In this section:
Linux | MacOS | |
---|---|---|
Processor | 32-bit or 64-bit (x86_64) processors with at least 4 cores are supported | 32-bit or 64-bit (x86_64) processors with at least 4 cores are supported |
Software | Java 8 (Oracle and OpenJDK are supported) GTK+ 2.18 or higher GLib 2.17.6 or higher Pango 1.20 or higher X.Org 1.0 or higher | Java 8 (Oracle and OpenJDK are supported) |
Memory | At least 1 GB RAM. 2 GB RAM is recommended. | 1 GB RAM minimum. 2 GB RAM is recommended. |
OS Version | n/a | Mac OS X 10.5 or higher |
Default font size | 8 is recommended. For example, on Ubuntu, use the following in the terminal:
|
The Parasoft/Eclipse application and system libraries must be for the same architecture. If you are using a 64-bit Linux but you are running the 32-bit (x86) version of Parasoft, you need the 32-bit version of the above libraries.
chmod +x parasoft_virtualize_<version>_linux.sh
chmod +x parasoft_virtualize_<version>_macosx.sh
./parasoft_virtualize_<version>_linux.sh
./parasoft_virtualize__<version>_macosx.sh
A directory under parasoft/virtualize/<version>
(Linux) or virtualize/<version>/ParasoftVirtualize.app/Contents/ParasoftVirtualize
(Mac) will be created. We refer to this location as <virtualize_install_dir>
throughout this user guide. The Virtualize executable, command line interface, examples, manuals, etc. are available within this directory.
After installation is completed, an application icon will be added in Finder. This is the icon that you double-click to launchVirtualize. If you want to view the various files and folders available within the installation, right-click the icon, and choose Show Package Contents. |
See Service Pack Updates.
To run Virtualize GUI:
virtualize/<version>
directory To run Virtualize Command Line:
virtualize/<version>
directory Double-click the Parasoft Virtualize icon in Finder to start the Virtualize desktop application.
To start Virtualize command line:
./virtualizecli
You must install a license before you begin using Virtualize.
On Eclipse 4.5 and Mac OS X 10.11, there is a known issue with the workspace launcher freezing (becoming unresponsive) when Virtualize starts up. The workaround is to launch Virtualize from the command line with the |