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Chapter 2
Installing and Running GATE [#]

2.1 Downloading GATE [#]

To download GATE point your web browser at http://gate.ac.uk/download/.

2.2 Installing and Running GATE [#]

GATE will run anywhere that supports Java 6 or later, including Solaris, Linux, Mac OS X and Windows platforms. We don’t run tests on other platforms, but have had reports of successful installs elsewhere.

2.2.1 The Easy Way [#]

The easy way to install is to use one of the platform-specific installers (created using the excellent IzPack). Download a ‘platform-specific installer’ and follow the instructions it gives you. Once the installation is complete, you can start GATE Developer using gate.exe (Windows) or GATE.app (Mac) in the top-level installation directory, on Linux and other platforms use gate.sh in the bin directory (see section 2.2.4).

Note for Mac users: on 64-bit-capable systems, GATE.app will run as a 64-bit application. It will use the first listed 64-bit JVM in your Java Preferences, even if your highest priority JVM is a 32-bit one.

2.2.2 The Hard Way (1) [#]

Download the Java-only release package or the binary build snapshot, and follow the instructions below.

Prerequisites:

Using the binary distribution:

The Ant scripts that start GATE Developer (ant.bat or ant) require you to set the JAVA_HOME environment variable to point to the top level directory of your JAVA installation. The value of GATE_CONFIG is passed to the system by the scripts using either a -i command-line option, or the Java property gate.site.config.

2.2.3 The Hard Way (2): Subversion [#]

The GATE code is maintained in a Subversion repository. You can use a Subversion client to check out the source code – the most up-to-date version of GATE is the trunk:
svn checkout https://gate.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/gate/gate/trunk gate

Once you have checked out the code you can build GATE using Ant (see Section 2.5)

You can browse the complete Subversion repository online at
http://gate.svn.sourceforge.net/.

2.2.4 Running GATE Developer on Unix/Linux [#]

The script gate.sh in the directory bin of your installation can be used to start GATE Developer. You can run this script by entering its full path in a terminal or by adding the bin directory to your binary path. In addition you can also add a symbolic link to this script in any directory that already is in your binary path.

If gate.sh is invoked without parameters, GATE Developer will use the files ~/.gate.xml and ~/.gate.session to store session and configuration data. Alternately you can run gate.sh with the following parameters:

-h
show usage information
-ld
create or use the files .gate.session and .gate.xml in the current directory as the session and configuration files.
-ln name
create or use name.session and name.xml in the current directory as the session and configuration files.
-ll
if the current directory contains a file named log4j.properties then use it instead of the default (GATE_HOME/bin/log4j.properties) to configure logging. Alternately, you can specify any log4j configuration file by setting the log4j.configuration property explicitly (see below).
-rh location
set the resources home directory to the location provided. If a resources home location is provided, the URLs in a saved application are saved relative to this location instead of relative to the application state file (see section 3.9.3). This is equivalent to setting the property gate.user.resourceshome to this location.
-d URL
loads the CREOLE plugin at the given URL during the start-up process.
-i file
uses the specified file as the site configuration.
all other parameters
are passed on to the java command. This can be used to e.g. set properties using the java option -D. For example to set the maximum amount of heap memory to be used when running GATE to 6000M, you can add -Xmx6000m as a parameter. In order to change the default encoding used by GATE to UTF-8 add -Dfile.encoding=utf-8 as a parameter. To specify a log4j configuration file add something like
-Dlog4j.configuration=file:///home/myuser/log4jconfig.properties.

Running GATE Developer with either the -ld or the -ln option from different directories is useful to keep several projects separate and can be used to run multiple instances of GATE Developer (or even different versions of GATE Developer) in succession or even simultanously without the configuration files getting mixed up between them.

2.3 Using System Properties with GATE [#]

During initialisation, GATE reads several Java system properties in order to decide where to find its configuration files.

Here is a list of the properties used, their default values and their meanings:

gate.home
sets the location of the GATE install directory. This should point to the top level directory of your GATE installation. This is the only property that is required. If this is not set, the system will display an error message and them it will attempt to guess the correct value.
gate.plugins.home
points to the location of the directory containing installed plugins (a.k.a. CREOLE directories). If this is not set then the default value of {gate.home}/plugins is used.
gate.site.config
points to the location of the configuration file containing the site-wide options. If not set this will default to {gate.home}/gate.xml. The site configuration file must exist!
gate.user.config
points to the file containing the user’s options. If not specified, or if the specified file does not exist at startup time, the default value of gate.xml (.gate.xml on Unix platforms) in the user’s home directory is used.
gate.user.session
points to the file containing the user’s saved session. If not specified, the default value of gate.session (.gate.session on Unix) in the user’s home directory is used. When starting up GATE Developer, the session is reloaded from this file if it exists, and when exiting GATE Developer the session is saved to this file (unless the user has disabled ‘save session on exit’ in the configuration dialog). The session is not used when using GATE Embedded.
gate.user.filechooser.defaultdir
sets the default directory to be shown in the file chooser of GATE Developer to the specified directory instead of the user’s operating-system specific default directory.
load.plugin.path
is a path-like structure, i.e. a list of URLs separated by ‘;’. All directories listed here will be loaded as CREOLE plugins during initialisation. This has similar functionality with the the -d command line option.
gate.builtin.creole.dir
is a URL pointing to the location of GATE’s built-in CREOLE directory. This is the location of the creole.xml file that defines the fundamental GATE resource types, such as documents, document format handlers, controllers and the basic visual resources that make up GATE. The default points to a location inside gate.jar and should not generally need to be overridden.

