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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DIRSTUDIO-780?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13209537#comment-13209537
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Aleks M commented on DIRSTUDIO-780:
-----------------------------------
The installer automatically suggested the following this directory as the JRE
directory:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7
Even though it was wrong, since the 32-bit JRE resides under the x86 directory
I decided to let it continue just to see what happens.
The installation completed just fine but I couldn't start Studio of course
since it was pointing to the wrong JRE. I got this error: Failed to load JNI
shared library.
I then ran the installer again so I could re-test it.and this time I manually
selected the 64-bit JRE in C:\Program Files\Java\jre6 and Studio worked fine.
How do you do the detection where the JRE is?
> Windows 7 taskbar display of pinned Studio icon
> -----------------------------------------------
>
> Key: DIRSTUDIO-780
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DIRSTUDIO-780
> Project: Directory Studio
> Issue Type: Question
> Affects Versions: 2.0.0-M2
> Environment: Windows 7 64 bit SP1
> Reporter: Aleks M
> Priority: Trivial
>
> Hello
> I've noticed one more thing.
> I'm using the Windows 7 style taskbar where you can "pin" applications to the
> taskbar.
> In this case I've pinned the Apache Directory Studio icon from the startmenu
> which points to: "C:\Program Files\Apache Directory Studio\Apache Directory
> Studio.exe"
> When clicking on the icon in the taskbar it starts Studio as it should but
> then the icon should change into the icon of the running app.
> This doesn't happen with Studio 2M2. The icon is changed while Studio is
> loading and it even has a nice progress bar shown in the taskbar, then when
> it has loaded the icon is changed back as if the app isn't running and
> another icon for the running Studio is displayed.
> I'm not marking this as a bug since it could be by design to allow loading
> several Studio instances at once? In this case PuTTY has a nicer way of doing
> it, since you can right click on the running instance in the taskbar and
> start a new instance.
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