eg. MSI, RPM, etc) to deliver
  Eclipse  features. However, native installers do not implement the required
  support  for understanding the Eclipse installation structure. In particular,
  the native uninstallers will, by default, remove plug-in files that were
 installed using the native installer without regard to these plug-ins being
 needed by other features. As a result, features installed using native installers 
   must be written into private product-specific installation location and 
 not  the shared Eclipse installation location. The shared Eclipse is made 
 aware  of the produce-specific location via an installed "link file". <li> 
         <b>custom  install handling</b></li>
           <br>
         In many cases the standard installation handling supplied by Eclipse 
  is  not be sufficient to handle various custom requirements. To accommodate
   this,  R2.0 Eclipse supports custom install handlers packaged as part
of   the feature  and executed during the feature installation. <li> <b>path
naming   conventions</b></li>
           <br>
         R1.0 mandated the use of the various identifiers and versions inside 
  the   packaged archives (eg. directory path names for plug-ins). This approach
    has proven to be ackward and error prone. In 2.0, the packaging requirements
    no longer mandate that path names of packaged files precisely reflect
the    contained identifiers and versions. The properly identified install
subdirectories    are created by the Eclipse support during the installation
and update process     based on the archive content (rather than explicit
jar path structure set    up at packaging time)         
</ul>
                    
<h3> <a name="Concepts"></a> Concepts</h3>
          <b>Plug-in</b> <br>
         Eclipse developers build plug-ins. Plug-ins are the base units of
 execution     recognized by the Eclipse runtime environment. In general,
plug-ins are   not exposed to users that select function during installation
or update.  The reason is that plug-in boundaries are established by developers
for development    reasons (like function reuse) and present the wrong level
of granularity   in terms of what the user sees as the unit of function.
         
<p>While plug-ins are being developed (ie. are frequently being changed),
     their internal file structure will reflect what is convenient to the
developer.     This will generally depend on the particular development tool
being used.     Typically, however, the developer will likely setup the plug-in
to execute     from a directory tree containing exposed .class files, rather
than executing     from a .jar (requires an extra step to create the .jar
and we all know  developers  hate extra steps). Also, at this stage the developer
does not  pay particular  attention to plug-in versioning information, because
the plug-in is continually  changing. </p>
                 
<p>However, when the plug-in is ready to be packaged, it needs to be converted
     to a form suitable for packaging and installation. Typically it means
 creation    of the runtime .jar(s) and removing any development-time files
 (source,  exposed .class files, etc). It also means updating the plugin.xml
 manifest  with the formal plug-in version and reflecting the version in
the  plug-in  directory name (see "Concurrent Plug-In Version Support" for
details).  </p>
                 
<p><b>Plug-in Fragment</b> <br>
         Plug-in Fragments (or simply Fragments) allow independent packaging
  of  certain  aspects of the base plug-in. This includes (but may not be
limited   to) translated  resources for the plug-in, OS-specific or windowing-system-specific 
   code.  At runtime, fragments are logically merged into the base plug-in. 
  From a packaging point of view, the install and update support does not 
really   differentiate  between plug-ins and their related fragments. </p>
                 
<p><b>Feature</b> <br>
         A feature is an installation packaging mechanism used to define
a  group    of versioned plug-ins and/or plug-in fragments plus non-plug-in
files that    is used to deliver some user function. A feature can also include
 other  features.  Features are exposed to users as part of the packaging
and installation   process,  because they represent a unit of function selection.
 Features also  represent  a unit of installation. Features carry a version
 identifier.</p>
                 
<p>Features are packaged as a feature archive, referencing the required plug-ins, 
    plug-in fragments and optional non-plug-in files. The feature archives 
 are   placed on an update server for download and installation by the Eclipse 
  update  manager, or they can be used as the input into a formal packaging 
  process  using one of the "traditional" installer technologies. The format 
  of the feature archive is described later. </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Framework"></a> Framework</h3>
          The 2.0 installation and update support is provided as a framework
  that   allows custom implementations to be supplied for its key elements.
  In particular,    the following can be supplied:          
<ul>
          <li> concrete implementations of feature (IFeature interface) that
  can   be used to support alternate packaging schemes. New concrete feature
  types   are  registere via the "org.eclipse.update.featureTypes" extension
  point.</li>
           <li> concrete implementations of site (ISite interface) that can 
 be  used  to support alternate site layout, or site behavior. New concrete 
 site  types   are registered via the "org.eclipse.update.siteTypes" extension
  point.</li>
           <li> each feature can specify a custom install handler as part 
of  its   feature  manifest. Install handlers (IInstallHandler interface) 
are  dynamically   invoked as part of the installation process to handle non-plugin
 data, plus   perform other custom processing allowed by the framework.</li>
                   
</ul>
          Eclipse provides default implementations of feature and site. These 
  are  described in the rest of this document. <br>
         &nbsp;          
<table border="1" cols="1" width="100%">
          <tbody>
             <tr>
          <td><b>Note: <i>The reminder of this document describes the default 
  concrete   implementation of the framework delivered with Eclipse. It specifies 
  the  structure of the default feature implementation, as well as the default
   site  implementation, plus the corresponding xml files (feature.xml and
 site.xml).   Providers of alternate concrete implementations can extend&nbsp;
 parts or   all of the default Eclipse implementation. This includes providing
 a mechanism   for dynamic computation of the site map (site.xml)</i></b></td>
          </tr>
                                     
  </tbody>         
</table>
                    
<h2> <a name="Packaging_Conventions"></a> Packaging Conventions</h2>
          Default feature packages consist of several related files:    
     
