I think the only chance to get Java for mips Linux is
the other Opensource Java called "kaffe". Try
compiling the source for Kaffe (from
http://www.kaffe.org). They have mips-Linux as a
supported platform in the sourcecode tree. Whether
it's fully supported and 64bit i dont know.
You will also nee
I fixed it... Not sure how I fixed it or why it's working now...
I know that I d/l'd from the top most link at the sun-java page and
installed it.
Linux RPM (self-extracting file)
(filesize: 15.74 MB) That didn't work...
I d/l'd from the second link ...
Linux (self-extracting file)
(filesize: 1
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 03:23:16PM +0200, Juergen Kreileder wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I had a look at the sources and I was able to build them on my x86
machine.
The port seems to be possible. I even think that the blackdown java team
has already done it.
Yes an
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 03:23:16PM +0200, Juergen Kreileder wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >I had a look at the sources and I was able to build them on my x86
> >machine.
> >
> >The port seems to be possible. I even think that the blackdown java team
> >has already done it.
>
> Yes and it's m
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to run the only 1.4 jdk released for the linux sparc arch.
Unfortunately, the only version available for sparc is the 1.4.1 which
began to broke around the availability of the glibc 2.3.6.
Now, some bug have been filed against this but noone ever responded to
Remember that a socket isn't closed until both stream directions are
shut down. It kinda looks like the remote end has either become
unreachable or isn't implementing TCP active close properly. You're
sending data which it is not ACKing, and it's not sending an RST either.
It may be stuck for s
Marek Pawinski wrote:
Hi
I am trying to install a app which uses java during the installation
process.
I get this error : ./setup.bin
"Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError:
com/zerog/lax/LAX"
Java looks for the com.zerog.lax.LAX class, so
it must be within reach for the runt
On Saturday 21 August 2004 21:38, Dave Barker-Plummer wrote:
> We are beginning to port our Java application to Linux and want to
> ensure that we are testing on a configuration that is sufficiently
> "typical" to maximize our chances that it will run for our users. My
> assumption is that we will
Sam Varshavchik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Keith Poirier writes:
>
>> I have RH Update 3 (beta) (also tried on update 2) installed on a
>> proliant 360G4 which uses the new Intel EM64T chip. I installed
>> jre-1_5_0-beta2-linux-amd64.rpm from Blackdown.org but when I link
>> to the java plugin,
Keith Poirier writes:
I have RH Update 3 (beta) (also tried on update 2) installed on a
proliant 360G4 which uses the new Intel EM64T chip. I installed
jre-1_5_0-beta2-linux-amd64.rpm from Blackdown.org but when I link to
the java plugin, and access a java app via mozilla it crashes:
Intel's EM64
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On March 13, 2004 15:02, Jean-Sebastien Bettez wrote:
> Hello,
> is there a porting plan for jdk 1.4 and/or jdk 1.5 on linux/arm?
>
> seeya!
It look like there's no one working on this project.
We would like to do the jdk1.5 arm port.
Do we have to
Thank for your response, but i found the solution : all is ok with the jdk1.4.2_04 instead of jdk1.4.1 !!!
Dirk Weigenand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
18/03/2004 15:32
Pour : BRUGAT Didier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc :
Objet : Re: Jav
I am actually running gentoo linux with glibc 2.3.1 which does not have the
LD_ASSUME_KERNEL option. From what I know, this forces glibc 2.1.3 (on
Redhat) to be used. However gentoo does not support this from what I can
tell. The system breaks when this variable is used.
On a performance note, I
Hi,
Remember that IBM-jvm needs the following environment variable:
LD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5
You could try this and see if page faults continue arising.
Regards,
Marco Trevisan
Narendra Sankar wrote:
hi
I ran a very simple thread creation benchmark on various vms to find out how
useful my
I would be more than happy to help with builds of the Blackdown JVM.
What do we have to do to get CVS access?
