Hi All, I'm running xindice on w2k and make a install on a win98 for my
partner for testing . The problem that wolfgang refers does not occurred in
my installation on win98, the bat adds all the jars, the .bat files seems
working fine i have only i few problems with index corruption maybe due
inappropriate shutdowns... tomorrow i look closer the files to search any
condition or problem relate it. Again, the 1 exit code is correct, i though
that 1 exit code means a error condition...

BTW anyone knows the way i can retrieve only the root node using xpath from
a xindice document? i used self but i got the root and descendants too...

Miguel Angel Urrutia Soler
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kimbro Staken" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2002 11:52 PM
Subject: Windows scripts was Re: SOLUTION Startup Error


Is there anyone who is running this under windows and is comfortable with
.bat files that could take a look at the scripts and see if they're
correct or can be improved?

On Tuesday, February 12, 2002, at 02:55 PM, Wolfgang B�r wrote:

> Hi Paul,
>
> there was another problem on WIN98:
>
> the line : for %%i in (%XINDICE_HOME%\java\lib\*.jar) do call
> %XINDICE_HOME%\bin\lcp.bat %%i
> which adds all the jars in the directory to the localclasspath didn't
> work in WIN98 so
> i added all the jars manually to the classpath
>
> with the point in the classpath:
> you have to set set it like: set CLASSPATH=.;C:\...xx.jar;C:\...xy.jar
> so it is like an own path which means the current directory !
>
> Hope it helps,
>
> Wolfgang
>
> Paul Caton wrote:
>
>> I'm also using jdk 1.3.1 on Windows 98. I tried both Wolfgang's
>> suggested fixes and had no joy getting the server to start. I followed
>> the Windows installation docs faithfully, too. There was only one
>> point I was unsure of: Step 6. tells you to add the Xindice.jar file
>> to the CLASSPATH, which I did, and also says:
>>
>> "make sure you have . in your classpath"
>>
>> I've mainly done Unix classpaths before and I'm not very familiar with
>> Windows conventions; is "." the same as %ClassPath% at the beginning
>> of the path, or does it mean you literally have to have ";.;" as one
>> of the paths?
>>
>> Paul Caton
>>
>> ---
>> Electronic Publications Editor
>> Women Writers Project
>>
>> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>    tel: (401) 863-3619
>> address: Box 1841, Brown University, Providence RI 02912
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
Kimbro Staken
XML Database Software, Consulting and Writing
http://www.xmldatabases.org/


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