<ul>
          <li> exactly one jar containing the feature manifest and related
 files.    This one is refered to as the "<b>feature archive</b>"</li>
           <li> zero or more jars containing the feature plug-ins. These
are   refered   to as the "<b>plug-in archives</b>"</li>
           <li> zero or more non-plug-in files associated with the feature. 
 They   are used by feature custom install handlers and contain data not interpreted
    by Eclipse</li>
                   
</ul>
                    
<h3> <a name="Feature_Archive"></a> Feature Archive</h3>
          The feature packaging information is placed into a separate Java
 .jar.    Standard Java jar facilities are used for constructing feature
archives.    Feature archives reference separately packaged plug-in archives
(see next    section) and non-plug-in files.          
<p>Features are identified using a structured identifier based on the provider
     internet domain name. For example, organization eclipse.org may produce
   feature org.eclipse.javatooling. The character set used for feature identifiers
   is as specified for plug-in identifiers (see reference information describing
     the plug-in manifest). </p>
                 
<p>The recommended convention for naming the feature archives is <br>
         <tt>&lt;id&gt;_&lt;version&gt;.jar</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Where <tt>&lt;id&gt;</tt> is the feature identifier and <tt>&lt;version&gt;</tt> 
     is the full version identifier contained in the respective feature.xml.
    Note that this is a recommended convention that minimizes chance of collisions,
     but is not required by the Eclipse architecture. For example, the following
     are valid feature archive names </p>
                 
<p><tt>org.eclipse.javatooling_1.0.3.jar</tt> <br>
         <tt>org.eclipse.pde_2.0.jar</tt> <br>
         <tt>my_feature.jar</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Internally, each feature archive is packaged relative to its feature directory 
    (but not including the directory path element). The archive has the following 
    structure </p>
                 
<p><tt>feature.xml</tt> <br>
         <tt>feature&lt;_locale&gt;.properties (see "Translated Feature Information")</tt> 
     <br>
         <tt>other feature files and subdirectories (TBD)</tt> <br>
         <tt>META-INF/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Java jar manifest and security files</tt> 
</p>
                 
<p>The feature install.xml format is defined by the following dtd: </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;?xml encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT feature (install-handler?, description?, copyright?,
license?, url?, includes*, requires?, plugin*, data*)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST feature</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; id&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; version&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; label&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; provider-name CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; image&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; os&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; arch&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; ws&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nl&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; colocation-affinity</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; primary&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 (true    | false) "false"</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; application&nbsp;&nbsp; CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> 
 <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT install-handler EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST install-handler</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; library&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; handler&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT description (#PCDATA)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST description</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT copyright (#PCDATA)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST copyright</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT license (#PCDATA)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST license</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT url (update?, discovery*)&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT update EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST update</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; label&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT discovery EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST discovery</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; label&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT includes EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST includes</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; id&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; version&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;    CDATA #REQUIRED</tt>&nbsp;<br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; name &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;
    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; optional &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </tt><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
    (true | false) "false"</tt><tt>&nbsp;<br>
         </tt><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; match&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (perfect | equivalent | compatible | greaterOrEqual)
   "compatible"</tt><tt> &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </tt><br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; search_location&nbsp;&nbsp; </tt><tt>(</tt><font
 color="#000000"><tt> root | self | both) "root"</tt></font><br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT requires (import+)&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT import EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST import</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; plugin&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
    CDATA #IMPLIED</tt><br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; feature &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; CDATA
  #IMPLIED</tt><br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; version&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; match&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   &nbsp;(perfect  | equivalent | compatible | greaterOrEqual) "compatible"</tt>&nbsp;<br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; patch &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </tt><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp; 
    (true | false) "false"</tt><tt>&nbsp;</tt><tt><br>
         &gt;</tt><br>
          </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT plugin EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST plugin</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; id&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; version&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; fragment&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (true
  |  false)  "false"</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; os&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; arch&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; ws&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nl&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; download-size CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; install-size&nbsp; CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT data EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST data</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; id&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; os&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; arch&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; ws&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nl&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; download-size CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; install-size&nbsp; CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p>The element and attribute definitions are as follows: </p>
                 
