I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher. If I go to http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downloads-21331... and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where I can get 8.1?
Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher. If I go to http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downloads-21331... and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where I can get 8.1?
The latest JRE is JRE 8u144 (version 8, update 144). There's no such thing as JRE 8.1.
A search for "JRE 8.1 or higher" had no hits at all.
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downloads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_090f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downloads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_090f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now.
On 14 September 2017 at 11:54, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now.
For some of the IBM hardware I have had to use a new Java but an old copy of Firefox. The best explanation I have is probably flawed but it was that the hardware wanted SSL1/SSL2 type stuff which the new Firefox and items blocked. There is probably a better way to fix it.
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 12:01 PM, Stephen John Smoogen smooge@gmail.com wrote:
On 14 September 2017 at 11:54, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now.
For some of the IBM hardware I have had to use a new Java but an old copy of Firefox. The best explanation I have is probably flawed but it was that the hardware wanted SSL1/SSL2 type stuff which the new Firefox and items blocked. There is probably a better way to fix it.
I have FF version 24.6.0 - probably very old. This is a locked down machine, not on the internet, so installing anything is a pain.
On 14 September 2017 at 12:10, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
I have FF version 24.6.0 - probably very old. This is a locked down machine, not on the internet, so installing anything is a pain.
In my case, that was the working version I needed for the IBM hardware. However I just realized the opposite might be also possible. The hardware is wanting to talk a newer version of TLS that your old browser can't use. In either case talking with the hardware vendor to find exactly what they are expecting in both TLS, Java and other parts is needed.
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 12:04 PM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
Contacting IBM now.
In case they don't suggest it, try connecting with http instead of https to see if it's actually an SSL certificate problem.
When I put in http it changes it back to https
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again. Kind regards
El 14 sept. 2017 5:55 p. m., "Larry Martell" larry.martell@gmail.com escribió:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Jose wrote:
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again.
Or change alternatives, or set JAVA_HOME.
mark
Kind regards
El 14 sept. 2017 5:55 p. m., "Larry Martell" larry.martell@gmail.com escribió:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On 9/14/2017 10:43 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Jose wrote:
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again.
Or change alternatives, or set JAVA_HOME.
Or, change the path. the java command sets java_home internally based on where its invoked from.
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 1:51 PM, John R Pierce pierce@hogranch.com wrote:
On 9/14/2017 10:43 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Jose wrote:
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again.
Or change alternatives, or set JAVA_HOME.
Or, change the path. the java command sets java_home internally based on where its invoked from.
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
On 9/14/2017 10:54 AM, Larry Martell wrote:
Or, change the path. the java command sets java_home internally based on where its invoked from.
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
I'm not sure how the browser plugin determines which java to run.
On 14.09.2017 19:54, Larry Martell wrote:
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
Is the java plugin enabled in your browser? That's not the default nowadays.
if you are running firefox you can check this by opening 'about:plugins'.
here - configured for older HP ILOs - for example, the plugin is linked into my firefox profile:
[ulf@bob ~]$ ll .mozilla/firefox/ln5frqem.default/plugins total 0 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 ulf ulf 37 Apr 21 2016 libnpjp2.so -> /opt/jre1.7.0_51/lib/i386/libnpjp2.so
best regards Ulf
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 2:32 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 19:54, Larry Martell wrote:
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
Is the java plugin enabled in your browser? That's not the default nowadays.
if you are running firefox you can check this by opening 'about:plugins'.
here - configured for older HP ILOs - for example, the plugin is linked into my firefox profile:
[ulf@bob ~]$ ll .mozilla/firefox/ln5frqem.default/plugins total 0 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 ulf ulf 37 Apr 21 2016 libnpjp2.so -> /opt/jre1.7.0_51/lib/i386/libnpjp2.so
I am running a very old versiond of FF, 24.6.0, and the menus and files are different. But I do not have a java plugin. But please note that this used to work until today when I upgraded the firmware in the IMM. That changed the java version required, so I updated that. But the FF version and config has not changed.
