Eclipse Indigo - Cannot install Android ADT Plugin
Asked Answered
K

19

65

When I try to install the Android Developer Tool, I get the following error.

Software being installed: Android Development Tools 11.0.0.v201105251008-128486 (com.android.ide.eclipse.adt.feature.group 11.0.0.v201105251008-128486) Missing requirement: Android Development Tools 11.0.0.v201105251008-128486 (com.android.ide.eclipse.adt.feature.group 11.0.0.v201105251008-128486) requires 'org.eclipse.wst.sse.core 0.0.0' but it could not be found

I also found that adding the WST package does not help. I get the following,

Cannot complete the install because one or more required items could not be found. Software being installed: Google Web Toolkit SDK 2.3.0 2.3.0.r37v201106211634 (com.google.gwt.eclipse.sdkbundle.e37.feature.feature.group 2.3.0.r37v201106211634) Missing requirement: Google Plugin for Eclipse 3.7 2.3.2.r37v201106211634 (com.google.gdt.eclipse.suite.e37.feature.feature.group 2.3.2.r37v201106211634) requires 'org.eclipse.wst.xml.core 0.0.0' but it could not be found Cannot satisfy dependency: From: Google Web Toolkit SDK 2.3.0 2.3.0.r37v201106211634 (com.google.gwt.eclipse.sdkbundle.e37.feature.feature.group 2.3.0.r37v201106211634) To: com.google.gdt.eclipse.suite.e37.feature.feature.group 2.3.2

I'm running Eclipse Indigo 64bit version. Could someone point me in the right direction? Or tell me where to find that missing package.

Kenward answered 26/6, 2011 at 5:11 Comment(5)
The ADT system requirements specify that it works with Eclipse 3.5, and doesn't mention 3.6 or 3.7 at all. If you want to play safe, I strongly suggest you to download Eclipse 3.5 32 bit. ADT doesn't work with Eclipse 64 bitEupheemia
@Eupheemia I'm running ADT with Eclipse x64Eveevection
I might be seriously confused, but I'm quite sure I had a lot of grief about 2 years ago trying to install it on Eclipse 64b, until I read that it only worked on Eclipse 32b... This might have changed in the mean time, or I might need to get my head checked :)... or bothEupheemia
@Eupheemia "Eclipse 3.5 (Galileo) or greater" is supported. This can be understood as supporting the latest release.Pilot
If you use AVG antivirus you should disable it. Only this helped me out (thanks @Lizozom from another question about this error).Ideality
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89

Head over to Help -> Install New Software. Click on Available software sites. Delete the Android repo. Uncheck Indigo & Eclipse updates & recheck them. Now head back to Help -> Check for updates. Once done, add the Android repo again. Accept the license & you should be good to go.

(Had to do the same yesterday after getting Indigo)

Eveevection answered 26/6, 2011 at 9:40 Comment(3)
Now I just get a load of messages about conflicting dependencies... Damn you java!Vizierate
This helped me out. Also, updates were failing silently until I ran Eclipse.exe as an Administrator. It probably would not have worked if I didnt have that option.Fleisig
Do not forget to select "Contact all update sites during install to find required software"Encage
A
44

I had the same problem. This helped for me:

  1. Go to Help->Install Software
  2. Click on "Available Software Sites"
  3. Click on Add: Name: "Helios" Location: "http://download.eclipse.org/releases/helios"
  4. Try to install Android Development Tools
Augustin answered 26/6, 2011 at 11:9 Comment(4)
Thanks. That seemed to fix it for me. I guess it just needed to know of the location of the Helios repository for dependencies. Not knowing the inner workings I cannot guess more. Alas this does not feel like a very 'clean' solution but it has got me up and running. (Eclipse Classic 3.7 Win32 build running on Win 7 Pro x64).Carltoncarly
same here, I had no eclipse indigo repo and used your solution and it works with android adt r12, eclipse 3.7, amd 64 bit server jvm. ThxDisability
Update : It works much fast than eclipse 3.6 for me, with settings for 3.6 from this thread #142857Disability
This does not work on 3.7. It just says "Duplicate location". Same with ..releases/indigo. And if you update anyway you get messages about conflicting dependencies.Vizierate
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17