<ul>
          <li> &lt;feature&gt; - defines the feature</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> id - required feature identifier (eg. com.xyz.myfeature)</li>
           <li> version - required component version (eg. 1.0.3)</li>
           <li> label - optional displayable label (name). Intended to be 
translated.</li>
           <li> provider-name - optional display label identifying the organization 
    providing this component. Intended to be translated.</li>
           <li> image - optional image to use when displaying information 
about    the  feature.&nbsp; Specified relative to the feature.xml.</li>
           <li> os - optional operating system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of os designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this feature should only be installed on one of the specified
     os systems. If this attribute is not specified, the feature can be installed
     on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
 a  hint by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> arch - optional machine architecture specification. A comma-separated 
    list of architecture designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for 
     <tt>     org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt>. Indicates this feature 
should only    be installed on one of the specified systems. If this attribute 
is not specified,   the feature can be installed on all systems (portable 
implementation).  This   information is used as a hint by the installation 
and update support  (user   can force installation of feature regardless of
this setting).</li>
           <li> ws - optional windowing system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of ws designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this feature should only be installed on one of the specified
     ws systems. If this attribute is not specified, the feature can be installed
     on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
 a  hint by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> nl - optional locale specification. A comma-separated list
 of  locale   designators defined by Java. Indicates this feature should
only  be installed   on a system running with a compatible locale (using
Java locale-matching    rules). If this attribute is not specified, the feature 
can be installed   on all systems (language-neutral implementation). This 
information is used   as a hint by the installation and update support (user 
can force installation    of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> colocation-affinity - optional reference to another feature 
 identifier    used to select the default installation location for this feature.
 When  this feature is being installed as a new feature (no other versions
 of it  are installed), an attempt is made to install this feature in the
same installation    location as the referenced feature.</li>
           <li> primary - optional indication specifying whether this feature 
  can   be used as a <a href="#Dominant_Feature">primary feature</a> . Default 
  if        <i>false</i> (not a primary feature).</li>
           <li> application - optional identifier of the Eclipse application
  that   is to be used during startup when the declaring feature is the <a
 href="#Dominant_Feature"> primary feature</a> . The application identifier
    must represent a valid application registered in the <tt>org.eclipse.core.runtime.applications</tt>
    extension point. Default is <tt>org.eclipse.ui.workbench</tt>.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;install-handler&gt;</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> library - optional .jar library containing the install handler 
  classes.   If specified, the referenced .jar must be contained in the feature 
  archive.   It is specified as a path within the feature archive, relative 
  to the feature.xml   entry. If not specified, the feature archive itself 
 is used to load the install handler classes. This attribute is only interpreted 
  if <i>class</i> attribute is also specified</li>
           <li> handler - optional identifier of the install handler. The 
value    is  interpreted depending on the value of the <i>library</i> attribute. 
 If        <i>  library</i> is specified,&nbsp; the value is interpreted as
 a fully qualified  name of a class contained in the specified <i>library</i>. 
  If       <i>library</i>   is not specified, the value is is interpreted 
as  an extension identifier  of an extension registered in the <i>org.eclipse.update.installHandlers</i> 
     extension point. In either case, the resulting class must implement the
         <i> IInstallHandler</i> interface. The class is dynamically loaded
  and called at specific points during feature processing. The handler has
 visibility to the API classes from the update plug-in, and Eclipse plug-ins
  required by the update plugin.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;description&gt; - brief component description as simple 
 text.    Intended to be translated.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> url - optional URL for the full description as HTML. The URL 
 can   be  specified as absolute of relative. If relative, it is assumed to
 be relative   to (and packaged in) the feature archive. Note, that for NL
 handling the  URL value should be separated to allow alternate URLs to be
 specified for  each national language. &nbsp;URL support keywords $os$,$ws$,$arch$
and $nl$ that will be replaced by the appropriate operating system, windowing
system, operating architecture or national language value.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;copyright&gt; - feature copyright as simple text. Intended
   to  be translated.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> url - optional URL for the full description as HTML. The URL 
 can   be  specified as absolute of relative. If relative, it is assumed to
 be relative   to (and packaged in) the feature archive. Note, that for NL
 handling the  URL value should be separated to allow alternate URLs to be
 specified for  each national language. URL support keywords $os$,$ws$,$arch$
and $nl$ that will be replaced by the appropriate operating system, windowing
system, operating architecture or national language value.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;license&gt; - feature "click-through" license as simple 
 text.    Intended to be translated. It is displayed in a standard dialog 
with [Accept]    [Reject] actions during the download/ installation process. 
Note, that click-through   license must be specified for any feature that 
will be selected for installation   or update using the Eclipse update manager. 
 When using nested features, only the nesting parent (ie. the feature selected 
 for installation or update) must have click-through license text defined. 
 The license text is required even if the optional <i>url</i> attribute is 
 specified.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> url - optional URL for the full description as HTML. The URL 
 can   be  specified as absolute of relative. If relative, it is assumed to
 be relative   to (and packaged in) the feature archive. Note, that for NL
 handling the  URL value should be separated to allow alternate URLs to be
 specified for  each national language. Note, that the "content" of this URL
 is <b>not</b>    what is presented as the click-through license during installation
 processing.    The click-through license is the actual value of the <i>&lt;license&gt;</i>
     element (eg. <tt>&lt;license&gt;click through text&lt;/license&gt;</tt>).&nbsp;URL
support keywords $os$,$ws$,$arch$ and $nl$ that will be replaced by the appropriate
operating system, windowing system, operating architecture or national language
value.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;url&gt; - optional URL specifying site(s) contain feature 
  updates,   or new features</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> &lt;update&gt; - URL to go to for updates to this feature</li>
                                                        
    <ul>
          <li> url - actual URL</li>
           <li> label - displayable label (name) for the referenced site</li>
                                                       
    </ul>
           <li> &lt;discovery&gt; - URL to go to for new features. In general,
   a  provider  can use this element to reference its own site(s), or site(s)
   of  partners  that offer complementary features. Eclipse uses this element
   simply  as a way to distribute new site URLs to the clients</li>
                                                        
    <ul>
          <li> url - actual URL</li>
           <li> label - displayable label (name) for the referenced site</li>
                                                       
    </ul>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;includes&gt; - optional reference to a nested feature 
that   is  considered to be part of this feature. Nested features must be 
located   on  the same update site as this feature</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> id - required nested feature identifier</li>
           <li> version - required nested feature version</li>
             <li> name- optional displayable label (name). Intended to be 
translated.</li>
             <li>optional - optional specification indicating if this included
   feature  can be optionally installed. Default is "false"<br>
             </li>
             <li>match&nbsp; - optional rule that will be applied when resolving
    the feature reference. A <samp>perfect</samp> match (the default that
matches    the 2.0.1 behavior) requires that the feature has exactly the
version specified    by the version attribute. Other choices progressively
relax the rule (<samp>    equivalent</samp> allows only service part of the
version to be more recent,          <samp>compatible</samp> also allows minor
part to be included in the   consideration, while <samp>greaterOrEqual</samp> 
 simply allows any version   that is more recent or identical to the one specified).</li>
             <li>search_location&nbsp; - optional. Indicates whether the
"New   Updates"   action should search the update location determined by
the nesting   root feature  (<tt>root</tt>, is the default), or the location
defined by   the nested feature  (<tt>self</tt>), or search both (<tt>both</tt>) 
in that   order (root first,  self if nothing is found).</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;requires&gt; - optional feature dependency information. 
 Is  expressed  in terms of plug-in dependencies. If specified, is enforced 
 by  the installation   and update support at the time of installation</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> &lt;import&gt; - dependency entry. Specification and processing
   is  a subset of the &lt;import&gt; specification in plugin.xml</li>
                                                        
