Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation of the SUN-JDK these
environment variables are not set. Java is in the path and that's it.
While starting Tomcat the script setclasspath.bat checks if one of the
/ JRE_HOME still necessary?
Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation of the SUN-JDK these
environment variables are not set. Java is in the path and that's it.
While starting Tomcat the script setclasspath.bat checks if one
Some of us run many JVM's on the same machine. And for reasons which drive us
insane, java 1.1.X tends to be the first java in the PATH.
-Tim
Stefan Wachter wrote:
Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation of the
What about multiple JREs or JDKs on your system? Unlike Microsoft products,
you can actually have multiple versions of Java on your system coexisting
peacefully.
Unfortunately, this is not really true... because the first entry in path
is the really one active. I had orrible experience
: Wednesday, May 10, 2006 7:13 AM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: JAVA_HOME / JRE_HOME still necessary?
Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation of the SUN-JDK these
environment variables are not set. Java
-
From: Stefan Wachter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2006 7:13 AM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: JAVA_HOME / JRE_HOME still necessary?
Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation
Subject: JAVA_HOME / JRE_HOME still necessary?
Hi all,
wouldn't it be nice if Tomcat does not need the JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME
environment variable? After installation of the SUN-JDK these
environment variables are not set. Java is in the path and that's
it.
While starting Tomcat