Java Runtime Environment 1.4.2 Installation
I´ve got HP Proliant dl380 g3 and I can´t use few things from the "iLO(integrated lights-out)" because this tool needs the Java Runtime Environment 1.4.2 to run in my browser
HP does not support this Old server so I tried to install it by myself:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javasebusiness/downloads/java-archive-downloads-javase14-419411.html#j2sdk-1.4.2_30-sol-JPR
I downloaded the j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin and executed it in the terminal and this is the result:
Do you agree to the above license terms? [yes or no]
yes
Unpacking...
Checksumming...
0
0
Extracting...
./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: 383: ./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: ./install.sfx.5638: not found
Done.
Any idea of what should I do?
Thanks for your Time!
java oracle jre jvm
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ yesterday
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
I´ve got HP Proliant dl380 g3 and I can´t use few things from the "iLO(integrated lights-out)" because this tool needs the Java Runtime Environment 1.4.2 to run in my browser
HP does not support this Old server so I tried to install it by myself:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javasebusiness/downloads/java-archive-downloads-javase14-419411.html#j2sdk-1.4.2_30-sol-JPR
I downloaded the j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin and executed it in the terminal and this is the result:
Do you agree to the above license terms? [yes or no]
yes
Unpacking...
Checksumming...
0
0
Extracting...
./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: 383: ./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: ./install.sfx.5638: not found
Done.
Any idea of what should I do?
Thanks for your Time!
java oracle jre jvm
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ yesterday
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
1
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
1
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12
add a comment |
I´ve got HP Proliant dl380 g3 and I can´t use few things from the "iLO(integrated lights-out)" because this tool needs the Java Runtime Environment 1.4.2 to run in my browser
HP does not support this Old server so I tried to install it by myself:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javasebusiness/downloads/java-archive-downloads-javase14-419411.html#j2sdk-1.4.2_30-sol-JPR
I downloaded the j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin and executed it in the terminal and this is the result:
Do you agree to the above license terms? [yes or no]
yes
Unpacking...
Checksumming...
0
0
Extracting...
./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: 383: ./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: ./install.sfx.5638: not found
Done.
Any idea of what should I do?
Thanks for your Time!
java oracle jre jvm
I´ve got HP Proliant dl380 g3 and I can´t use few things from the "iLO(integrated lights-out)" because this tool needs the Java Runtime Environment 1.4.2 to run in my browser
HP does not support this Old server so I tried to install it by myself:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javasebusiness/downloads/java-archive-downloads-javase14-419411.html#j2sdk-1.4.2_30-sol-JPR
I downloaded the j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin and executed it in the terminal and this is the result:
Do you agree to the above license terms? [yes or no]
yes
Unpacking...
Checksumming...
0
0
Extracting...
./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: 383: ./j2re-1_4_2_19-linux-i586.bin: ./install.sfx.5638: not found
Done.
Any idea of what should I do?
Thanks for your Time!
java oracle jre jvm
java oracle jre jvm
asked Sep 27 '15 at 22:26
J.C.T.J.C.T.
612
612
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ yesterday
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ yesterday
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
1
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
1
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12
add a comment |
1
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
1
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12
1
1
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
1
1
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
lets try to install Full JDK(Java Development kit) JRE(Java Run-Time Environment) (included) to avoid problems.
type these in terminal if your system is Debian:
the first thing ,we need to add repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
do an update
sudo apt-get update
and finally installing jdk with jre
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
to verify that you installed java Successfully (optional)
java -version
as shown there how to install Java in Linux Deb
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
add a comment |
If you need an elder version of Sun Java (bought by Oracle), you need to download it from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/archive-139210.html, unpack it yourself, and update your $PATH to point to it. Possibly also your $JAVA_HOME for some tooling.
The oficial Installation Notes for Linux
Make sure that execute permissions are set Run this command:
chmod +x j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Run the self-extracting binary.