I got around the org.eclipse.wst.xml.core 0.0.0 issue by taking the following steps:

  • Go to help
  • Install New Software: Add Name: Indigo Location: "http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo"
  • Select 'WST Server Adapters' under 'Web, XML, Java,..." (last name in list)
  • Accept licensing agreement
  • Restart Eclipse
  • Resume procedure to install ADT

It worked for me, hope it does for you too.

Zantos answered 22/7, 2011 at 4:2 Comment(2)
I can confirm that this worked for me too, using Eclipse Classic Indigo.Jitterbug
In my experience, this works, but, simply as download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo was added to the software repos. (See Alex's answer)Fuliginous
S
11

I had the same issue. The other solutions here didn't work for me because I couldn't even see the Indigo / Helios update repos. The problem was that Eclipse was in Program Files, but I wasn't running it as an administrator.

Seeress answered 3/10, 2011 at 4:38 Comment(1)
Same issue here on Windows 7. Moved Eclipse out of Program Files and problem went away. Alternatively, you could always run Eclipse as Administrator as you appear to have done.Barathea
M
10

So I got indigo, and then : Go to Help->Install New Software Click on Add: Name: "Indigo" Location: "http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo" Try to install Android Development Tools (as you will see, only 1 option out of 4 will appear - this is normal for Indigo)

Modification answered 15/7, 2011 at 14:17 Comment(1)
Thanks. Strangely, on my Ubuntu 11.10 , with the default Indigo install, this repository wasn't available. I had to add it by hand. Wierd.Appeasement
S
6

Ensure you have the option "Contact all update sites during install to find required software". This option is located in the lower left corner on the first screen after choosing Help/Add New Software. This is unchecked by default. This WILL FIX the issue if it was unchecked.

The plugin will install in 3.7 32bit and 64bit.

Stomach answered 17/8, 2011 at 3:7 Comment(0)
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5

The Google Plugin for Eclipse depends on other specific Eclipse components, such as WST. Your installation of Eclipse may not yet include all of them, but they can be easily installed by following these instructions. Eclipse 3.7 (Indigo)

 Select Help > Install New Software...

Click the link for Available Software Sites.
Ensure there is an update site named Indigo. 

If this is not present, click Add... and 
enter http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo for the Location.

Now go through the installation steps; Eclipse should download and install 
the plugin's dependencies.
Nashoma answered 17/2, 2012 at 1:0 Comment(1)
This worked for me - By default eclipse Indigo had this checked but it also had a few other software sites checked too. I unchecked all and only checked the indigo site and the android site and it installed on my 64 bit install fine.Cardioid
K
3

I've also had this problem. I solved it by going to:

Clicking -> available software sites
Select "Helios" and click Reload.
Select "ADT Plugin" and click Reload.
Then went back, tried again and it worked.

If you still can't get it working there are directions for doing it manually here:
http://developer.android.com/sdk/eclipse-adt.html#installing

(also: I'm using 3.7 64x, it's working fine, not having any issues.)

Krystlekrystyna answered 26/6, 2011 at 15:29 Comment(0)
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3

I tried installing and got the same error (using the new "marketplace"). I tried the typical Help->install new software... then where it says "Work with:" I entered:

http://dl-ssl.google.com/android/eclipse/

followed all the prompts and everything seems to be working fine now.

Kisor answered 26/6, 2011 at 21:22 Comment(0)
P
3

Execute eclipse with root level

$sudo /opt/eclipse/eclipse

Photographer answered 18/1, 2012 at 16:20 Comment(0)
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1

Go to Help->Install Software. Add the following link http://dl-ssl.google.com/android/eclipse/ .

