The Eclipse ESCET toolkit contains the tooling for CIF, Chi and ToolDef.
The Eclipse ESCET IDE offers the most complete and integrated experience, from convenient editing to execution of the various tools. It suits most users.
The Eclipse ESCET command line tools allow execution on headless systems and also support integration with other tools, for advanced usage.
The Eclipse ESCET P2 update site contains all the toolkit's plugins and features, for easy integration into OSGi-based applications.
The Eclipse ESCET toolkit contains the tooling for CIF, Chi and ToolDef. For each supported platform, the download contains the IDE. In addition, for Windows and Linux also command line tools are included. It is portable, so just download, extract, and run it, to get started quickly.
Version: nightly-20241121-131238 (release notes)
Windows x64 (64-bit) | Download | Mirrors | More info |
Linux x64 (64-bit) | Download | Mirrors | More info |
macOS aarch64 (64-bit Apple M-chip) | Download | Mirrors | More info |
macOS x64 (64-bit Intel processor) | Download | Mirrors | More info |
Eclipse ESCET is also available as an Eclipse P2 update site:
https://download.eclipse.org/escet/nightly/update-site/
To download a different version of Eclipse ESCET, visit the download page for that version (see the versions page).
Extract the downloaded archive somewhere on your hard disk:
eclipse-escet.exe
from the directory that contains the extracted files to launch the Eclipse ESCET IDE.
The bin
directory contains the command line scripts.
For more information on the Eclipse ESCET IDE, see the Eclipse ESCET general toolkit documentation. In particular the section on starting the Eclipse ESCET IDE for the first time.
Extract the downloaded archive somewhere on your hard disk:
eclipse-escet
from the directory that contains the extracted files to launch the Eclipse ESCET IDE.
The bin
directory contains the command line scripts.
For more information on the Eclipse ESCET IDE, see the Eclipse ESCET general toolkit documentation. In particular the section on starting the Eclipse ESCET IDE for the first time.
Make sure to download the Eclipse ESCET version matching the architecture of your Apple computer. The x64 version will work on older as well as newer Apple computers. The aarch64 version natively supports newer Apple computers with an Apple M-chip, and therefore runs faster than the x64 version on those computers. The aarch64 version does not work on older Apple computers with an Intel processor. To find out what architecture your Apple computer has, check out this Apple Support page.
Add the Eclipse ESCET app to the Applications folder:
.dmg
file by double clicking it. This opens a window with the Eclipse ESCET app and a shortcut icon to your Applications folder.The first time you open the Eclipse ESCET app:
For more information on the Eclipse ESCET IDE, see the Eclipse ESCET general toolkit documentation. In particular the section on starting the Eclipse ESCET IDE for the first time.
After extracting the downloaded archive, the command line tools are located in the bin
directory.
The command line tools are only available for Windows and Linux, not for macOS.
You may want to add the bin
directory to your PATH
environment variable.
See e.g. How do I set or change the PATH system variable? for how to achieve this.
To see which tools are available, simply look in the bin
directory.
Each of these tools can be started with the -h
or --help
option to get further information.