Narendra Sankar wrote:
Hi Everyone
Since I discovered Jedit, I have been looking into jvm performance,
specifically on linux as that is my platform of choice. I love jedit and it
has a
>I installed Linux on my ipaq and the j2re1.3.1 for ARM in my /home
>directory. I set PATH to /home/j2re1.3.1/bin. But there is he
>problem: There is no java file in that directory so typing java into
>the console brings up java not found"
There should be a file named .java_wrapper in this direc
Heiner Litz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I installed Linux on my ipaq and the j2re1.3.1 for ARM in my /home
> directory. I set PATH to /home/j2re1.3.1/bin. But there is he
> problem: There is no java file in that directory
Your filesystem doesn't understand symlinks, use a real one.
J
Run:
xprop -root -remove _MOTIF_DEFAULT_BINDINGS
at the prompt and it should take care of the warnings.
Barr
On Fri, 9 Aug 2002, jordan muscott wrote:
> i don't know if this exactly helps - but i have had the same sort of
> error messages from time to time. They don't seem fatal ( on my b
i don't know if this exactly helps - but i have had the same sort of
error messages from time to time. They don't seem fatal ( on my box )
,and IIRC i tracked them down to using a java plugin for mozilla from
one JDK, whilst having my PATH set up to use a different JDK elsewhere.
Seems a bit wei
On Sat, 13 Apr 2002 12:23:33 -0400 (EDT)
"Thomas Cowdery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
--snip--
> Warning: Cannot convert string " Home,_Key_Begin" to type Virtual
> Binding
>
--snip--
These can be safely ignored; they are just teliing you that they can not
bind to particular (hot)key c
Man Chi Ly,
On Sat, 06 Apr 2002 11:13, in Re: Java plugins for Mozilla in
Linux, you wrote:
> I think I covered all bases in this lengthy response. :-)
And i appreciate it very much, thank you.
I went ahead and did the .rpm.bin thing and it all worked
marvelously. Mozilla has its plu
Mark Christiaens,
On Fri, 05 Apr 2002 20:02, in Re: Java plugins for Mozilla in
Linux, you wrote:
> This runs the demo that is stored in the Java2Demo.jar file. It
> should come up in a matter of seconds. If this works properly,
> everything is probably ok since this is a fairl
Olivier Rossel,
On Fri, 05 Apr 2002 20:59, in Re: Java plugins for Mozilla in
Linux, you wrote:
> My piece of advice would be:
> do not use the rpm.bin!
> use the .bin.
Could you say why? I am new to all this but have also been told to
make sure the rpmdatebase remains inform
Jerome,
On Fri, 05 Apr 2002 21:47, in Re: Java in Mandrake 8.1, you wrote:
> staroffice is very particular about which java it will use, I
> think it insists on 1.1.8. You can find more about this and
> other problems with staroffice on the linux in the staroffice
> discussion a
On 2002-04-04 15:21:56 -0500, Pierre Neihouser wrote:
> Looks like my Red Hat 7.1 system is getting old and I have some catch up to
> do.
RH doesn't package any Java, just gcj.
Best regards
Martin
--
Martin Schröder, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ArtCom GmbH, Grazer St
Mark Christiaens,
On Fri, 05 Apr 2002 18:50, in Re: Java plugins for Mozilla in
Linux, you wrote:
Thanks for the promt help from the list!
> If you have the Sun JDK 1.4.0 installed, the plugin is in:
>
> /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.0/jre/plugin/i386/ns610/libjavaplugin_oji140.s
>o
&g
I recently used JRE 1.4 with netscape 6.2.2 and that worked you can do the
same for mozilla too.
Download JRE 1.4 if you can (1.3.1 does work too but I've seen a couple
of annoying glitches with the default plugin they have)
Then do the following, if libjavaplugin_oji does not exist don't worry.
OTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2002 1:56 PM
Subject: RE: Java in Mandrake 8.1
> I beg to differ,
> SuSE's 7.3 distro comes with at least 3 jdks. Sun1.3.0, Sun1.1.8, and
> IBM1.3.0 Anyone can be ins
EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Java in Mandrake 8.1
I can't agree more with you. Distros don't usually install the JDK or JRE,
that's a licensing problem I suppose but Sun should do something about this.
