'linux_enable="YES"' is enabled on the server. Like I said, it runs
for a while and dies with one or two processes hogging all the
avalible cpu time. What version of freebsd are you using? I did get it
running by pointing the freenet scripts to the java vm loc. Anyway,
I'm going to wait and see if newer versions of freenet will work with
it. Otherwise I'm gonna wait for my hosting company to get a linux
server :-P
~Paul


On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 03:51:15 -0500, S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 15:48:37 -0400
> Paul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > The binary on the server at the moment is a 1.3 vm. To get the 1.4 vm
> > working you have to download the source and some binaries from sun's
> > site, apply a patch from the bsd team, and then compile it. (all
> > because of sun's lisense) Sounds simple enough execpt compiling it
> > requires a java vm.
> > ~Paul
> 
> Fuck that noise. If you can support Linux binary compatibility (try
> linux_enable="YES" in /etc/rc.conf), you can use the Linux binary
> version of Java instead of jumping through hoops to compile a native
> recent version on FreeBSD.
> 
> # fetch "http://java.sun.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=9719";
> # mv AutoDL\?BundleId\=9719 j2re1.4.2_05
> # chmod 755 j2re1.4.2_05
> # ./j2re1.4.2_05
> 
> [press Enter a lot, then agree to the license]
> 
> Finally, edit your start-freenet.sh to point to the copy of Java that
> you installed.
> 
> This is how I run Freenet under FreeBSD ... with the Linux distribution.
> It's a shame that Dolphin is no longer participating here, he was a
> FreeBSD user who had managed to compile his own local native copy of
> Java. I could never get it to work, so I went with emulating the Linux
> version.
> 
> -s
>
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