I am using on apache solr3.6 (naive user) and have data in the multicore of solr folder.
D:\setup\apache-solr-3.6.0\example\multicore
The current version of tomcat I am using has startup.bat in its bin folder so I specified JAVA_OPTS in it as below:
rem Get remaining unshifted command line arguments and save them in the
set CMD_LINE_ARGS=
:setArgs
if ""%1""=="""" goto doneSetArgs
set CMD_LINE_ARGS=%CMD_LINE_ARGS% %1
shift
goto setArgs
:doneSetArgs
set "JAVA_OPTS=%JAVA_OPTS% -Dsolr.solr.home=D:\setup\apache-solr-3.6.0\example\multicore"
call "%EXECUTABLE%" start %CMD_LINE_ARGS%
:end
However I recently downloaded a new version of tomcat which contains no startup.bat in it but some .exe file (may be tomcat.exe) instead, double clicking which will start the tomcat server.
So how do I specify JAVA_OPTS and -Dsolr now?
As #Bhanu said...
Go to tomcat istallation folder, inside Apache Software Foundation\Tomcat 6.0\bin you'll find tomcat6w.exe run it. It will open tomcat configuration window
Open java tab and specify the multicore path inside java options as -Dsolr.solr.home=D:\setup\apache-solr-3.6.0\example\multicore
For setting up Solr Home option with Tomcat refer to details.
Also, more information would be available at SolrTomcat
In newer versions of tomcat say tomcat7, you will find tomcat7w.exe in tomcat/bin. Run it select Java tab and in Java Options pane write your path.
It is quite easy compared to JNDI way.
Related
After extracting the Pentaho zip file I downloaded. I set my class path to JDK 1.7.0. But, upon running the Spoon.bat file I keep getting the statement: "Unable to launch your Java Virtual Machine (JVM)." How do I resolve this problem ?
NB: I have configured JAVA_HOME, JRE_HOME as stated by similar previously answered questions.
Note that Pentaho7 requires java 8.
In any case, Set the PENTAHO_JAVA_HOME=dir, where dir is the directory that contains the /bin/java.exe executable.
Alternative:
The spoon.bat [resp spoon.sh] runs first the set-pentaho-env.bat to find a suitable java. Edit this file to know in which order it searches for it. So do like me, when nobody looks at you, edit this file manually, and set _PENTAHO_JAVA_HOME and _PENTAHO_JAVA manually.
To check: In a command line shell, cd to your PDI install directory and type spoon.bat. It writes something like start "Spoon" "**some\directory**\javaw.exe" more stuff. Check that you can type **some\directory**\javaw.exe -version in your shell.
If not: in the same directory, type set-pentaho-env.bat. It writes down the PENTAHO_JAVA and PENATHO_JAVA_HOME thAt spoon will use. Edit that file until %PENTAHO_JAVA%\java.exe -version and %PENTAHO_JAVA_HOME%\java.exe -version answers the appropriate version.
In my case (for PDI 9.2.x), installing an Oracle JDK 8 solved the issue (no need to set the Java home folder explicitly)
I’m currently running window 7, ACF 11, and IIS 7 and would like to install Lucee express to try.
I’m having the hardest time getting Lucee to work on my local desktop. I followed this article http://www.gpickin.com/index.cfm/blog/setting-up-lucee-in-my-dev-environment-changing-ports I can’t get the Lucee welcome page to work.
I download the Lucee Express from here http://lucee.org/downloads.html
I extract the file to C:\lucee
Ran the C:\lucee\bin\startup.bat
Navigated to 127.0.0.1:8888
I get the follow message: Firefox can't establish a connection to the server at 127.0.0.1:8888
Can someone tell me what am I doing wrong? Thank you in advance for your insights.
As identified in the comments on the question: you are missing the environment variable pointing to your Java runtime (you need one of JAVA_HOME or JRE_HOME.
This can be achieved in one of a coupla ways.
Set it globally:
Control Panel > System > Advanced system settings > Environment Variables > System Variables > New...
Or set it for just that environment by editing the startup.bat file you've already been using:
SET JAVA_HOME=[path]
In both situations you need a path to either a JRE or a JDK. You say you have CF11 already installed, so you can simply point to its one, which will be a subdirectory of your CF install, as Leigh points out above. So something like:
SET JRE_HOME=D:\apps\Adobe\ColdFusion\11\express\jre
If you have a Java JDK installed instead and want to use that, use JAVA_HOME instead of JRE_HOME, eg:
SET JAVA_HOME=D:\apps\Oracle\Java\jdk\1.8.0_60
As these things can be installed anywhere, you'll just need to locate 'em and use the path accordingly. You want to point it to the top level directory of your JRE or JDK, which contains the bin subdirectory.