I mean even Mac OS comes up with the JDK installed !!
Now, I thought that jav
On Thu, 4 Apr 2002, Pierre Neihouser wrote:
> I can't agree more with you. Distros don't usually install the JDK or JRE,
> that's a licensing problem I suppose but Sun should do something about this.
> I mean even Mac OS comes up with the JDK installed !!
Wait a second, I own a copy of SuSE 7.1 (
gt;
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2002 12:10 PM
Subject: Re: Java in Mandrake 8.1
> On Thu, 4 Apr 2002, Pierre Neihouser wrote:
> > I believe you should look for java all lowercase. Locate is case
sensitive
> > (afai remember).
> Yes it is, and yes he
On Thu, 4 Apr 2002, Pierre Neihouser wrote:
> I believe you should look for java all lowercase. Locate is case sensitive
> (afai remember).
Yes it is, and yes he probably should. But why not try `locate -i`,
and if that doesn't work you could also try running updatedb (this
updates the database lo
I believe you should look for java all lowercase. Locate is case sensitive
(afai remember).
I don't have my Linux box with me (and I don't have Open Office installed on
it anyway), but that would be where I would start...
Hope it helps,
-- Pierre
- Original Message -
From: "Walter Log
Hi,
If you have the download edition of mandrake 8.1 there is no java
installed only kaffe which is as far as I know not suitable to use it
with StarOffice. For a proper support you should download and install
Java2 SDK (either get it from www.blackdown.org or from java.sun.com)
Greets,
won't be able to write to a cramfs partition, but if you're
using it for storing the j2re, you wouldn't want to anyway.
-Original Message-
From: Shuai Liu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 6:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Java-Linux] will
e how to do that or where to find related instruction? Thanks
a lot.
Shuai
>From: "Shuai Liu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: [Java-Linux] will JRE1.3.1 fit in iPaq 3600?
>Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2002 17:13:42 +
>
>Hi, Jesse
>
>Than
PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 12:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Java-Linux] will JRE1.3.1 fit in iPaq 3600?
Hi, Jesse
Thank you for the message?
But 3800 with 64MB of ROM? Did you mean RAM? Because I found 3800 has
only
32MB ROM.
Also, I have never used a CF card before
;To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: RE: [Java-Linux] will JRE1.3.1 fit in iPaq 3600?
>Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2002 08:44:59 -0500
>
>I wave installed it on a 3800 with 64MB of ROM, but believe it or not,
>it leaves plenty of room thanks to jffs2; however, I would recommend
>installi
I wave installed it on a 3800 with 64MB of ROM, but believe it or not,
it leaves plenty of room thanks to jffs2; however, I would recommend
installing it on a CF card. Try to leave as much room available for
other more vital support utilities.
Also make sure you install:
libstdc++2.10-glibc2.2
On Mon, Feb 11, 2002 at 01:47:00PM -0800, Calvin Austin wrote:
> The Sun 1.3.1 release was tested with Japanese Redhat 6.2J, are you using
> a similar Japanese distribution? I know we have tests with kinput2 and eucJP
well, the latest debian, with all the proper encodings and locales
installed, a
You can find gcj http://gcc.gnu.org/java/
You can find towerj http://www.towerj.com/
TowerJ just realeased version 3.8 and it's supposed to have a smaller
footprint. (You pay through the nose for it).
Michael D. Schleif wrote:
>Edgar Villanueva wrote:
>
>>There are a bunch of ways to do thi
Ross Mark wrote:
>
> If you don't need a 1.2 jvm then try Kaffe as last time I tried it
> the footprint was <5M. Depending on how much space you have the full
> 1.1.8 jre from Blackdown is a fair bit smaller than the 1.2.
I didn't find any glibc20 1.1.8 at blackdown.org -- please, point it out
> > gcj is the gcc java compiler.
