On 28/04/2015 22:00, Apostolos Syropoulos via openindiana-discuss wrote:
Hello,
A few days ago I downloaded the latest sources of openjdk8in order to build a
32bit binary.
The build process finished and it created the required images. Now, there is no
file
libnpjp2.soso there is no Java
On 28/04/2015 22:00, Apostolos Syropoulos via openindiana-discuss wrote:
Hello,
A few days ago I downloaded the latest sources of openjdk8in order to build a
32bit binary.
The build process finished and it created the required images. Now, there is no
file
libnpjp2.soso there is no Java
from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenJDK
The Web browser plugin and Web Start
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Web_Start, which are part of Oracle
Java, are not included in OpenJDK. Sun previously indicated that they would
try to open-source these components, but neither Sun nor Oracle have
On 29/04/2015 16:05, Apostolos Syropoulos wrote:
Its now named libjavaplugin.so, the old libnpjp2.so is not supported.
But that new plugin does not work with the older firefox 31.x series,
so stay with Java 7 for that. It works with Firefox 37.
$ pwd
/usr/jdk/instances/jdk1.8.0_31
$ find .
Its now named libjavaplugin.so, the old libnpjp2.so is not supported.
But that new plugin does not work with the older firefox 31.x series,
so stay with Java 7 for that. It works with Firefox 37.
$ pwd
/usr/jdk/instances/jdk1.8.0_31
$ find . -name libjava*
./jre/lib/amd64/libjava_crw_demo.so
As said, OpenJDK is not Oracle JDK and has NO browser plugins.
Some times one makes some intuitive assumptions which obviously most of the
times do not hold... Thus I thought it was clear that I was talking about
the Oracle JDK. So to be absolutely clear, I cannot find the browser plugin in
You can only get the plugin for Java 7, Java 8 for Solaris is 64 bit only,
because Solaris runs on servers and the plugin was 32 bit only.
If you compile OpenJDK, using IcedTea, you should be able to get a plugin
working for you.
I just resort to keeping the latest Java 7 install lying around.
You can only get the plugin for Java 7, Java 8 for Solaris is 64 bit only,
because Solaris runs on servers
and the plugin was 32 bit only.
OK but why is there a plugin for both 32 and 64 bit Linux systems?
If you compile OpenJDK, using IcedTea, you should be able to get a plugin
working for
On 04/29/15 07:05 AM, Apostolos Syropoulos via openindiana-discuss wrote:
So where is this plugin? I am asking because I suspect that Oracle has dropped
the
Java plugin for Solaris friends.
It has for Oracle JDK - I don't know about OpenJDK.
On 29/04/2015 16:13, Apostolos Syropoulos wrote:
As said, OpenJDK is not Oracle JDK and has NO browser plugins.
Some times one makes some intuitive assumptions which obviously most of the
times do not hold... Thus I thought it was clear that I was talking about
Uhmm , sorry for that
The 64-bit binaries do not contain deployment tools such as Java Web Start
and Java Plug-in, therefore desktop integration is no longer required.
Required? I guess this is a clever way to say that we provide no support for
Solaris. But of course they do provide support for Linux.
A.S.
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