Actually I had assumed editing the line in /etc/jvm.conf would have been enough for somebody who didn't want a GUI. Was I wrong?
On Mon, 2005-04-11 at 07:32 +0200, Michael Koch wrote: > On Mon, Apr 11, 2005 at 08:17:22AM +0200, Wolfgang Baer wrote: > > > >On Sun, 2005-04-03 at 11:12 -0500, Jerry Haltom wrote: > > >>We need a standard, nice, easy to extend way for binary wrappers > > >>in /usr/bin and/or startup scripts to locate their VM. There are a few > > >>requirements that I had: > > >>1) Whatever we do should be GUI configurable. I want to write a "System > > >>VM Selection" control panel of some sort allowing the user to choose > > >>which VM is used system-wide and also program specific. > > > > That would be nice - especially as users are should be allowed to > > override the vm. But I think we should put the scripts first in > > java-common - to have something to test etc. - and then at a later > > stage put the GUI stuff in place. > > > > Just to ensure that the feature doesn't need to wait till a > > working GUI is written. > > > > BTW, should the GUI be in Java ? > > We need at least a command-line tool, probably called update-java-vm or > so in Debian-style. A real gui tool would be nice too to make it easier > for end users. > > Perhaps we should have the command-line tool first. We can then later > add the GUI as it will be just for comfortability. > > > Michael > -- > Escape the Java Trap with GNU Classpath! > http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/java-trap.html > > Join the community at http://planet.classpath.org/ > > -- Jerry Haltom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]