>
> I want to investigate this -- do you have any links? I really need to
> know how big that new library is.
http://gcc.gnu.org/java ... though it's not yet had work done
to optimize it for a particularly small footprint.
-
Edgar Villanueva wrote:
>
> There are a bunch of ways to do this with alot of constraints.
>
> More details would be required to answer this correctly.
>
> One way which may work is compiling the java application into native
> code with gcj.
>
> gcj is the gcc java compiler.
>
> There are so
There are a bunch of ways to do this with alot of constraints.
More details would be required to answer this correctly.
One way which may work is compiling the java application into native
code with gcj.
gcj is the gcc java compiler.
There are some issues with this. gcj requires a library j
Thanks Nathan,
I managed to upgrade to an official Mesa library (this was mentioned in the
README-Java3D) and
also used the newest ver 4.0.1. Not sure why it didnt work the first time. But it
works now.
:)
Happy Holidays to all ...
-Eryk
>A note I found in the Flightgear-users archive su
On Mon, Dec 24, 2001 at 10:19:59AM -0800, Eryk Furman wrote:
> Hi all this is my first post, I just started developing Java under Linux, cuz
>frankly i cant deal
> with Microsoft's OS's anymore. I am running Red Hat 7.1, Java 2 jdk1.4 beta 3,
>blackdown java3d
> 1.3. Im running this on an IBM
On 21 Dec 2001, Jesse Stockall wrote:
> On Fri, 2001-12-21 at 14:45, Kunal Bisla wrote:
> > Hi ALL,
> > Does any body know of an implemantation of java comm
> > api for linux
> > thanks ,
> > Kunal
>
> If you read Sun's FAQ
> http://java.sun.com/products/javacomm/javadocs/CommAPI_FAQ.txt
>
yes I have implemented java comm support on Linux. IBM has a comm
package that can be installed and configured rather easily with java 2
all the docs are included and it really only involves copy the right
jars into the right places. I know for a fact that SuSE linux ships the
IBM comm packa
On Fri, 2001-12-21 at 14:45, Kunal Bisla wrote:
> Hi ALL,
> Does any body know of an implemantation of java comm
> api for linux
> thanks ,
> Kunal
If you read Sun's FAQ
http://java.sun.com/products/javacomm/javadocs/CommAPI_FAQ.txt
You will find a reference to
http://www.interstice.com/kevi
Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'll test it with the static version.
OK, that may be the problem...
> IIRC RedHat 6.1 used a different family name for the symbol font. Try:
Well, for starters, Calvin Austin supplied me with an updated
font.properties file.
Phil Boutros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Hm, works fine here with "Opera 5.05TP1 for Linux - 20010807 Build
>> 030
>> - [5]". Do you use the static or dynamic QT version?
>
> I use Opera 5.05TP1 for Linux - 20010807 Build 030 - [5],
>
Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hm, works fine here with "Opera 5.05TP1 for Linux - 20010807 Build 030
> - [5]". Do you use the static or dynamic QT version?
I use Opera 5.05TP1 for Linux - 20010807 Build 030 - [5],
also, static version.
Calvin Austin is trying
Phil Boutros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Is JavaScript enabled in Netscape?
>
> Well...I feel like a real moron. I didn't see anything that
> said that Javascript was supposed to be turned on, and I have it off
> 99.9% of the time!
I'
Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Is JavaScript enabled in Netscape?
Well...I feel like a real moron. I didn't see anything that
said that Javascript was supposed to be turned on, and I have it off
99.9% of the time!
Turning it on solved the problem in Netscape.
Phil Boutros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> How did you install the 1.3.1 plugin? With a symlink to
>> javaplugin.so?
>
> Yes.
>
>> Please set JAVA_PLUGIN_TRACE=1 and send the output you get when
>> plugin starts up.
>
> OK. An
Juergen Kreileder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> How did you install the 1.3.1 plugin? With a symlink to
> javaplugin.so?
Yes.
> Please set JAVA_PLUGIN_TRACE=1 and send the output you get when plugin
> starts up.