    <ul>
          <li> plugin - identifier of dependent plug-in.</li>
               <li> feature - identifier of dependent feature. If plugin
and   feature   are specified, plugin takes precedence upon feature. Feature
or   plugin must   be specified.</li>
           <li> version - optional plug-in/feature version specification</li>
               <li>patch - optional specification indicating if this feature
  is  a  patch of the dependant feature. Default is "false". If patch is
true,   version  must be specified. If patch is true, only feature must be
specified.   If patch  is true, and match is specified, it must be 'perfect'.<br>
               </li>
           <li> match - optional matching rule. Valid values and processing 
 are   as  follows:</li>
                                                                        
 
      <ul>
          <li> if version attribute is not specified, the match attribute 
(if   specified)   is ignored.</li>
                 <li>if version is specified, match defaults to compatible.<br>
                 </li>
                 <li>if patch is true, and match is not specified, match
defaults     to perfect.<br>
                 </li>
           <li> <b><i>perfect</i></b> - dependent plug-in version must match
  exactly   the specified version.</li>
           <li> <b><i>equivalent</i></b> - dependent plug-in version must 
be  at  least  at the version specified, or at a higher service level (major
 and minor version  levels must equal the specified version).</li>
           <li> <b><i>compatible</i></b> - dependent plug-in version must 
be  at  least  at the version specified, or at a higher service level or minor
 level  (major  version level must equal the specified version).</li>
           <li> <b><i>greaterOrEqual</i></b> - dependent plug-in version
must   be  at least at the version specified, or at a higher service, minor
or major   level.</li>
                                                                        
      </ul>
                                                       
    </ul>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;plugin&gt; - identifies referenced plug-in</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> id - required plug-in identifier (from plugin.xml)</li>
           <li> version - required plug-in version (from plugin.xml)</li>
           <li> fragment - optional specification indicating if this entry
 is  a  plug-in  fragment. Default is "false"</li>
           <li> os - optional operating system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of os designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this entry should only be installed on one of the specified 
  os  systems. If this attribute is not specified, the entry can be installed
    on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
a  hint  by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of entry  regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> arch - optional machine architecture specification. A comma-separated 
    list of architecture designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for 
     <tt>     org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt>. Indicates this feature 
should only    be installed on one of the specified systems. If this attribute 
is not specified,   the feature can be installed on all systems (portable 
implementation).  This   information is used as a hint by the installation 
and update support  (user   can force installation of feature regardless of
this setting).</li>
           <li> ws - optional windowing system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of ws designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this entry should only be installed on one of the specified 
  ws  systems. If this attribute is not specified, the entry can be installed
    on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
a  hint  by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of entry  regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> nl - optional locale specification. A comma-separated list
 of  locale   designators defined by Java. Indicates this entry should only
 be  installed   on a system running with a compatible locale (using Java
locale-matching   rules). If this attribute is not specified, the entry can
be installed on   all systems (language-neutral implementation). This information
is used as  a hint by the installation and update support (user can force
installation   of entry regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> download-size - optional hint supplied by the feature packager, 
   indicating  the download size in KBytes of the referenced plug-in archive. 
   If not specified,  the download size is not known (<b>Implementation Note:</b> 
   the implementation  needs to distinguish between "not known" and 0 size)</li>
           <li> install-size - optional hint supplied by the feature packager,
   indicating   the install size in KBytes of the referenced plug-in archive.
   If not specified,   the install size is not known (<b>Implementation Note:</b>
   the implementation   needs to distinguish between "not known" and 0 size)</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;data&gt; - identifies non-plugin and non-feature data 
that  is part of the feature. Generally, data are post-install processed using
feature Install handler. Feature files like feature.properties are not considered
 data.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> id - required data identifier in the form of a relative path.</li>
           <li> os - optional operating system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of os designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this entry should only be installed on one of the specified 
  os  systems. If this attribute is not specified, the entry can be installed
    on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
a  hint  by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of entry  regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> arch - optional machine architecture specification. A comma-separated 
    list of architecture designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for 
     <tt>     org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt>. Indicates this feature 
should only    be installed on one of the specified systems. If this attribute 
is not specified,   the feature can be installed on all systems (portable 
implementation).  This   information is used as a hint by the installation 
and update support  (user   can force installation of feature regardless of
this setting).</li>
           <li> ws - optional windowing system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of ws designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this entry should only be installed on one of the specified 
  ws  systems. If this attribute is not specified, the entry can be installed
    on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
a  hint  by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of entry  regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> nl - optional locale specification. A comma-separated list
 of  locale   designators defined by Java. Indicates this entry should only
 be  installed   on a system running with a compatible locale (using Java
locale-matching   rules). If this attribute is not specified, the entry can
be installed on   all systems (language-neutral implementation). This information
is used as  a hint by the installation and update support (user can force
installation   of entry regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> download-size - optional hint supplied by the feature packager, 
   indicating  the download size in KBytes of the referenced data archive. 
 If  not specified,  the download size is not known (<b>Implementation Note:</b> 
   the implementation  needs to distinguish between "not known" and 0 size)</li>
           <li> install-size - optional hint supplied by the feature packager,
   indicating   the install size in KBytes of the referenced data archive.
 If  not specified,   the install size is not known (<b>Implementation Note:</b>
   the implementation   needs to distinguish between "not known" and 0 size)</li>
                                     
