Rogue wrote:
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Karl Larsen wrote:
Ed Greshko wrote:
Karl Larsen wrote:
Les Mikesell wrote:
Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
Your complaints about the GPL always boil down to the
Returning to Java, I have installed the one from the Sun web site.
It is an rpm with a wrapper that allows them to force you to sign
something. Then it installs something but it must be incomplete.
I want java so I can load jedit so I can write to the wiki at the
Fedora Doc's site. It is supposed to be simple. The jedit site said do
this:
$ jar jedit4.3pre12install.jar
but alas there is no active jar on my Fedora. Earlier Fedora it worked
but on F8 it doesn't.
What have I done wrong?
I don't know what you did wrong. But on my F8 system I did install
Sun's jdk (jdk-6u3-linux-i586.rpm)
and there is /usr/bin/jar.
I looked and no /usr/bin/jar but there is a /usr/bin/java which lead
to gij which seems to work but not. It did this:
[karl@k5di Desktop]$ gij jedit4.3pre12install.jar
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError:
jedit4.3pre12install.jar
at gnu.java.lang.MainThread.run(libgcj.so.8rh)
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: jedit4.3pre12install.jar
not found in gnu.gcj.runtime.SystemClassLoader{urls=[file:./],
parent=gnu.gcj.runtime.ExtensionClassLoader{urls=[], parent=null}}
at java.net.URLClassLoader.findClass(libgcj.so.8rh)
at gnu.gcj.runtime.SystemClassLoader.findClass(libgcj.so.8rh)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(libgcj.so.8rh)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(libgcj.so.8rh)
at gnu.java.lang.MainThread.run(libgcj.so.8rh)
[karl@k5di Desktop]$
It appears that the jedit file may be bad.
Geeze
Karl
Karl,
If you are doing a default x86 Sun JDK install, you will find the
distributables in /usr/java/jdk.../bin directory. If you are using Java
6 then you should also see /usr/java/default and /usr/java/latest
symlinks pointing to the Java6 directory.
You could add /usr/java/default/bin to your path (either by modifying
/etc/profile file, or in any other file that you use to setup your
environment)
Now, you should be able to run whatever command that you wanted to run:
java -jar XYZ.jar
HTH,
Rogue
Hi Rogue, I would never guessed the above. Turns out you need to be
using a root login. But I have the jEdit installed but now reading the
man page to see how to do it :-)
Thank you so much. I was sure that having no /usr/bin/jar meant I did
something wrong. But the new stuff takes new ways. Thanks a lot!
Karl
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--
Karl F. Larsen, AKA K5DI
Linux User
#450462 http://counter.li.org.
PGP 4208 4D6E 595F 22B9 FF1C ECB6 4A3C 2C54 FE23 53A7
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