OK. Another person asked me the same thing. Here's what it
g
Phil Boutros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have tried the blackdown 1.3.1 JRE, 1.2.2 JRE, and the Sun
> 1.3.1 JRE, all with corresponding plugins for Netscape (using 4.78).
How did you install the 1.3.1 plugin? With a symlink to
javaplugin.so?
> Now, with version 1.3.1 (either t
the best book is Thinking in Java.
You can find here
http://www.mindview.net/Books/TIJ/
Bye
Nicola
> Greetings,
> I am new to this list and to the Java programming language. As
such, I
> would like to post my first question. Does anyone know where there
might be
> an online Language Refe
Here it is:
http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/
On Tue, 6 Nov 2001, Sage net31 wrote:
> Greetings,
> I am new to this list and to the Java programming language. As such, I
> would like to post my first question. Does anyone know where there might be
> an online Language Reference ma
On Tue, Nov 06, 2001 at 10:15:20AM -0500, Sage net31 wrote:
> I am not talking about the language specification that is typically offered,
> rather, a book(or online manual) that offers a relativley complete
> collection of all standard classes and methods.
What's wrong with the JavaDoc that ca
Man Chi Ly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I was curious which version of Mozilla the Java Plugin in Blackdown
> JDK 1.3.0 is compatible with.
It was written for M18 originally.
> This bug shows the behavior with recent Mozilla builds:
>
> http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=107295
>
>
PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, October 05, 2001 7:44 AM
Subject: Re: Java 3D question
>
> On Wednesday 03 October 2001 08:36, Timothy Reaves wrote:
> > I have linux Java 3D working on my box. Are there any actual
> > applications out there for Java 3D, or just the little d
On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 06:46:52PM -0700, Nathan Meyers wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 06:32:11PM -0700, Dan Kegel wrote:
> > root wrote:
> > The 2.4 kernel uses 32 bit process ids, so that shouldn't be a
> > problem. Are there other precious resources you're worried about?
> > If not, there's
On Wednesday 03 October 2001 08:36, Timothy Reaves wrote:
> I have linux Java 3D working on my box. Are there any actual
> applications out there for Java 3D, or just the little demos that show
> that it works?
I believe RoboForge uses Java 3D. Anyone who knows better feel
free to correct me.
On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 06:32:11PM -0700, Dan Kegel wrote:
> root wrote:
> >
> > On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 02:22:51PM -0700, Dan Kegel wrote:
> > > Nathan Meyers wrote:
> > > > The current Linux implementation of POSIX threads uses the clone() kernel
> > > > call for each thread, resulting in a 1-1
On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 06:50:48AM -0700, Avi Cherry wrote:
> At 2:16 PM +0200 10/3/01, Florent Coste wrote:
> >I'm not a kernel guru too,
> >
> >but what know is that :
> >java threads are mapped to posix threads (linuxthreads in the glibc). The
> >linuxthreads library uses the kernel threads, wh
At 2:16 PM +0200 10/3/01, Florent Coste wrote:
>I'm not a kernel guru too,
>
>but what know is that :
>java threads are mapped to posix threads (linuxthreads in the glibc). The
>linuxthreads library uses the kernel threads, which directly map
>into a 'process
>like' entry in the scheduler. (1-1 m
> In Linux:
> Well, I hope to hear it from you guys. ;) ... since it is not in the book
> that I have and I am not a kernel guru ... and how is it different between
> 2.2 and 2.4.
Hello all,
I'm not a kernel guru too,
but what know is that :
java threads are mapped to posix threads (linuxthread
I've seen similar beharvior on a RedHat 7.1 system with
a 2.4.2 kernel:
[user@system]$ java -version
java version "1.3.1"
Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build Blackdown-1.3.1-FCS)
Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM (build Blackdown-1.3.1-FCS, mixed mode)
Another ex
This error, incidentally, comes about half the time,
running the command line repeatedly. Adding "-Xrs"
reduces the occurrence to about 1 out of 10 times (and
gives a different PC value, no surprise). Running from
jdb, the error doesn't occur at all.