On 14 September 2017 at 14:51, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 2:32 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 19:54, Larry Martell wrote:
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
Is the java plugin enabled in your browser? That's not the default nowadays.
if you are running firefox you can check this by opening 'about:plugins'.
here - configured for older HP ILOs - for example, the plugin is linked into my firefox profile:
[ulf@bob ~]$ ll .mozilla/firefox/ln5frqem.default/plugins total 0 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 ulf ulf 37 Apr 21 2016 libnpjp2.so -> /opt/jre1.7.0_51/lib/i386/libnpjp2.so
I am running a very old versiond of FF, 24.6.0, and the menus and files are different. But I do not have a java plugin. But please note that this used to work until today when I upgraded the firmware in the IMM. That changed the java version required, so I updated that. But the FF version and config has not changed.
So it sounds like the links needed for the plugin to work are not configured on the system. So you have some symlinks pointing to the openjdk with the system and some pointing the one you tried to install. I don't know how you installed this new jdk so it may be for many different reasons.
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 3:08 PM, Stephen John Smoogen smooge@gmail.com wrote:
On 14 September 2017 at 14:51, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 2:32 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 19:54, Larry Martell wrote:
Where would I do that? This is something running from a browser.
Is the java plugin enabled in your browser? That's not the default nowadays.
if you are running firefox you can check this by opening 'about:plugins'.
here - configured for older HP ILOs - for example, the plugin is linked into my firefox profile:
[ulf@bob ~]$ ll .mozilla/firefox/ln5frqem.default/plugins total 0 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 ulf ulf 37 Apr 21 2016 libnpjp2.so -> /opt/jre1.7.0_51/lib/i386/libnpjp2.so
I am running a very old versiond of FF, 24.6.0, and the menus and files are different. But I do not have a java plugin. But please note that this used to work until today when I upgraded the firmware in the IMM. That changed the java version required, so I updated that. But the FF version and config has not changed.
So it sounds like the links needed for the plugin to work are not configured on the system. So you have some symlinks pointing to the openjdk with the system and some pointing the one you tried to install. I don't know how you installed this new jdk so it may be for many different reasons.
I installed it by downloading the rpm and installing that. IBM said on my older FF the app/plugin is called JNLP and I should change the setting for that to 'always ask' and then when it asks use javaws - I did that but it still fails.
On 14.09.2017 21:26, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 3:08 PM, Stephen John Smoogen smooge@gmail.com wrote:
So it sounds like the links needed for the plugin to work are not configured on the system. So you have some symlinks pointing to the openjdk with the system and some pointing the one you tried to install. I don't know how you installed this new jdk so it may be for many different reasons.
I installed it by downloading the rpm and installing that. IBM said on my older FF the app/plugin is called JNLP and I should change the setting for that to 'always ask' and then when it asks use javaws - I did that but it still fails.
Again, please enter 'about:plugins' in the address bar of your browser to make sure, that the right java version is activated.
But normally javaws is a different topic. As far as i remember, there should be an option to let firefox ask, which javaws should be executed. As i understand, you have different version installed.
And at last, please check the security options with jcontrol. Newer java version are more restricted about security settings.
best regards Ulf
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 5:30 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 21:26, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 3:08 PM, Stephen John Smoogen smooge@gmail.com wrote:
So it sounds like the links needed for the plugin to work are not configured on the system. So you have some symlinks pointing to the openjdk with the system and some pointing the one you tried to install. I don't know how you installed this new jdk so it may be for many different reasons.
I installed it by downloading the rpm and installing that. IBM said on my older FF the app/plugin is called JNLP and I should change the setting for that to 'always ask' and then when it asks use javaws - I did that but it still fails.
Again, please enter 'about:plugins' in the address bar of your browser to make sure, that the right java version is activated.
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.3 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.2.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.2.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.3 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.3.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.4 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.5 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.6 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.7 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;version=1.8 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-applet;jpi-version=1.8.0_50 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.3 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.2.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.2.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.3 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.3.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.4 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.4.1 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.4.2 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.5 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.6 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.7 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;version=1.8 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-bean;jpi-version=1.8.0_50 IcedTea class,jar application/x-java-vm-npruntime IcedTea
But normally javaws is a different topic. As far as i remember, there should be an option to let firefox ask, which javaws should be executed. As i understand, you have different version installed.
