Am 26.01.2016 um 10:40 schrieb André Warnier (tomcat):
On 26.01.2016 10:19, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Am 26.01.2016 um 09:36 schrieb Christoph P.U. Kukulies:
Am 25.01.2016 um 19:34 schrieb George Sexton:
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
2016-01-26 12:19 GMT+03:00 Christoph P.U. Kukulies :
> Am 26.01.2016 um 09:36 schrieb Christoph P.U. Kukulies:
>>
>> Am 25.01.2016 um 19:34 schrieb George Sexton:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, w
On 26.01.2016 10:19, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Am 26.01.2016 um 09:36 schrieb Christoph P.U. Kukulies:
Am 25.01.2016 um 19:34 schrieb George Sexton:
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually u
Am 26.01.2016 um 09:36 schrieb Christoph P.U. Kukulies:
Am 25.01.2016 um 19:34 schrieb George Sexton:
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually using?
At a CMD prompt I'm getting:
C:\> java -vers
Am 25.01.2016 um 19:34 schrieb George Sexton:
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually using?
At a CMD prompt I'm getting:
C:\> java -version
java version "1.8.0_71"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environme
On 1/25/2016 12:34 PM, George Sexton wrote:
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually using?
At a CMD prompt I'm getting:
C:\> java -version
java version "1.8.0_71"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment
Be careful. The only real way to know what tomcat is using is to get into
the manager who will display the java version it is using. Their startup
script makes some determination on the fly.
On Mon, Jan 25, 2016 at 1:34 PM, George Sexton
wrote:
>
>
> On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies
On 1/25/2016 3:52 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually using?
At a CMD prompt I'm getting:
C:\> java -version
java version "1.8.0_71"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_71-b15)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit
Thanks. Will give that a try.
How can I tell, which java engine Tomcat is actually using?
At a CMD prompt I'm getting:
C:\> java -version
java version "1.8.0_71"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_71-b15)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.71-b15, mixed mode)
--
Christoph
On 1/22/2016 6:06 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Windows 7:
Today I installed Java 8 on my windows 7 machine and did an upgrade of
the CMS at the same time (from OpenCMS 9.5.2 to 9.5.3).
After the Java update and the CMS update suddenly my tomcat 6.0.39
didn't start any longer. The servi
Am 22.01.2016 um 14:29 schrieb David kerber:
On 1/22/2016 8:06 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Windows 7:
Today I installed Java 8 on my windows 7 machine and did an upgrade of
the CMS at the same time (from OpenCMS 9.5.2 to 9.5.3).
After the Java update and the CMS update suddenly my tomcat
2016-01-22 16:06 GMT+03:00 Christoph P.U. Kukulies :
> Windows 7:
>
> Today I installed Java 8 on my windows 7 machine and did an upgrade of the
> CMS at the same time (from OpenCMS 9.5.2 to 9.5.3).
> After the Java update and the CMS update suddenly my tomcat 6.0.39 didn't
> start any longer. The
On 1/22/2016 8:06 AM, Christoph P.U. Kukulies wrote:
Windows 7:
Today I installed Java 8 on my windows 7 machine and did an upgrade of
the CMS at the same time (from OpenCMS 9.5.2 to 9.5.3).
After the Java update and the CMS update suddenly my tomcat 6.0.39
didn't start any longer. The service g
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