Date: Wed, 01 Feb 2006 11:56:17 +0200 From: Panagiotis Astithas <past@ebs.gr> To: martinko <martinkov@pobox.sk> Cc: Micah <micahjon@ywave.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, freebsd-java@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Java Virtual Machine Message-ID: <43E085C1.70206@ebs.gr> In-Reply-To: <43E07DA9.2020006@pobox.sk> References: <43C02026.5020707@gmail.com> <43C041B8.2080008@ywave.com> <43D3D60C.4090502@pobox.sk> <43D3DD95.4040308@ywave.com> <43E07DA9.2020006@pobox.sk>
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martinko wrote: > Micah wrote: > >> martinko wrote: >> >>> Micah wrote: >>> >>>> Porpoise Power wrote: >>>> >>>>> Which Java VM is the best for freebsd 5.4, running gnome2, and >>>>> firefox? >>>>> >>>>> James Best >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Both the native jdk14 and jdk15 provide good Java VMs. jdk15 is >>>> newer and might be unstable (hasn't been for me). jdk14 is more >>>> tested and is the "default" java for FreeBSD on i386. >>>> >>>> HTH, >>>> Micah >>> >>> >>> can you have both versions installed ? >>> and how do you choose which one of them to use (for instance in >>> mozilla) ? >>> >>> m. >> >> >> Yes, you can have both installed at the same time. >> /usr/ports/java/javavmwrapper makes switching JVMs easy using >> environment variables, however it doesn't seem to support switching >> browser plugins. For that you'd probably have to switch the symlink >> in /usr/X11R6/lib/browser_plugins and restart the browser. >> >> HTH, >> Micah >> >> >> >> >> >> > > hello, > > i've just tried it and realised it had already been installed as a jdk* > dependency. :) > > however, according to the man page, running the following should select > the most native and up-to-date version of java: > > $ java -version > java version "1.4.2-p8" > Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build > 1.4.2-p8-root_21_jan_2006_21_32) > Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM (build 1.4.2-p8-root_21_jan_2006_21_32, mixed > mode) > > however, i've got newer version installed too: > > $ cat /usr/local/etc/javavms > /usr/local/jdk1.5.0/bin/java # FREEBSD-JDK1.5.0 > /usr/local/jdk1.4.2/bin/java # FREEBSD-JDK1.4.2 > /usr/local/linux-sun-jdk1.4.2/bin/java # Linux-Sun-JDK1.4.2.10 > > how come 1.5.0 wasn't selected in the example above please ?? Because it is not supposed to be as well-tested as the 1.4 version. Of course as the man page says, you can set various combinations of environment variables to influence the choice, which is what most of us do. Cheers, Panagiotis
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