I have had simular problems with many other applications. Though not
overly often. Most of the time it is the case of a application hung in the
background( well in the sorta background like place that windows95/98/NT kinda
has ). But once in a while you do have to just reboot. But rebooting is
part of the OS at least thats the impresion I get when I try to do things like
change IP adresses or color depth or fonts or.... err sorry.
In the imortal words of a Microsoft spokesman in the early 90s, "Windows
will be more UNIX like in the future.". To witch I must say why wait. :-)
Is it true windows2000 has a real/functional command line mode? And the
GUI is no longer part of the kernel?
Ron Burton
John Brecht wrote:
> >John Brecht wrote:
> >
> > I am running Apache 1.3.3 and JServ on a Windows98 machine. Once Apache
> > has been started, even after I shut it down, I cannot delete, rename, or
> > move the Jar containing the class files for a client applet I am
> > testing. The system seems to think that the file is in use. After
> > rebooting the system, I get access back. Anybody have this problem.
> >
> >Yes, but this has nothing to do with Apache or JServ (or, rather, it is
> >tangentially related). It's a "feature" of Windoze. If the OS thinks the
> >file is active, then it won't allow you to mess with it. Rebooting the
> >machine clears the "in use" marker on the file. I've seen this on NT a lot,
> >with all sorts of programs. I can shut down every process (like a Netscape
> >Server) so I can deal with a Netscape log file, and no luck. I have to
> >reboot to clear the usage marker. No wonder I'm a Unix bigot....
> >
> >Isn't it a violation of some obsure Microsoft policy to be running server
> >software on a client OS???? <just kidding>.
> >
>
> Well, I've run a whole bunch of Java applets and applications over the past
> few years on various Windows machines, and this has never happened.
>
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