Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-08 Thread Romain Dalmaso
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 4:00 AM,  urza9...@gmail.com wrote:
 If you're
 launching with the shell script (is there a launcher shell script anymore?),
 you could just change where it calls java and hardcode your own location as
 above.

Don't do that. It's stupid. Edit the wrapper.java.command=java line
in the wrapper.conf file.
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Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-08 Thread Uriel Carrasquilla

 Don't do that. Edit the wrapper.java.command=java line
 in the wrapper.conf file.

This is a nice clean solution.  Thank you.
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Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-08 Thread Uriel Carrasquilla


 Edit the wrapper.java.command=java line
 in the wrapper.conf file.


I must be doing something wrong.
I started from scratch by deleting the freenet directory followed by a tar 
-xzvf freenet...tar.gz.
Then, I changed wrapper.con file as follow:
wrapper.java.command=$HOME/bin/java

I did an ls $HOME/bin/java to confirm.
Then, I ran $HOME/bin/java -version to confirm it is SUN's 1.6 version.

When I tried to run ./run.sh start, it gave me the default Linux Open JVM 
(that I cannot change since I don't have root access).

I started from scratch again, tar, followed by modify wrapper.conf.
This time, I went into run.sh and every call to java, I changed to 
$HOME/bin/java.
Then, I did the same with ./freenet/bin/1run.sh and changed very called to java 
to $HOME/bin/java.

At this point I did a cd ./freenet and typed:
./bin/1run.sh

Everything was looking great until I got a message:  crontab command not found. 
 Well, I don't have crontab and I won't be getting it from my hosting company.
I verified by typing which crontab, the failing command.

I thought, well, I will just have to start freenet (./run.sh start) every time 
I reboot (or put in my own profile).

I proceeded to do a ./run.sh status.
I was told freenet was not running.
I proceeded to ./run.sh start

Got the following messages:
Starting freenet 0.7

When I do the ./run.sh status:  no luck, it is not running.

When I look at freenet.ini, it is very small with only 7 lines.

By the way, for some reason I can only have 128M for my JVM.
I went into wrapper.conf and the line the comments tell me to change (I removed 
the # in the 1st column), I ended the line with MaxPermSize=128m.

When I looked at ./log/wrapper.log, there is a message saying unable to start 
JVM.  It is repeated quite a few times along with no such file or directory.
I doubled checked that I can run Java:
$HOME/bin/java -version

Could it be that $HOME is causing problems?
Could it be that I need to type /$HOME in all the files?

I promise to put together the documentation once we get this project going.

Thank you all for your help so far.






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Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-08 Thread Dennis Nezic
On Wed, 8 Sep 2010 22:10:22 -0400, Uriel Carrasquilla wrote:
 
 
  Edit the wrapper.java.command=java line
  in the wrapper.conf file.
 
 
 I must be doing something wrong.
 I started from scratch by deleting the freenet directory followed by
 a tar -xzvf freenet...tar.gz. Then, I changed wrapper.con file as
 follow: wrapper.java.command=$HOME/bin/java
 [...]
 Could it be that $HOME is causing problems?

Could be. Try not using variables, but instead /home/fullpath/bin/java.
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Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-07 Thread Eric Chadbourne
On 09/07/2010 08:33 PM, Uriel Carrasquilla wrote:
 I don't have root access to my machine.
 I installed Sun Java 1.6 in my own user directory.
 I created a java a soft link in $HOME/bin.
 But I cannot put $HOME/bin ahead of the other libraries in $PATH.
 How can I force freenet to use the java version in $HOME/bin?
 
 Or if this is not the right approach, what would suggest?

at terminal can you export JAVA_HOME and then type env and see what it says?

alternatively can you specify which java version to use when starting
freenet?  off the top of my head i can't remember how to do this at
terminal.  i have two versions of java installed and gnome let's me
select which version to use when i right click on the jar.

hope that helps,
eric c



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Re: [freenet-support] How to force freenet to use a non-default java

2010-09-07 Thread urza9814
If you're running the jar directly, you could just hardcode the path to Java
in front of it. i.e. instead of typing 'java -jar freenet.jar' you could
type something like '~/bin/java -jar freenet.jar'...and you could put that
into a shell script or some kind of shortcut to make it easier. If you're
launching with the shell script (is there a launcher shell script anymore?),
you could just change where it calls java and hardcode your own location as
above. If you're already launching Freenet from a shortcut of some type, try
right-clicking or looking around for some way to edit the command that it's
running and make the changes I've suggested above.

I realize this is all bit vague - I haven't used 0.7 (well, tried it a few
times, always returned to 0.5), and I also don't know what kind of system
you're running, but hopefully that will give you a general idea. If you have
any specific issues or questions about what I've said, I may be able to help
you out further.

On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 9:43 PM, Eric Chadbourne
eric.chadbou...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 09/07/2010 08:33 PM, Uriel Carrasquilla wrote:
  I don't have root access to my machine.
  I installed Sun Java 1.6 in my own user directory.
  I created a java a soft link in $HOME/bin.
  But I cannot put $HOME/bin ahead of the other libraries in $PATH.
  How can I force freenet to use the java version in $HOME/bin?
 
  Or if this is not the right approach, what would suggest?

 at terminal can you export JAVA_HOME and then type env and see what it
 says?

 alternatively can you specify which java version to use when starting
 freenet?  off the top of my head i can't remember how to do this at
 terminal.  i have two versions of java installed and gnome let's me
 select which version to use when i right click on the jar.

 hope that helps,
 eric c


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