  </ul>
                   
</ul>
          <a name="Feature_Archive_Mapping_Id_To_Path"></a> When interacting
  with   the update site, the feature implementation maps the <tt>&lt;plugin&gt;</tt>
    and <tt>&lt;data&gt;</tt> elements into path identifiers used by the
site     to determine the actual files to download and install. The default
feature     implementation supplied by Eclipse constructs the path identifiers
as follows:             
<ul>
          <li> <tt>&lt;plugin&gt;</tt> element results in a path entry in 
the   form   "<tt>plugins/&lt;pluginId&gt;_&lt;pluginVersion&gt;.jar</tt>" 
(for   example,   "<tt>plugins/org.eclipse.core.boot_1.0.3.jar</tt>")</li>
           <li> <tt>&lt;data&gt;</tt> element results in a path entry in
the   form   "<tt>features/&lt;featureId&gt;_&lt;featureVersion&gt;/&lt;dataId&gt;</tt> 
    " (for example, "f<tt>eatures/com.xyz.tools_2.3.1/examples.zip</tt>")</li>
                   
</ul>
          Note, that in general the feature.xml&nbsp; manifest documents
should    specify  UTF-8 encoding. For example          
<p><tt>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Translatable text contained in the feature.xml can be separated into feature&lt;_locale&gt;.properties 
    files using Java property bundle conventions. Note that the translated 
 strings   are used at installation time (ie. do not employ the plug-in fragment 
 runtime   mechanism). </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Plug-In_Archive"></a> Plug-In Archive</h3>
          Plug-ins and plug-in fragments are individually packaged as separate
   Java   .jars. Standard Java jar facilities are used for constructing plug-in
   archives.   There is no distinction made between a plug-in archive containing
   a plug-in   and one containing a plug-in fragment.          
<p>The recommended convention for naming the plug-in archives is <br>
         <tt>&lt;id&gt;_&lt;version&gt;.jar</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Where <tt>&lt;id&gt;</tt> is the plug-in or fragment identifier and <tt> 
    &lt;version&gt;</tt> is the full version identifier contained in the respective
    plugin.xml or fragment.xml. Note that this is a recommended convention
 that   minimizes chance of collisions, but is not required by the Eclipse
 architecture.   For example, the following are valid plug-in archive names
 </p>
                 
<p><tt>org.eclipse.platform_1.0.3.jar</tt> <br>
         <tt>org.eclipse.ui.nl_2.0.jar</tt> <br>
         <tt>my_plugin.jar</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Internally, each plug-in archive packages all the relevant plug-in or
fragment files relative to its plug-in or fragment directory (but not including
the directory path element). The archive has the following structure </p>
                 
<p><tt>plugin.xml *OR* fragment.xml</tt> <br>
         <tt>other plug-in or feature files and subdirectories</tt> <br>
         <tt>META-INF/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Java jar manifest and security files</tt> 
</p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Packaging_NL"></a> Packaging NL</h3>
          In Eclipse, translated plug-in information is packaged either together
    with the base plug-in, or as a plug-in fragment. At runtime, Eclipse
locates     the translations for the required locale. The use of fragments
allows translations     to be added to the runtime without the need to repackage
the base plug-ins.             
<p>This mechanism cannot be used for translating the actual packaging information
     that is part of the installation xml files. Consequently the standard
 Java    translation conventions are used for the packaging information,
and  all  necessary translations must be available at the time the feature
is packaged.  </p>
                 
<h4> <a name="Translated_Feature_Information"></a> Translated Feature Information</h4>
          <b>Note:</b> This section describes the conventions used for translating
     the information contained within the feature manifest. It allows for
the    update client to select the correctly localized strings from the update
  server.  This section specifically does not describe localization of individual
  plug-ins.           
<p>Several of the attributes within the feature manifest are strings intended
     for display through user interfaces. To facilitate translation, these
 attribute    values use the convention defined for translatable attributes
 of plugin.xml.    Strings beginning with % up to the first space are treated
 as resource identifier  keys (without the %) and looked up in a properties
 file. For example </p>
                 
<p><tt>label="%cfg Tool Feature for Linux"</tt> </p>
                 
<p>results in a resource lookup in the correct property file with key "cfg".
     If no property files are supplied, or the key is not found the default
  string  value (following the %key) is used. </p>
                 
<p>The property files are named as feature_&lt;locale&gt;.properties using
     the Java resource bundle naming conventions. Within the feature archive
   .jar they are placed in the same directory as their corresponding feature.xml
   file.  </p>
                 
<p><b>Implementation Note</b>: When accessing the resource bundles the Eclipse 
    installation and update code should create a class loader for accessing 
  the  translated string. This way, the standard locale lookup algorithm implemented
    by Java is automatically used. </p>
                 
<p><tt>ResourceBundle b;</tt> <br>
         <tt>ClassLoader l;</tt> <br>
         <tt>l = new URLClassLoader(new URL[] {&lt;targetDirectoryURL&gt;}, 
 null);</tt>     <br>
         <tt>b = ResourceBundle.getBundle("feature",Locale.getDefault(),l);</tt>
    </p>
                 
<p>The resulting resource bundle can be used in <tt>IPluginDescriptor.getResourceString(String,ResourceBundle)</tt> 
     to actually return the correct translated string for the manifest attribute.
     </p>
                 