Leads me to suspect a bug in java's shutdown c
Dear All
Have you got the J@Whiz test program for Java 2 Platform?
Could you help me having J@Whiz?
Thank
Nam
-Original Message-
From: David Brownell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, June 01, 2001 6:10 AM
To: Christopher Smith
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Fwd: Re: Java
> >
> >Chris!
> >
> >
> >I missed your talk at JavaOne, and not just because it was so early in
> >the morning. ;-)
> >
> >I missed the entire conference because I had some important things to
> >take care of, i.e. work!
> >
> >Are you going to post slides from your presentation anywhere? Can you
Christopher Smith wrote:
>
> On 31 May 2001 06:45:08 +1000, Jesus M. Salvo Jr. wrote:
> > > 4) Use JNI to use Linux's various asynch I/O API's.
> > Option 4) is how BEA WebLogic Server does it, ( I think ). They have this
> > libmuxer.so ( which is also available for Solaris -- dont know why when
hi all,
can anyone tell me if there is a way to trace into source code and find out
which class is invoked and which method in various java classes.
i don't have documentation of a project which i've been assigned to and need
to reverse engineer the classes and then get the various paths from th
|hi all, can anyone tell me if there is a way to trace into source
|code and find out which class is invoked and which method in
|various java classes. i don't have documentation of a project
|which i've been assigned to and need to reverse engineer the
|classes and then get the various paths fro
> > I may have missed this ... will this be covering GCJ?
> >
> > Compiled Java has some nice advantages. Including
> > more natural and efficient integration with native code,
> > as well as faster startup and the ability to do some
> > aggressive ahead-of-time optimizations, and working
> > be
On 31 May 2001 16:09:38 -0700, David Brownell wrote:
> I may have missed this ... will this be covering GCJ?
>
> Compiled Java has some nice advantages. Including
> more natural and efficient integration with native code,
> as well as faster startup and the ability to do some
> aggressive ahead-
I may have missed this ... will this be covering GCJ?
Compiled Java has some nice advantages. Including
more natural and efficient integration with native code,
as well as faster startup and the ability to do some
aggressive ahead-of-time optimizations, and working
better with standard OS tools
Christopher Smith wrote:
> On 31 May 2001 10:58:08 -0700, ed phillips wrote:
> > Thanks for providing this pre-session back and forth. Although I'm excited by
>
> Probably the only way I can get people to show up for 8:30am (someone at
> KeyMedia obviously doesn't like me).
>
> > the prospects a
Christopher Smith wrote:
> On 31 May 2001 06:45:08 +1000, Jesus M. Salvo Jr. wrote:
> > > 4) Use JNI to use Linux's various asynch I/O API's.
> > Option 4) is how BEA WebLogic Server does it, ( I think ). They have this
> > libmuxer.so ( which is also available for Solaris -- dont know why when J
Hi,
will there be anyone involved with the ARM / iPAQ ports around at the
JavaOne ?
Thomas
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, 31 May 2001 08:24, Christopher Smith wrote:
> On 31 May 2001 06:45:08 +1000, Jesus M. Salvo Jr. wrote:
> > > 4) Use JNI to use Linux's various asynch I/O API's.
> >
> > Option 4) is how BEA WebLogic Server does it, ( I think ). They have this
On 31 May 2001 06:45:08 +1000, Jesus M. Salvo Jr. wrote:
> > 4) Use JNI to use Linux's various asynch I/O API's.
> Option 4) is how BEA WebLogic Server does it, ( I think ). They have this
> libmuxer.so ( which is also available for Solaris -- dont know why when JVM
> for Solaris makes use of sola
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I meant this to be sent to the mailing list, but I selected "Reply"
originally instead of "Reply To All"
- -- Forwarded Message ------
Subject: Re: Java/Linux at JavaOne
Date: Wed, 30 May 2001 21:23:46 +1000
Fro
--On Tuesday, May 29, 2001 21:25:20 -0700 ed phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> It might be helpful and may even spawn other suggestions if
> you were to flesh out in a post some of the aspects, as you articulate
> them, of scaling Java on Linux. Perhaps a kind of pre-BoF statement of
> the to
Excuse me,
It is a session not a BoF, but the question still might be helpful
pre-session.