When this was working before the firmware update the RC software invoked IcedTea. As one of the attempted fixes IBM suggested using javaws instead. Intially I did not have javaws but I did have javaws.itweb. I tried that and it failed in the same way.
Then they asked me to run this:
alternatives --config java
There are 2 programs which provide 'java'.
Selection Command ----------------------------------------------- *+ 1 /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.8.0-openjdk.x86_64/bin/java 2 /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jav
And switch to the second one. When I did that it still failed with IcedTea, but then there was a javaws. I ran that and it did completely different things and finally failed with "Login error". They they had me go into ControlPanel and put the IP address of the IMM in the excpetion site list. I did that and then I get: KVM Java: Duplicate exists. Then they gave up and said they don't know.
And at last, please check the security options with jcontrol. Newer java version are more restricted about security settings.
I don't seem to have jcontrol
On 14.09.2017 23:56, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 5:30 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
Again, please enter 'about:plugins' in the address bar of your browser to make sure, that the right java version is activated.
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar
That's OpenJDK instead of Oracle.
Then they asked me to run this:
alternatives --config java
There are 2 programs which provide 'java'.
Selection Command
*+ 1 /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.8.0-openjdk.x86_64/bin/java 2 /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jav
Maybe you should also try 'alternatives --config javaws' to switch to the Oracle java webstart. But i'm not sure that this is possible for javaws.
And at last, please check the security options with jcontrol. Newer java version are more restricted about security settings.
I don't seem to have jcontrol
Should be part of your JRE installation:
[ulf@x1 ~]$ rpm -qlp Downloads/jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm |grep bin/jcontrol /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jcontrol
best regards Ulf
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 6:45 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 23:56, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 5:30 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
Again, please enter 'about:plugins' in the address bar of your browser to make sure, that the right java version is activated.
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar
That's OpenJDK instead of Oracle.
Do you know how I can associate IcedTea with Oracle's JRE?
Then they asked me to run this:
alternatives --config java
There are 2 programs which provide 'java'.
Selection Command
*+ 1 /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.8.0-openjdk.x86_64/bin/java 2 /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jav
Maybe you should also try 'alternatives --config javaws' to switch to the Oracle java webstart. But i'm not sure that this is possible for javaws.
No, that gave no output.
And at last, please check the security options with jcontrol. Newer java version are more restricted about security settings.
I don't seem to have jcontrol
Should be part of your JRE installation:
[ulf@x1 ~]$ rpm -qlp Downloads/jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm |grep bin/jcontrol /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jcontrol
Ah, yes, I do have that. It's the same as running ControlPanel - that is where they had me try puttin the IP address of the IMM in the exception site list.
On 15.09.2017 00:59, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 6:45 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar
That's OpenJDK instead of Oracle.
Do you know how I can associate IcedTea with Oracle's JRE?
You can try to replace the icedtea plugin with the one from Oracle. As i wrote in my first mail. Try to locate the plugin folder of your firefox installation (maybe in your ff profile or system wide in the firefox folder), backup the old plugin and place there a symlink to the oracle plugin (/usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so).
/usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jcontrol
Ah, yes, I do have that. It's the same as running ControlPanel - that is where they had me try puttin the IP address of the IMM in the exception site list.
OK and did your set the security setting to the lowest one?
best regards Ulf
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 7:09 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 15.09.2017 00:59, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 6:45 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar
That's OpenJDK instead of Oracle.
Do you know how I can associate IcedTea with Oracle's JRE?
You can try to replace the icedtea plugin with the one from Oracle. As i wrote in my first mail. Try to locate the plugin folder of your firefox installation (maybe in your ff profile or system wide in the firefox folder), backup the old plugin and place there a symlink to the oracle plugin (/usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so).
