Hi Abraham
Abraham Rodriguez Mota wrote on Sep 03, 2008; 06:31am:
> C:\batik17\batik-1.7>java -jar batik-squiggle.jar
> java.security.AccessControlException: access denied
(java.net.NetPermission setDefaultAuthenticator)
> at java.security.AccessControlContext.checkPermission(Unknown
Source)
> at java.security.AccessController.checkPermission(Unknown Source)
> at java.lang.SecurityManager.checkPermission(Unknown Source)
> at java.net.Authenticator.setDefault(Unknown Source)
> at org.apache.batik.apps.svgbrowser.Main.<init>(Main.java:413)
> at org.apache.batik.apps.svgbrowser.Main.main(Main.java:163)
This implies that your JDK install has a non-standard security
settings.
This error in and of it's self isn't much of a problem, it means that
Batik
won't be able to respond to HTTP proxies that require Usernames and
Passwords. A Java application shouldn't have any problem registering
it's own network authenticator.
> In fact, squiggle starts but pops out the following error message:
> SVG Error:
> access denied(java.io.FilePermission \C:\..\..\batik-squiggle.jar read)
Similarly this indicates that your JDK isn't allowing some (fairly
standard)
security access.
Could you be using Applet security settings or something?