> I'm using Red Hat 5.2 with kernel 2.0.36-1
>
> Where can i find the kernel 2.0.37 (what is the problem if i use jdk1.2
> with kernel 2.0.36).
http://www.kernel.org should help.
Oliver
___
Oliver Fels| e-mail:
Neurot
> I recently saw a press release on the porting of the Java Media APIs to
> Linux...are these available yet for the x86 ported VM?
The latest release contains, besides the native libs, a pure JAVA
version, so this should also work under Linux (though I have not
tried it yet).
Oliver
First of all. JDK 1.2pre for Linux is great. Congratulation and thanx to the people
who brought it together.
Q:
1.) (JDK 1.2) Setting different priorities does not seem to have an effect on thread
scheduling (a thread with priority reduced to
mininum will continue to get scheduled as frequentl
On linux the granularity of the timer (GregorianCalendar.time) seems to be on
millisecond level, while on Windows NT on 10
milliseconds level. Does anyone know, why?
Peter
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a s
Makes Sun the source code JDK1.2 for Solaris available to Blackdown? Is this code what
the blackdown people are modifying for the
port to linux? If so, which are the major areas where changes need to be effected?
Which changes are the most difficult to get
right?
Peter
---
---On Sat, 27 Mar 1999 18:35:29 -0500, Matthew McKeon said
> Where the heck is the activator?!?
> Does anyone know of any mirrors where I might obtain it?
>
Matthew:
I don't know if this will work with JAVA1.2, but, with 1.1.7 we simply
copied swingall.jar to /netscape/java/classes a
Hi gang,
Over the past few months I've received a number of emails about javasignals
- and many folks found an annoying bug related to breaking RMI. I've just
received a fix for this bug from Bernhard Bablok ([EMAIL PROTECTED]).
Unfortunately, I didn't keep a list of who wanted the fix. ;-)
I
On Mon, 29 Mar 1999, Peter Kovacs wrote:
> On linux the granularity of the timer (GregorianCalendar.time) seems to be on
>millisecond level, while on Windows NT on 10
> milliseconds level. Does anyone know, why?
Broken windows?
--
Cheers
John Summerfield
http://os2.ami.com.au/os2/ for OS/2 su
>
> Matthew:
>
> I don't know if this will work with JAVA1.2, but, with 1.1.7 we simply
> copied swingall.jar to /netscape/java/classes and turned off javascript so
> the document can't check for the plug-in. This lets us run swing1.1 applets
> in netscape4.x.
I don't think that would work,
If you check the "ping" program, you get the same problem. So it's not a
JDK problem.
-rchit
John Summerfield wrote:
>
> On Mon, 29 Mar 1999, Peter Kovacs wrote:
>
> > On linux the granularity of the timer (GregorianCalendar.time) seems to be on
>millisecond level, while on Windows NT on 10
>
> Peter Kovacs writes:
Peter> First of all. JDK 1.2pre for Linux is great. Congratulation
Peter> and thanx to the people who brought it together. Q:
Peter> 1.) (JDK 1.2) Setting different priorities does not seem to
Peter> have an effect on thread scheduling (a thread with p
Wes Biggs wrote:
>
> optima wrote:
>
> > cc -G NativeHello.c NativeHelloImp.c -o libHello.so
> > ,I encount a problum
> > "cc: unrecognized option `-G'
> > /usr/lib/crt1.o(.text+0x36): undefined reference to `main'"
The problem is that there is no "-G" option to gcc. If you want to build
12 matches
Mail list logo