When using GATE Embedded, you can set the values for these properties before you call Gate.init(). Alternatively, you can set the values programmatically using the static methods setGateHome(), setPluginsHome(), setSiteConfigFile(), etc. before calling Gate.init(). See the Javadoc documentation for details. If you want to set these values from the command line you can use the following syntax for setting gate.home for example:

java -Dgate.home=/my/new/gate/home/directory -cp... gate.Main

When running GATE Developer, you can set the properties by creating a file build.properties in the top level GATE directory. In this file, any system properties which are prefixed with ‘run.’ will be passed to GATE. For example, to set an alternative user config file, put the following line in build.properties1:

run.gate.user.config=${user.home}/alternative-gate.xml

This facility is not limited to the GATE-specific properties listed above, for example the following line changes the default temporary directory for GATE (note the use of forward slashes, even on Windows platforms):

run.java.io.tmpdir=d:/bigtmp

When running GATE Developer from the command line via ant or via the gate.sh script you can set properties using -D. Note that the “run” prefix is required when using ant:

ant run -Drun.gate.user.config=/my/path/to/user/config.file

but not when using gate.sh:

./bin/gate.sh -Dgate.user.config=/my/path/to/user/config.file

The GATE Developer launcher also supports the system property gate.class.path to specify additional classpath entries that should be added to the classloader that is used to load GATE classes. This is expected to be in the normal “classpath” format, i.e. a list of directory or JAR file paths separated by semicolons on Windows and colons on other platforms. The standard Java 6 shorthand of /path/to/directory/*2 to include all .jar files from a given directory is also supported. As an alternative to this system property, the environment variable GATE_CLASSPATH can be used, but the environment variable is only read if the system property is not set.

./bin/gate.sh -Dgate.class.path=/shared/lib/myclasses.jar

2.4 Configuring GATE [#]

When GATE Developer is started, or when Gate.init() is called from GATE Embedded, GATE loads various sorts of configuration data stored as XML in files generally called something like gate.xml or .gate.xml. This data holds information such as:

This type of data is stored at two levels (in order from general to specific):

Where configuration data appears on several different levels, the more specific ones overwrite the more general. This means that you can set defaults for all GATE users on your system, for example, and allow individual users to override those defaults without interfering with others.

Configuration data can be set from the GATE Developer GUI via the ‘Options’ menu then ‘Configuration’. The user can change the appearance of the GUI in the ‘Appearance’ tab, which includes the options of font and the ‘look and feel’. The ‘Advanced’ tab enables the user to include annotation features when saving the document and preserving its format, to save the selected Options automatically on exit, and to save the session automatically on exit. The ‘Input Methods’ submenu from the ‘Options’ menu enables the user to change the default language for input. These options are all stored in the user’s .gate.xml file.

When using GATE Embedded, you can also set the site config location using Gate.setSiteConfigFile(File) prior to calling Gate.init().

2.5 Building GATE [#]

Note that you don’t need to build GATE unless you’re doing development on the system itself.

Prerequisites:

To build gate, cd to gate and:

  1. Type:
    ant
  2. [optional] To test the system:
    ant test
  3. [optional] To make the Javadoc documentation:
    ant doc
  4. You can also run GATE Developer using Ant, by typing:
    ant run
  5. To see a full list of options type: ant help

(The details of the build process are all specified by the build.xml file in the gate directory.)

You can also use a development environment like Eclipse (the required .project file and other metadata are included with the sources), but note that it’s still advisable to use ant to generate documentation, the jar file and so on. Also note that the run configurations have the location of a gate.xml site configuration file hard-coded into them, so you may need to change these for your site.

2.5.1 Using GATE with Maven/Ivy [#]

This section is based on contributions by Marin Nozhchev (Ontotext) and Benson Margulies (Basis Technology Corp).

Stable releases of GATE (since 5.2.1) are available in the standard central Maven repository, with group ID “uk.ac.gate” and artifact ID “gate-core”. To use GATE in a Maven-based project you can simply add a dependency:

<dependency>  
  <groupId>uk.ac.gate</groupId>  
  <artifactId>gate-core</artifactId>  
  <version>6.0</version>  
</dependency>

Similarly, with a project that uses Ivy for dependency management:

<dependency org="uk.ac.gate" name="gate-core" rev="6.0"/>

In addition you will require the matching versions of any GATE plugins you wish to use in your application – these are not managed by Maven or Ivy, but can be obtained from the standard GATE release download or downloaded using the GATE Developer plugin manager as appropriate.

Nightly snapshot builds of gate-core are available from our own Maven repository at http://repo.gate.ac.uk/content/groups/public.

2.6 Uninstalling GATE [#]

If you have used the installer, run:

java -jar uninstaller.jar

or just delete the whole of the installation directory (the one containing bin, lib, Uninstaller, etc.). The installer doesn’t install anything outside this directory, but for completeness you might also want to delete the settings files GATE creates in your home directory (.gate.xml and .gate.session).

2.7 Troubleshooting [#]

See the FAQ on the GATE Wiki for frequent questions about running and using GATE.

1In this specific case, the alternative config file must already exist when GATE starts up, so you should copy your standard gate.xml file to the new location.

2Remember to protect the * from expansion by your shell if necessary.