<h4> <a name="Translated_Plug-In_Information"></a> Translated Plug-In Information</h4>
          No change from 1.0. Translated plug-in information should be packaged 
   as  plug-in fragments.          
<h3> <a name="Packaging_Target-Specific_Support"></a> Packaging Target-Specific
    Support</h3>
          No change from 1.0. Target-specific plug-in support (os, ws) should 
  be  packaged as plug-in fragments.          
<h3> <a name="Packaging_Attribution_Information"></a> Packaging Attribution
    Information</h3>
          This topic is covered in separate documents available on the eclipse.org
     development resources page of the Update component.          
<h3> <a name="Packaging_Non_Plug_In_Files"></a> Packaging Non-Plug-In Files</h3>
          Arbitrary non-plug-in files can be included as part of the feature
  definition    using the <tt>&lt;data&gt;</tt> elements. Non-plug-in files
  typically also    requires specification of a custom install handler. In
 general, the Eclipse    support only downloads the referenced non-plug-in
 files and calls the custom    install handler to perform any actual installation
 steps.          
<p>Eclipse does not specify the format of the non-plug-in files. </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Custom_Install_Handling"></a> Custom Install Handling</h3>
          Custom install handlers are written as a Java class and are packaged
   as  part of the <a href="#Feature_Archive">feature archive</a> . The installer
    must implement the <tt>IInstallHandler</tt> interface (in most cases
will     extend the <tt>BaseInstallHandler</tt> abstract helper class which
implements     <tt>IInstallHandler</tt>). When required, the install handler
is dynamically     loaded by the installation and update code, and is called
at specific points    during its processing. The install handler code has
visibility to classes    from the installation and update support plug-in,
and its prerequisite  plug-ins.            
<p><b>Implementation Note:</b> the detailed list of visible prerequisite
plug-ins is still evolving. It is expected to include <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot
</tt> and <tt>org.eclipse.core.runtime</tt> in all cases, plus <tt>org.eclipse.ui</tt> 
     and <tt>org.eclipse.swt</tt> when running with full workbench (ie. not 
  "headless  mode"). Also, it would be useful to always expose <tt>org.eclipse.core.ant</tt> 
     so that build scripts can be used as part of the install handler implementation.
     </p>
                 
<p>The IInstallHandler interface supports the following methods [<b>Implementation
     Note:</b> the detailed definition of the IInstallHandler interface is
 still    evolving. The description below is not an API specification (simply
 a functional    description)]: </p>
                 
<ul>
          <li> install-initiated - the install handler is called after a
feature     was selected for installation, but before any files were downloaded.
It   is  intended  to implement any custom click-through or user registration
 dialogs.  The base implementation of this method supplied with the abstract
 class     <tt>BaseInstallHandler       </tt>performs the default click-through
 processing using the license  text supplied as part of the feature manifest.
 On return this method indicates  success (installation continues) of failure
 (installation is aborted).</li>
           <li> install-downloaded - the install handler is called after
all   the   required  feature files were downloaded (feature, plugins, data)
but   before   the actual  installation is performed. The install handler
is expected   to   perform verification  of the non-plug-in data files (eg.
security),  or any   other pre-install processing.&nbsp; On return this method
indicates   success   (installation continues) or failure (installation is
aborted).</li>
           <li> install-completion - the install handler is called after
the   feature   information and the plug-ins were installed. It is expected
to  complete the  installation of any non-plug-in data that was part of the
feature.  On return  this method indicates success (returns custom install
log) or failure (installation  is aborted). On failure, the install handler
is expected to perform any required cleanup.</li>
           <li> uninstall-initiated - the install handler is called when
a  feature    is selected for removal, but before any of the standard uninstall
 processing    has taken place. It is passed the custom install log created
 by the install    handler install-completion step.</li>
           <li> uninstall-completion - the install handler is called on completion 
    of the standard uninstall steps. It is passed the custom install log created
    by the install handler install-completion step.</li>
                   
</ul>
          Note, that as a general practice, install handlers should be provided 
   in  their own jars (even though they could be just exposed in the feature 
   archive  jar). The jar should be signed, and sealed.          
<h3> <a name="Security_Considerations"></a> Security Considerations</h3>
          The general approach is to use base Java jar signing for the feature
   and   plug-in archive .jars.          
<p>Features are verified as follows: </p>
                 
<ul>
          <li> download and verify the feature archive (use base Java jar 
verification)</li>
           <li> for each plug-in archive</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> verify the archive jar content (use base Java jar verification)</li>
           <li> verify plug-in id and version from <tt>&lt;plugin&gt;</tt>
 entry    in feature manifest matches downloaded plugin.xml</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> for each non-plugin file</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> call install handler to verify file</li>
                                     
  </ul>
                   
</ul>
          In general, when processing signed jars, the user will be prompted
  for   each unrecognized certificate. The response choices will include
aborting     the installation (originator is not trusted), continuing the
installation     (originator is trusted for this installation).          
<h2> <a name="Update_Server"></a> Update Server</h2>
          The default Eclipse update server is any URL-accessible server. 
The   default   implementation assumes a fixed-layout server. The content 
of the   server (in terms of available features and plug-ins) is described 
in a site   map file, <i>site.xml</i>. This file can be manually maintained, 
or can be  dynamically   computed by the server.          
<h3> <a name="Site_Map"></a> Site Map</h3>
          The update server URL can be specified as a full URL to the site
 map   file,   or a URL of a directory path containing the site map file
(similar    to index.html   processing). The site map site.xml format is
defined by  the  following dtd:           
<p><tt>&lt;?xml encoding="ISO-8859-1"?&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT site (description?, feature*, archive*, category-def*)&gt;</tt> 
     <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST site</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; type&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT description (#PCDATA)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST description</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT feature (category*)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST feature</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; type&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; id&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; version&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
 CDATA    #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED<br>
        &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; label &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; CDATA
  #IMPLIED<br>
       </tt><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; os&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; arch&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; ws&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; nl&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #IMPLIED</tt><br>
       <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; patch &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </tt><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp; 
    (true | false) "false"</tt><br>
       <tt> &gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT archive EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST archive</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; path&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; url&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT category EMPTY&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST category</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; name&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p><tt>&lt;!ELEMENT category-def (description?)&gt;</tt> <br>
         <tt>&lt;!ATTLIST category-def</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; name&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; label&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     CDATA #REQUIRED</tt> <br>
         <tt>&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p>The element and attribute definitions are as follows: </p>
                 