Then press next and accept the license, it installs some of the software required then you will be gud to go.

After the eclipse restarts it prompts you to download the android sdk required or give the path of android sdk if already it is downloaded.

This works all the time what ever may be the version.

Stroman answered 2/12, 2011 at 11:34 Comment(0)
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1

By the way, Eclipse + ADT (ADT Bundle) is now provided as a single package,

Developer.Android:ADT Bundle

Lackaday answered 27/3, 2013 at 6:20 Comment(0)
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0

None of the existing answers worked for me. Having all the correct update sites in "available sites" was not enough to tell Eclipse how to find its dependencies.

Using Fedora 14 and Eclipse Indigo 3.7.1, I had to follow these steps to make the installation working:

  1. Check and install "Linux Tools" from http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo
  2. Check and install "Linux Tools" from http://download.eclipse.org/releases/indigo/201109230900

After restarting Eclipse, I was able to finaly install the Android SDK.

Encage answered 21/2, 2012 at 23:3 Comment(0)
D
0

Thanks to all for the posts but unfortunatley none of the above solved my problem. Eventually what got it all working for me was to download eclipse indigo 3.7.2 and (this is very important) EXTRACT IT DIRECTLY INTO MY PROGRAMS FOLDER. Before I would extract it to my desktop and copy into the programs folder (C:\Program Files) but I would jus get an error message saying "The Eclipse executable launcher was unable to locate its companion shared library" when trying to run eclipse.

After extracting eclipse directly to my programs folder I ran it and added the ADT plugin the way reccomended in on the android site and so far all is working well :)

I'm on a windows 7 x64 machine and had jre-7u2-windows-x64.exe, jdk-7u2-windows-x64.exe and installer_r16-windows.exe installed before extracting eclipse.

I hope this can help someone else too :)

Doorframe answered 28/2, 2012 at 20:29 Comment(0)
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0

This seems to be fixed in Indigo Eclipse now, there's a video showing someone install android eclipse on youtube?

Rinker answered 20/4, 2012 at 12:35 Comment(0)
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Still pretty bewildering. It seems some combination of the above suggestions worked in Eclipse 3.7.2.

First, I had to move to a network that dl-ssl.google.com hasn't blocked (this is an ongoing problem with the Google server) (Easy with a laptop, less so with my tower.)

The Eclipse folks should look at this problem. The user sees an error, something about a missing package "org.eclipse.wst.sse.core', say. There are 50 or so plugin repositories listed. which of these is the one that has this package??? None has a name containing a 'wst' or 'sse'.

This is very poor. There needs to be a way for the user to associate the error message with a repository solution.

Anyway: after some hunt-and-peck I ended up selecting (and reloading each repository, and with Contact all update sites during install to find required software checked)

One of these provided the packages needed for the Android plugin . Best guess: Helios.

Laurentium answered 16/8, 2012 at 14:23 Comment(0)
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0

The best answer (by Sathya) is also applicable in Eclipse Juno.

Littlejohn answered 20/11, 2012 at 22:10 Comment(0)
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0
Cannot complete the install because one or more required items
could not be found.  Software currently installed: Shared profile 
1.0.0.1308118821836 (SharedProfile_epp.package.java 
1.0.0.1308118821836) Missing requirement: Shared profile 
1.0.0.1308118821836 (SharedProfile_epp.package.java 
1.0.0.1308118821836) requires 'org.maven.ide.eclipse

Run As Administrator !!!

Hine answered 18/5, 2014 at 17:6 Comment(0)
I
-1

Eclipse Classic or Galileo is the two you can use. The other Eclipse IDE are not meant to program or interpret JAVA in the same way. Download either 64x or 32x will work on Classic or Galileo on a PC. Just make sure you PC can handle which version of Eclipse you download.

Ilario answered 22/11, 2011 at 23:46 Comment(1)
Not true, you can use helio and indigo on 32bit and 64bit.Kenward

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