years, you might even save money *and* get Java support included.
Blake
-Original Message-
From: Manuel Strehl [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2005 11:40 AM
To: fop-users@xmlgraphics.apache.org
Subject: Re: Compiled FOP versions
Hi again.
Thanks for the reply.
My
Hi again.
Thanks for the reply.
My provider's got PHP and Perl running. But I only have 200MB of
webspace and am not allowed to install things that need root rights.
I also looked up the JSE package at sun.com, and the complete pack is
~150MB. Only the core files still need 100MB. That's a bit
Without servlets and JSPs, what will your provider allow you use to
execute programs on the server--ASP, PHP, or cgi? A pure HTTP server
will not be able to activate programs, regardless of what you can
compile FOP into. Is the provider using IIS or Apache as the web server?
My thinking, alo
You're pretty much out of luck at the moment. It is on my list to make
FOP compile with GCJ/Classpath but so far I've had no time to go after
it. At the moment a JVM is simply required.
What you can try, though, is install a JVM for that machine yourself.
But you have to figure out yourself if you
Hi there.
I didn't find any post in the last months concerning my point. If it was
discussed earlier, I'd like to apologize.
My Problem: My provider doesn't offer a Java VM on the servers. So I'm
looking for another possibility to run FOP. I found out (at Wikipedia)
that you can compile Java