<ul>
          <li> &lt;site&gt; - defines the site map</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> type - optional site type specification. The value refers
to  a  type   string registered via the <a href="#Framework">install framework</a> 
   extension  point. If not specified, the type is assumed to be the default 
  Eclipse site  type (as specified in this document).</li>
           <li> url - optional URL defining the update site baseline URL
(used    to  determine individual &lt;feature&gt; and &lt;archive&gt; location).&nbsp; 
    Can be relative or absolute. If relative, is relative to site.xml. If 
not    specified, the default is the URL location of the site.xml file.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;description&gt; - brief description as simple text. Intended
    to be translated.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> url - optional URL for the full description as HTML. The URL 
 can   be  specified as absolute of relative. If relative, If relative, is 
 relative   to site.xml.</li>
           <br>
         Note, that for NL handling the URL value should be separated to
allow    alternate  URLs to be specified for each national language.    
                      
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;feature&gt; - identifies referenced feature archive</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> type - optional feature type specification. The value refers 
 to  a  type  string registered via the <a href="#Framework">install framework</a> 
     extension point. If not specified, the type is assumed to be the default 
    feature type for the site. If the site type is the default Eclipse site 
  type,  the default feature type is the packaged feature type (as specified 
  in this  document).</li>
           <li> id - optional feature identifier. The information is used 
as  a  performance   optimization to speed up searches for features. Must 
match  the identifier   specified in the feature.xml of the referenced archive
 (the  url attribute).   If specified, the version attribute must also be
specified.</li>
           <li> version - optional feature version. The information is used 
 as  a  performance  optimization to speed up searches for features. Must 
match  the  version specified in the feature.xml of the referenced archive 
(the url attribute).  If specified, the id attribute must also be specified.</li>
           <li> url - required URL reference to the feature archive. Can
be  relative    or absolute. If relative, it is relative to the location
of the  site.xml   file.       <b>Note</b>: the default site implementation 
allows  features  to be accessed without being explicitly declared using a
&lt;feature&gt;  entry. By default, an undeclared features reference is interpreted
as "features/&lt;id&gt;_&lt;version&gt;.jar"</li>
            <li>label - optional feature label. The value is used for optimization
    when browsing the site from the update manager. Intended to be translated.<br>
           </li>
           <li> os - optional operating system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of os designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this feature should only be installed on one of the specified
     os systems. If this attribute is "*", the feature can be installed 
 on   all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
a hint   by the installation and update support (user can force installation
of feature   regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> arch - optional machine architecture specification. A comma-separated 
    list of architecture designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for 
     <tt>     org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt>. Indicates this feature 
should only    be installed on one of the specified systems. If this attribute&nbsp;is
   "*",  the feature can be installed on all systems (portable implementation).
   This  information is used as a hint by the installation and update support
   (user  can force installation of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> ws - optional windowing system specification. A comma-separated 
   list  of ws designators defined by Eclipse (see Javadoc for <tt>org.eclipse.core.boot.BootLoader)</tt> 
    . Indicates this feature should only be installed on one of the specified
     ws systems. If this attribute&nbsp;is "*", the feature can be installed
     on all systems (portable implementation). This information is used as
 a  hint by the installation and update support (user can force installation
  of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li> nl - optional locale specification. A comma-separated list
 of  locale   designators defined by Java. Indicates this feature should
only  be installed   on a system running with a compatible locale (using
Java locale-matching    rules). If this attribute&nbsp;is "*", the feature
can be installed on all  systems (language-neutral implementation). This
information is used as a hint by the installation and update support (user
can force installation  of feature regardless of this setting).</li>
           <li>patch - optional specification indicating if this feature
is  a   patch. Default is "false".&nbsp;</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;archive&gt; - identifies referenced "storage" archive 
(the   actual  files referenced via the <tt>&lt;plugin&gt;</tt> or <tt>&lt;data&gt;</tt> 
     elements in the feature manifest). The site simply manages archives as
  a  path-to-URL map. The default Eclipse site implementation does not require
    the &lt;archive&gt; section to be included in the site map (site.xml). 
 Any   archive reference not explicitly defined as part of an &lt;archive&gt; 
 section   is assumed to be mapped to a url in the form "&lt;archivePath&gt;" 
 relative   to the location of the site.xml file.</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> path - required archive path identifier. This is a string
that   is  determined  by the <a
 href="#Feature_Archive_Mapping_Id_To_Path">feature</a>      referencing
this archive and is not otherwise interpreted by the site  (other   than
as a lookup token).</li>
           <li> url - required URL reference to the archive. Can be relative
  or  absolute.  If relative, it is relative to the location of the site.xml
  file.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;category-def&gt; - an optional definition of a category 
 that   can be used by installation and update support to hierarchicaly organize
   features</li>
                                      
  <ul>
          <li> name - category name. Is specified as a path of name tokens
 separated    by /</li>
           <li> label - displayable label. Intended to be translated.</li>
                                     
  </ul>
           <li> &lt;category&gt; - actual category specification for a feature
   entry</li>
                                      
  <ul>
         name - category name                           
  </ul>
                   
</ul>
          Note, that in general the feature.xml&nbsp; manifest documents
should    specify  UTF-8 encoding. For example          
<p><tt>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;</tt> </p>
                 
