Re: JDK1.1.5 with RedHat
> > I have the same problem. > I installed the libc version. > I also tried jdk 1.1.6 and nothing changed. > I have installed the latest version of libc 5.4.44 and ld.so > I ' d b egrateful if you helped me. I have installed the glibc version of jdk 1.1.6 (last night) and was getting core dumps from all of the individual components except 'java', oddly enough. On reading the docs more carefully, it stated that glibc 2.0.7 (I believe) was required. I downloaded 2.0.13 from redhat, installed the RPM, and everything is now working perfectly. I've only been on this mailing list about 30 mins :-) Regards, Vin > > On 11 Jun 1998, Preben Randhol wrote: > > > * "this is Zhao, Lenny" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > | hi guys, I am not sure if anyone experence this problem before. After I > > | installed 1.1.5 under RedHat5.0, I just typed "javac"to see if it is > > | working, it give a me segmentation fault(core dump). It supposed to give > > > > did you install the glibc version? > > > > -- > > Preben Randhol| Linux was made by foreign terrorists > > Tlf73940929/(735)94076 [arb] | to take money from true US > > Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]| companies like Microsoft. > > http://www.pvv.org/~randhol/ | -- Some AOL'er. > > > >
Re: JDK1.1.5 with RedHat
> > > I'm having the same problem with Redhat 4.2 and the libc version - > my javac dumps core, but java works fine (as does appletviewer). I > suppose it is because of the same problem? Does anyone have the ftp url > for glibc handy at the redhat site? I can't find anyting in that directory > structure :) It's available for download from : ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/updates/5.0/i386/glibc-2.0.7-13.i386.rpm (really intuitive :-) It's about 3.5MB in size. Good luck, Vin
Re: Out of memory
> > Hi Paris > > Look at > http://www.blackdown.org/java-linux/docs/faq/FAQ-java-linux-5.html#ss5.7 > > I believe that you need more memory - check how big is your swap and make it > bigger. As I know javac and javadoc eat a lot of memory (can someone explains > why?). And when you run X, part of your memory already eaten. Netscape might > eat A LOT more... so big swap is a good idea. > > For the swaping look in > http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/linux.html#ldp in one of the guides > (linux installation guide, linux sysadmin guide ...) > > BTW - make backups before playing with the swap and with partitions... > > Rani. > > On Fri, Jun 12, 1998 at 12:13:06PM +0300, Paris Flegas wrote: > > When i am running X-windows and run javac it says > > "**Out of memory,exiting**" > > but when I am not in Xwindows javac works perfectly. > > What can I do so I can free some memory? Also, look at the graphics settings you're using for X, such as bpp (bits per pixel). If you're using a high quality mode, such as 16bpp, then your X server could be eating a *lot* of memory, such as 20MB or more. Dropping your graphics quality to 8pp will save you a good bit of memory. Good luck, Vin
Re: Is there a linux java editing tool?
> > > > > > > Matt > > > > I reccomend vi, but many people think emacs is a good editor. > > > > will it do sintaxis highlighting and stuff? NEdit v5.0 is an excellent X-based editor, which does syntax highlighting for a wide variety of languages, including java. You can customise it to your own tastes easily, it has built- in support for running external applications such as 'javac', and is available as a precompiled binary for linux at : ftp://ftp.fnal.gov/pub/nedit/v5_0 Regards, Vin
Re: Survey, what tool do you use?
> > > No nedit users? Yup, me. Vin