My old version of FF does not have plugin folder, it has a file called pluginreg.dat that looks like this:
IcedTeaPlugin.so:$ /usr/lib64/IcedTeaPlugin.so:$ :$ 1462942245000:0:0:$ The <a href="">IcedTea-Web Plugin</a> executes Java applets.:$ IcedTea-Web Plugin (using IcedTea-Web 1.6.2 (rhel-1.el6-x86_64)):$ 38 0:application/x-java-vm:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 1:application/x-java-applet:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 2:application/x-java-applet;version=1.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 3:application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 4:application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 5:application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.3:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 6:application/x-java-applet;version=1.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 7:application/x-java-applet;version=1.2.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 8:application/x-java-applet;version=1.2.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 9:application/x-java-applet;version=1.3:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 10:application/x-java-applet;version=1.3.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 11:application/x-java-applet;version=1.4:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 12:application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 13:application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 14:application/x-java-applet;version=1.5:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 15:application/x-java-applet;version=1.6:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 16:application/x-java-applet;version=1.7:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 17:application/x-java-applet;version=1.8:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 18:application/x-java-applet;jpi-version=1.8.0_50:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 19:application/x-java-bean:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 20:application/x-java-bean;version=1.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 21:application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 22:application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 23:application/x-java-bean;version=1.1.3:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 24:application/x-java-bean;version=1.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 25:application/x-java-bean;version=1.2.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 26:application/x-java-bean;version=1.2.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 27:application/x-java-bean;version=1.3:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 28:application/x-java-bean;version=1.3.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 29:application/x-java-bean;version=1.4:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 30:application/x-java-bean;version=1.4.1:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 31:application/x-java-bean;version=1.4.2:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 32:application/x-java-bean;version=1.5:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 33:application/x-java-bean;version=1.6:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 34:application/x-java-bean;version=1.7:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 35:application/x-java-bean;version=1.8:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 36:application/x-java-bean;jpi-version=1.8.0_50:IcedTea:class,jar:$ 37:application/x-java-vm-npruntime:IcedTea::$
How would I add /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so to that?
/usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jcontrol
Ah, yes, I do have that. It's the same as running ControlPanel - that is where they had me try puttin the IP address of the IMM in the exception site list.
OK and did your set the security setting to the lowest one?
The only 2 choices are "High" and "Very High" - it was already on High
On 18.09.2017 16:35, Larry Martell wrote:
My old version of FF does not have plugin folder, it has a file called pluginreg.dat that looks like this:
i doubt that. Please look into
/usr/lib/mozilla/plugins or /usr/lib64/mozilla/plugins. i'm quite sure that these directories also exist in you ff v24. pluginreq.dat should only cache the plugin informations and can be renamed.
It's also possible to store your plugin in your profile if you want to install the plugin only for your account. in this case you can either use ~/.mozilla/plugins (for all profiles) or [Profile directory]/plugins for a specific profile.
best regards Ulf
On Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 11:49 AM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 18.09.2017 16:35, Larry Martell wrote:
My old version of FF does not have plugin folder, it has a file called pluginreg.dat that looks like this:
i doubt that. Please look into
/usr/lib/mozilla/plugins or /usr/lib64/mozilla/plugins. i'm quite sure that these directories also exist in you ff v24. pluginreq.dat should only cache the plugin informations and can be renamed.
It's also possible to store your plugin in your profile if you want to install the plugin only for your account. in this case you can either use ~/.mozilla/plugins (for all profiles) or [Profile directory]/plugins for a specific profile.
In /usr/lib64/mozilla/plugins there is a symlink from libjavaplugin.so to /usr/lib64/IcedTeaPlugin.so I changed that to point to /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so but I got the exact same results. I also tried renaming the pluginreg.dat file. No joy.
On 18.09.2017 20:11, Larry Martell wrote:
On Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 11:49 AM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
It's also possible to store your plugin in your profile if you want to install the plugin only for your account. in this case you can either use ~/.mozilla/plugins (for all profiles) or [Profile directory]/plugins for a specific profile.
In /usr/lib64/mozilla/plugins there is a symlink from libjavaplugin.so to /usr/lib64/IcedTeaPlugin.so I changed that to point to /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so but I got the exact same results. I also tried renaming the pluginreg.dat file. No joy.
curious. I have no more ideas at this point.
best regards Ulf
On 14 September 2017 at 18:59, Larry Martell larry.martell@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 6:45 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
On 14.09.2017 23:56, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 5:30 PM, Ulf Volmer u.volmer@u-v.de wrote:
Again, please enter 'about:plugins' in the address bar of your browser to make sure, that the right java version is activated.
