Dunno, I am installing it for the first time with apt-get today.
I have always installed the "normal" way, making the symbolic link directly from the java /jdk/plugin/.. to mozilla folder.. On Son, 2005-02-27 at 10:04 -0800, tony mancill wrote: > You can add this line to your /etc/apt/sources.list: > > deb http://ftp.tux.org/pub/java/debian sid non-free > > Then, just "apt-get update ; apt-get install j2re1.4 equivs" > > FWIW, I did this just earlier today on my pure64/sid system. I only loaded > the j2re1.4 package and then updated the > /etc/alternatives/libjavaplugin_oji.so symlink to point to > /usr/lib/j2se/1.4/jre/plugin/amd64/mozilla/libjavaplugin_oji.so. > > The plugin seems to work, but now when I start mozilla, I get the following: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/lib/mozilla/plugins$ mozilla > grep: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared > object file: No such file or directory > cut: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared > object file: No such file or directory > sed: error while loading shared libraries: libc.so.6: cannot open shared > object file: No such file or directory > > Anyone on the list know what I'm doing wrong? > > Thanks, > tony > > Erik Norman wrote: > > I don't really get the right mirror location into my source list of apt. > > > > could you please just paste that entry of your apt source list into a > > mail and send it? > > > > Erik > > > > On Sam, 2005-02-26 at 22:06 -0600, Juan A wrote: > > > >>www.blackdown.com > >> > >>look for a mirror, add it to your sources.list, check you have > >>non-free also in you main mirror and you�re done > >>apt-get install j2sdk1.4 or j2re1.4 > >> > >> > >>Robert King escribi�: > >> > >>>There are licence problems. The java-package package allows you to > >>>install > >>>downloaded java (list of supported stuff in the package), but you still > >>>need > >>>to download seperately > >>> > >>>On Sun, 27 Feb 2005 14:40, Patrick Carlson wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>>>Hello. I'm a little confused as to getting Java on my AMD64 system. > >>>>Can I apt-get install it? I went to java.com and they seem to have an > >>>>AMD64 self extracting binary. I would rather use apt-get though so > >>>>that I can keep it up to date. Thank you for the help. > > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