<p>Translatable text contained in the site.xml can be separated into site&lt;_locale&gt;.properties
     files using Java property bundle conventions. Note that the translated
  strings  are used at installation time (ie. do not employ the plug-in fragment
  runtime  mechanism). The property bundles are located relative to the site.xml
  location.   </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Default_Site_Layout"></a> Default Site Layout</h3>
          <tt>&lt;site root&gt;/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; site.xml</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; features/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; feature archives&nbsp;&nbsp;
     (eg. org.eclipse.javatools_1.0.1.jar)</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;featureId&gt;_&lt;featureVersion&gt;/&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     (optional)</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   non-plug-in  files for feature</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; plugins/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; plug-in argives&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     (eg. org.eclipse.ui_1.0.3.jar)</tt>          
<h3> <a name="Controlling_Access"></a> Controlling Access</h3>
          The default Eclipse site implementation provides support for http 
 access    with basic user authentication (userid and password).        
 
<p>Custom access control mechanisms can be added to base Eclipse in one of 
    2 ways: </p>
                 
<ul>
          <li> by supplying server-side logic on the update server (eg. implementing 
    servlets that compute the site.xml map, and control access to individual 
   archives based on some user criteria)</li>
           <li> by supplying a custom concrete implementation of the site 
object    (installed  on the client machine, update server specified <tt>&lt;site
  type=""&gt;</tt>  ). The custom concrete site implementation, together
with   any server-side   logic support the required control mechanisms.</li>
                   
</ul>
          Eclipse provides an example demonstrating an implementation of
an  access    mechanism based on feature key files.          
<h2> <a name="Eclipse_Install"></a> Eclipse Install</h2>
                    
<h3> <a name="Default_Install_Layout"></a> Default Install Layout</h3>
          <tt>&lt;install root&gt;/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; install/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; features/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   &lt;featureId&gt;_&lt;version&gt;/</tt>   <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     feature.xml</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     other feature files</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     META-INF/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
     META-INF-ECLIPSE/</tt>          
<p><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; plugins/</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;pluginORfragmentId&gt;_&lt;version&gt;/</tt> 
     <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   plugin.xml  or fragment.xml</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   other  plugin or fragment files</tt> <br>
         <tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 
   META_INF/</tt>   </p>
                 
<p><b>Implementation Note:</b> we will go back to the original design of
not splitting out fragments (ie. plugin and fragments go into the same install 
    location) </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Unmanaged_Plugins"></a> "Unmanaged" Plug-Ins</h3>
          Eclipse supports a concept of "unmanaged" plug-ins. These are plug-ins
    that were directly installed into the Eclipse file tree without being
part    of a feature (eg. developer unzipping plug-in archive directly into
the  Eclipse  file tree).          
<p>Eclipse runtime recognizes these plugins during startup and loads the
plug-in information into the runtime registry following the standard plug-in
binding rules. The update support also recognizes the presence of this new
plug-in, but since this plug-in is not part of any feature it cannot be updated
using the update support (hence "unmanaged"). Unmanaged plug-in that become
referenced by a feature as a result of some future installation or update
action become "managed" (can be updated as part of the feature). </p>
                 
<p>Unmanaged plug-ins are not displayed as part of the installation and update 
    UI. </p>
                 
<h3> <a name="Using_Native_Platform_Installers"></a> Using Native Platform
    Installers</h3>
          The Eclipse installation contains plugins that can be shared across 
  multiple   features. When installing and uninstalling features using the 
 Eclipse installation   and update support, these relationship are correctly 
 maintained. Only one   copy of any version of a plug-in is used.        
 
<p>However, when using native platform installers, performing native uninstall
     creates problems because plug-ins would be removed without regard to
any    sharing relationships. As a result, Eclipse <b>does not allow</b>
plug-ins    to be installed using native installers into the shared installation
tree.    Instead, native installers must establish their own installation
root directory.    The subdirectory structure is the same as defined for
base Eclipse. The  private  root directory is logically linked into the shared
 Eclipse installation   via  a link file installed by the native installer.
 The file path for the   link  file is <tt>&lt;configRoot&gt;/links/</tt>.
 The <tt>&lt;configRoot&gt;   </tt>  location is computed by Eclipse relative
 to the launch <a href="#Multiple%20Launch%20Points"> configuration file</a>
 . By default,    this is the <tt>install/</tt> directory in the shared Eclipse
 installation    tree. </p>
                 
<p>The name of the link file is not specified by Eclipse. The name is determined
     by the native installer. To minimize the potential for naming collisions,
     it is recommended that the file name contain the identifier and version
   of the feature being installed by the native installer. For example, <tt>&lt;featureId&gt;_&lt;featureVersion&gt;.properties</tt> 
    . The file content is in the form of a Java properties file, with the 
following    properties defined: </p>
                 
<p><tt>path=[r|rw] install-path[,[r|rw] install-path]*</tt> </p>
                 
<p>The property <tt>path</tt> is a comma-separated list of optionally annotated
     install paths. The property value <tt>install-path</tt> is a full file
  path  to the installation directory root, specified in local OS format.
The  optional  annotation <tt>r</tt> or <tt>rw</tt> indicates whether Eclipse
 update support  should allow the specified location to be used for updates.
 Default is to  allow updates&nbsp; (w). </p>
                 
<p>Eclipse does not manage the linked directories in any way. It simply detects 
    their existence by the presence of the link files, and includes the linked 
    plug-ins during the platform startup. The native installer is responsible 
    for uninstalling the link when the corresponding directory is removed. 
 Eclipse   runtime ignores any links that cannot be resolved. <br>
         &nbsp; </p>
         <br>
        <br>
       <br>
      <br>
     <br>
    <br>
     
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