This is what I get from that:
application/x-java-vm IcedTea class,jar
That's OpenJDK instead of Oracle.
Do you know how I can associate IcedTea with Oracle's JRE?
Iced Tea is a tool which Firefox calls to get the java.
[root@el6 ~]# yum info icedtea-web Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, security Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * base: mirrors.centos.webair.com * epel: mirror.cogentco.com * epel-testing: mirror.cogentco.com * extras: mirrors.centos.webair.com * updates: mirrors.centos.webair.com Available Packages Name : icedtea-web Arch : x86_64 Version : 1.6.2 Release : 1.el6 Size : 1.6 M Repo : base Summary : Additional Java components for OpenJDK - Java browser plug-in and Web Start implementation URL : http://icedtea.classpath.org/wiki/IcedTea-Web License : LGPLv2+ and GPLv2 with exceptions Description : The IcedTea-Web project provides a Java web browser plugin, an implementation : of Java Web Start (originally based on the Netx project) and a settings tool to : manage deployment settings for the aforementioned plugin and Web Start : implementations.
What does alternatives --config java and alternatives --config javaws give as options?
Then they asked me to run this:
alternatives --config java
There are 2 programs which provide 'java'.
Selection Command
*+ 1 /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.8.0-openjdk.x86_64/bin/java 2 /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jav
Maybe you should also try 'alternatives --config javaws' to switch to the Oracle java webstart. But i'm not sure that this is possible for javaws.
No, that gave no output.
And at last, please check the security options with jcontrol. Newer java version are more restricted about security settings.
I don't seem to have jcontrol
Should be part of your JRE installation:
[ulf@x1 ~]$ rpm -qlp Downloads/jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm |grep bin/jcontrol /usr/java/jre1.8.0_144/bin/jcontrol
Ah, yes, I do have that. It's the same as running ControlPanel - that is where they had me try puttin the IP address of the IMM in the exception site list. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
....if not needed...
El 14 sept. 2017 7:49 p. m., m.roth@5-cent.us escribió:
Jose wrote:
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again.
Or change alternatives, or set JAVA_HOME.
mark
Kind regards
El 14 sept. 2017 5:55 p. m., "Larry Martell" larry.martell@gmail.com escribió:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
> I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
> If I go to
downloads/jre8-downlo
ads-21331 55.html > and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone > know where
I can get 8.1?
BundleId=225344_09
0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 12:53 PM, Jose linuxas08@gmail.com wrote:
Hello, Although you've instaled Oracle JRE 1.8, OpenJDK is the default, as you can see. Remove OpenJDK and execute java -version again.
How can I run yum remove without it trying to access the net? This machine has no internet connection and yum remove has been running for an hour trying to hit mirrors and repos.
Kind regards
El 14 sept. 2017 5:55 p. m., "Larry Martell" larry.martell@gmail.com escribió:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Rich Huff rich@richhuff.com wrote:
On Thu, 2017-09-14 at 11:25 -0400, Larry Martell wrote:
On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 11:08 AM, Darr247 darr247@gmail.com wrote:
I have some software that says it requires JRE 8.1 or higher.
That's very odd, since technically JRE 8 is java 1.8 (and JRE 7 is/was 1.7; JRE 6 was 1.6, et cetera).
If I go to
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downlo ads-21331 55.html
and install jre-8u144-linux-x64.rpm I get jrel.8.0_144. Anyone know where
I can get 8.1?
http://javadl.oracle.com/webapps/download/AutoDL?BundleId=225344_09 0f390dda5 b47b9b721c7dfaa008135 should get you the 64-bit v1.8 build 144 of Java, which is indeed the latest version.
What software is it that requires JRE 8.1?
Sorry I mistyped it says 1.8 or greater. I did install that and I still get the message. It's remote control software for an IBM system.
Do you have a lower version Java installed? What does command 'java -version' say?
openJDK version "1.8.0_101" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101-b13) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.101-b13, mixed mode)
IBM has their own flavor of Java. Is it looking for that?
I don't know. I am running CentOS6 and then trying to run their remote control SW throught FF. Maybe I have to restart FF ... going to try that ... no joy, same errors. Contacting IBM now. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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