On 15-May-99 Robert Williams wrote:
> What changes did you make? Simplicity + JDK1.2 freezes up
> after a few steps through the tutorial example 1 on my Red Hat 5.2 system.
No changes at all. I have a SuSE 6.1, I installed JDK1.2 and the only change I
did was to edit the Simplicity script to m
Ok, so i've got my application written and packaged into a jar file
and it's ready to ship. What is the best way to use it in the target
system? Just running java my.class sparks up a 77 Meg 1.2 jvm on
my system which seems pretty heavy weight for a simple application.
I'm aware of the -Xms and -X
Hi,
I've just released for you another version (1.3v2)
of TYA JIT compiler for the Linux and FreeBSD platforms.
ftp://gonzalez.cyberus.ca/pub/Linux/java/tya13v2.tgz
size is 130253 byte.
Even archive size is only some 100 byte bigger than
the previous release we have once again some progress,
I just like to address your reference to Kaffe being a personal java
environment.
After lurking a while on this list, I'm starting to realize that Kaffe's
labeling as "PersonalJava" is an unfortunate one.
PersonalJava (http://www.javasoft.com/products/personaljava/)
http://www.javasoft.com/pr
Stephen Martin wrote:
>
> Ok, so i've got my application written and packaged into a jar file
> and it's ready to ship. What is the best way to use it in the target
> system? Just running java my.class sparks up a 77 Meg 1.2 jvm on
> my system which seems pretty heavy weight for a simple applicat
Godmar Back wrote:
>
> I just like to address your reference to Kaffe being a personal java
> environment.
> After lurking a while on this list, I'm starting to realize that Kaffe's
> labeling as "PersonalJava" is an unfortunate one.
>
> PersonalJava (http://www.javasoft.com/products/personalja
>
> In regards to setting minimum and maximum stack sizes, a "good value" is
> really dependent on your application. If you're doing alot of file IO or
> very intense computations, you might want to set those numbers fairly
> high. The only way to really determine how much memory to explicitly
>
Juergen Kreileder wrote May 6th:
> With a few changes to the linking step your example works for me,
> I'll send you my changes later.
I haven't gotten any changes, or any response to the three
inquiries I sent you since. In case there should be any doubt
about it, my example (AWT via Invocati
I am a linux newbie. I have installed Redhat 6.0 and have access to the internet
through my adsl. I am trying to install the jdk1.1.7 so that I can install the java
version of ICQ but am not sure how to proceed. If anyone is able to offer any
help I would very much appreciate it.
Protect priva
> Bernd Kreimeier writes:
Bernd> Juergen Kreileder wrote May 6th:
>> With a few changes to the linking step your example works for me,
>> I'll send you my changes later.
Bernd> I haven't gotten any changes, or any response to the three
Bernd> inquiries I sent you since.
Hi,
I´ve just installed JDK 1.2. First, invoking any of the binarys lead to a error
message due to a not found library (present in the jdk 1.2 lib path). I then
added these library paths to ld.so.conf and ran "ldconfig -D". Now all libs are
recognized (e.g. "ldd appletviewer" returns no missing
Does JDK1.2 still not work with Native/JIT as
shown on the current JCK status page, or has that just been forgotten to be
updated?
-Riyad
P.S> Sorry for the HTML, this is not my
machine.
On Sun, May 16, 1999 at 07:08:59PM -0700, Riyad Kalla wrote:
> Does JDK1.2 still not work with Native/JIT as shown on the current JCK
> status page, or has that just been forgotten to be updated?
Are you so special that you need not include a valid "Subject:" header
in your posts? The content you
I installed jdk-1.2 on my RH 6.0 system
Comiling the *.java files works but the trouble is that I can't exec them
with java *.class the error is :
/usr/local/jdk1.2/bin/green_threads/java: error in loading shared
libraries : libXt.so.6: cannot open object file: No such file or directory
Does an
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