Tycho is a manifest-first way to build
- Eclipse plug-ins/OSGi bundles
- Features
- Update sites/p2 repositories
- RCP applications
with Maven.
- 👔 Eclipse project entry: https://projects.eclipse.org/projects/technology.tycho
- 🗒️ Documentation:
- https://tycho.eclipseprojects.io/doc/latest/
- https://github.com/eclipse-tycho/tycho/wiki (previously https://wiki.eclipse.org/Tycho/ outdated-content please help to migrate!)
- 📢 Release notes: RELEASE_NOTES.md
- 🪲 Bug Tracker
- ⌨️ How to Contribute and latest snapshots: CONTRIBUTING.md
- 💬 Discussion channels
- Usage assistance https://github.com/eclipse-tycho/tycho/discussions
- Development https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/tycho-dev
Just get in contact with us through the discussions and share your ideas or report issues.
Please bear in mind that this is a community project, and not a product you contracted support for and as a result, some contributors may or may not look at your support requests on demand and if you do not provide the fix/implementation yourself the issue might even never get fixed.
If you require dedicated help with Tycho, want to make sure a bugfix or feature is handled with priority, the following companies offers commercial support for Tycho
In general, if Tycho is key technology for your Organization, you can help with the following things:
Test snapshots of Tycho early and often so that regressions are found early before we start the release process, this gives faster release and maybe even more often releases if we are certain that snapshots are production-ready.
Consider donate some developer time to improve code (e.g. fixing bugs), enhancing documentation, help with review of open PRs, answer questions on the discussions, or providing integration test to cover your important features.
If you want to help with development of Tycho itself but can't afford to do it by yourself, you can sponsor some of the contributors of Tycho directly:
- Christoph Läubrich - A sample of his recent work can be seen here.
Tycho has a very large user-base and thus we use exhaustive test-suites to ensure everything works well. This comes at a cost of also using a lot of processing power.
The following Organizations support Tycho getting processing power for their builds:
- Eclipse Foundation - host our CI Infrastructure, become a friend of Eclipse and support the Eclipse Foundation in general
- Läubisoft GmbH - provides four dynamic build nodes powered by 12 CPU / 32 GB RAM
- Renesas Electronics Corporation - sponsors a resource pack with 2 CPU / 8 GB RAM
If your Organizations is an Eclipse Member you can help us by sponsoring one of the included resource packs to speed up builds. Organizations can check how many Resource Packs they have left for project sponsoring on the membership portal.