Christopher Smith wrote:
> --On Tuesday, May 29, 2001 15:01:25 -0700 Nelson Minar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > The Penguin Gets Pumped Up . . . Turning Linux into a High-Powered
> > Java Technology-
Chris,
It might be helpful and may even spawn other suggestions if
you were to flesh out in a post some of the aspects, as you articulate them,
of scaling Java on Linux. Perhaps a kind of pre-BoF statement of the topic
to be discussed?
Thanks,
Ed Phillips
Christopher Smith wrote:
> --On Tue
--On Tuesday, May 29, 2001 15:01:25 -0700 Nelson Minar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> The Penguin Gets Pumped Up . . . Turning Linux into a High-Powered
> Java Technology-Based Application Server
> Java/Linux performance talk
> http://servlet.java.sun.com/javaone/conf/sessions/934/0-sf2001.jsp
On Wed, 23 May 2001, ed phillips wrote:
> Is Calvin or anyone else giving any talks on their work to get
> the latest JDK and Hotspot going on Linux?
>
> Calvin sent some intriguing hints about the work he had to do
> to get Hotspot performing well on Linux, but I'd like more info
> or even docu
"Alexander V. Konstantinou" wrote:
>
> > PocketLinux and Kaffe are free (GPL) software, however non-GPL licenses
> > of the PocketLinux Kaffee JVM are available for a fee. Several PDA
>
> Is that legal? I thought once you GPLed code you cannot offer it under
> a different license since it is l
> PocketLinux and Kaffe are free (GPL) software, however non-GPL licenses
> of the PocketLinux Kaffee JVM are available for a fee. Several PDA
Is that legal? I thought once you GPLed code you cannot offer it under
a different license since it is likely to contain third-party contributions?
Ale
Mike Sprauve wrote:
>
> Can anyone tell me what the status is of the JDK
> running on Linux to the Intel StrongArm. I also need
> AWT support of that port
I don't know about Blackdown's JDK, but the Kaffe VM is the "real meat"
of PocketLinux, which runs on StrongArm devices. You didn't give an
I've seen a couple instances of this, almost all are attributed to the sound
card driver. If you have sb live cards then there is an open source driver
from opensouce.creative.com (driver called emu10k).
Otherwise check with the vendors site, until ALSA is complete, opensound.com
have probably
To me, this sounds like the programs you're running aren't really
dead. "Address already in use" usually means that some other program
has opened a socket on that port. Try something like
ps uxwa | fgrep java
and see if the processes are still around. If they are then you can
kill them using
How do you close your program? If you just "ctrl-c" it, the socket is not
closed properly. You need a way to tell the server to stop listening
(setting your listening variable to false) and it will be fine.
bye,
Sophie Benoit
-Original Message-
From: Zhihong Pan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTE
> If I don't call Java all is ok. If I call Java (my simple "Hello Word"
> Java class) the application exits with "segmentation fault" after some
> seconds of splatting.
I'm sure someone who knows more will respond; but could it be a signaling
handling conflict? I don't know about pthreads specif
> Mozilla doesn't understand NPX_PLUGIN_PATH. You have to create a link
This fixed the problem. Thank you
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> "noisebrain" == noisebrain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
noisebrain> I've tried to get java working under mozilla several
noisebrain> times without luck. Currently I'm using mozilla
noisebrain> 2001010517 (released this month, I believe it's called
noisebrain> 0.7). I'm lau
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 04 January 2001 18:28
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; KIRKBRIDE Rob
> ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> Subject: java questions
>
>
>
> Hi,
> I have an interest in learning Java and as a first step I
> have installed jdk
> 1.3 on my computer. I wrote th
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