I am trying to get our Mavenized web application up and running in a freshly installed IDEA 11.1.4 Ultimate (Windows 7) under a freshly unzipped Glassfish 3.1.2.2. I have done this many times in Eclipse, but am not familiar with IDEA.
I can build and deploy it just fine, but when I try to access pages with JSP-content I get:
PWC6345: There is an error in invoking javac. A full JDK (not just JRE) is required
The Glassfish Application Servers entry adds the javax.ejb.jar, javax.servlet-api.jar and javax.servlet.jsp-api.jar as libraries.
I have set the project SDK to point to a full JDK resulting in:
(which does not seem to include a jar with javac)
The IntelliJ tutorials I've found so far, does not mention this problem. My guess would be that the "please start using this JDK" information is not passed on to Glassfish, so it just picks up the system JRE.
What configuration step have I missed? I do not want to edit configuration files - I expect the IntelliJ plugin to do this if I know how to tell it to.
I got the same notification and just changed in admin port -> Configurations -> server-config -> JVM Settings -> Java Home as "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_72", and it started working.
PWC6345: There is an error in invoking javac. A full JDK (not just JRE) is required.
I was getting same error after restarting my glassfish 4 server.When I am trying to access my deployed application it was saying to mention full JDK.
login to Glassfish admin console.(http://localhost:4848).
Go to Configuration---->server-config--->JVM Settings
Set the java home with your correct jdk home (ex:C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.8.0_121).
Restart the server.
It will work fine.
Next solution helped me
source: http://alvinalexander.com/blog/post/java/fixing-glassfish-jdk-path-problem-solved
Find your asenv.bat file. C:\Program Files\glassfish-4.0\glassfish\config\asenv.bat
Open it in text editor and find strings like "set AS_ = blahblah"
Add this string there "set AS_JAVA=C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_60" (print your own JDK path here). If string "set AS_JAVA= blahblah" already exists then just fix the path.
Add JDK_HOME\lib\tools.jar file to the JDK configuration Classpath.
However, the problem in your case may be different as Glassfish JDK is not taken from IntelliJ IDEA settings, this question may help:
How do I specify the jdk for a glassfish domain?
I am trying to set up a WebDAV folder on my CentOS server. I have for the most part succeeded. My problem is that I am trying to set up a size limit (quota) on the folder. I found a blog that spelled out how to do that using the "DAVSATMaxAreaSize" command. However, when I restart Apache, I get the error: "Invalid command 'DAVSATMaxAreaSize', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration". Does this mean the module that supports this command is not installed? How can I fix this?
You need to recompile your apache.
Download patch from http://www.geocities.jp/t_sat7/webdav/webdav.html
Download rpm source for apache from centos repos. Patch it with patch u downloaded and recompile apache.
I had the problem on my Ubuntu 12.04 server but I didn't want to recompile my apache. I "solved" it as follows:
I created a file container using dd (for 100MB):
dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/webdav-file-container bs=1048576 count=100
And created a filesystem in that container:
mkfs.ext4 /var/webdav-file-container
Then I mounted this container as folder for my share:
mount /var/webdav-file-container /var/webdav-share
So, now the filesystem in the container has a fixed size and apache cannot write more than the 100MB.
The only thing is that the user does not know how much space is left on that share. The Windows client report the size of it's own system drive ...
I downloaded Tomcat 6 from Tomcat Website and try to install. I found the .exe file in C:\apache-tomcat-6.0.35\bin but when i run the exe file the command prompt disappeared after show "The system cannot find the file specified". I already installed JDK 6 update 29 in my system. Please advice
I had a simmilar problem after installing a java update, but JAVA_HOME was set correctly. If you run tomcat as a service, you might have to right click on the tomcat icon and open java tab and change java virtual machine path or just set "use default".
If I were to "guess" I would say that the JAVA_HOME is not set. But to confirm :
Can you go the command line, make sure that JAVA_HOME is set correctly, startup tomcat (from command line) ? If you run into errors, please send the text output.
Try to run "startup.bat" to start a tomcat instance.
Go to your/path/tomcat and execute script catalina_start.bat .I had the same issue and this worked for me (though I installed Tomcat as a part of XAMPP package)