Michiel Meeuwissen wrote:
Ernst Bunders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

It ****s only if you're not using ASCII, and I think Sun is

to blame, with


their silly changes in Runtime.exec.

very surprising. well, should that make us think about using jai? That would certainly solve the problem (hey, why am i getting this 'ol microsoft fealing?), but i tried using jai with linux, and i got stranded becouse it starts looking for an x service (why???), and wouldn't find it even though it was there. These problems don't exist on windows.

The solution to the X-server problem is this:


http://developer.java.sun.com/servlet/SessionServlet?url=/developer/bugParade/bugs/4281163.html

===

To fix this problem:

* If you are running Java 1.4 or later:
  Add the system property "java.awt.headless" to your environment with
  a value of "true." Do this by specifying "-Djava.awt.headless=true"
  on the command line that starts the JVM.

--
Rico Jansen ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
"You call it untidy, I call it LRU ordered" -- Daniel Barlow



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