I tried running one of the stock swing demos ("FileChooserDemo") from
Sun's jdk 1.2, and to my pleasant surprise it started up without a hitch
using sablevm and kaffe. It doesn't look the same as it does when
running with the sun jvm, however.
I'm brand new to using any of the free java option
Some more news about Tomcat5:
http://www.edev.be/blog/index.php/archives/2005/03/25/about-a-tomcat5-package-in-debian/
Mon, 28 Jun 2004 16:14:04 +0100,
David Goodenough <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Currently Tomcat 5 is not available for Debian, only Tomcat4. Can I ask
> what is holding 5 back
[Stefan Gybas]
> java-common is a special package because it contains the Java Policy.
> Like the Debian Policy, it is not maintained by a small group of
> developers (in this case pkg-java) but all Debian Java developers. I
> think it is best if debian-java stays the maintainer of java-common s
Petter Reinholdtsen wrote:
At the moment, java-common is the only java package maintained by
. All the other java packages are
maintained by <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
java-common is a special package because it contains the Java Policy.
Like the Debian Policy, it is not maintained by a small group of
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 cho
Package: java-common
Severity: minor
Version: 0.22
At the moment, java-common is the only java package maintained by
. All the other java packages are
maintained by <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
Making sure all java packages are using the same maintainer string
make it possible to list all java packag
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