Execute the downloaded file, prepended by the path to it. For
example, if the file is in the current directory, prepend it with "
./" (necessary if " ." is not in the PATH environment variable):
./j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Note about System Preferences: By default, the installation script
configures the system such that the backing store for system
preferences is created inside the Java 2 Runtime Environment's
installation directory. If the J2RE is installed on a network-mounted
drive, it and the system preferences can be exported for sharing with
Java runtime environments on other machines. As an alternative, root
users can use the -localinstall option when running the installation
script, as in this example:
j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin -localinstall This option causes
the system preferences to be stored in the /etc directory from which
they can be shared only by VMs running on the local machine. You must
be root user for the -localinstall option to work.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
lets try to install Full JDK(Java Development kit) JRE(Java Run-Time Environment) (included) to avoid problems.
type these in terminal if your system is Debian:
the first thing ,we need to add repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
do an update
sudo apt-get update
and finally installing jdk with jre
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
to verify that you installed java Successfully (optional)
java -version
as shown there how to install Java in Linux Deb
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
add a comment |
lets try to install Full JDK(Java Development kit) JRE(Java Run-Time Environment) (included) to avoid problems.
type these in terminal if your system is Debian:
the first thing ,we need to add repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
do an update
sudo apt-get update
and finally installing jdk with jre
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
to verify that you installed java Successfully (optional)
java -version
as shown there how to install Java in Linux Deb
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
add a comment |
lets try to install Full JDK(Java Development kit) JRE(Java Run-Time Environment) (included) to avoid problems.
type these in terminal if your system is Debian:
the first thing ,we need to add repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
do an update
sudo apt-get update
and finally installing jdk with jre
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
to verify that you installed java Successfully (optional)
java -version
as shown there how to install Java in Linux Deb
lets try to install Full JDK(Java Development kit) JRE(Java Run-Time Environment) (included) to avoid problems.
type these in terminal if your system is Debian:
the first thing ,we need to add repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
do an update
sudo apt-get update
and finally installing jdk with jre
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
to verify that you installed java Successfully (optional)
java -version
as shown there how to install Java in Linux Deb
answered Sep 28 '15 at 10:30
Basil BattikhiBasil Battikhi
1416
1416
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
add a comment |
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
2
2
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
OP needs 1.4.2 and not 8.
– A.B.
Sep 28 '15 at 11:39
add a comment |
If you need an elder version of Sun Java (bought by Oracle), you need to download it from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/archive-139210.html, unpack it yourself, and update your $PATH to point to it. Possibly also your $JAVA_HOME for some tooling.
The oficial Installation Notes for Linux
Make sure that execute permissions are set Run this command:
chmod +x j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Run the self-extracting binary.
Execute the downloaded file, prepended by the path to it. For
example, if the file is in the current directory, prepend it with "
./" (necessary if " ." is not in the PATH environment variable):
./j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Note about System Preferences: By default, the installation script
configures the system such that the backing store for system
preferences is created inside the Java 2 Runtime Environment's
installation directory. If the J2RE is installed on a network-mounted
drive, it and the system preferences can be exported for sharing with
Java runtime environments on other machines. As an alternative, root
users can use the -localinstall option when running the installation
script, as in this example:
j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin -localinstall This option causes
the system preferences to be stored in the /etc directory from which
they can be shared only by VMs running on the local machine. You must
be root user for the -localinstall option to work.
add a comment |
If you need an elder version of Sun Java (bought by Oracle), you need to download it from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/archive-139210.html, unpack it yourself, and update your $PATH to point to it. Possibly also your $JAVA_HOME for some tooling.
The oficial Installation Notes for Linux
Make sure that execute permissions are set Run this command:
chmod +x j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Run the self-extracting binary.
Execute the downloaded file, prepended by the path to it. For
example, if the file is in the current directory, prepend it with "
./" (necessary if " ." is not in the PATH environment variable):
./j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Note about System Preferences: By default, the installation script
configures the system such that the backing store for system
preferences is created inside the Java 2 Runtime Environment's
installation directory. If the J2RE is installed on a network-mounted
drive, it and the system preferences can be exported for sharing with
Java runtime environments on other machines. As an alternative, root
users can use the -localinstall option when running the installation
script, as in this example:
j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin -localinstall This option causes
the system preferences to be stored in the /etc directory from which
they can be shared only by VMs running on the local machine. You must
be root user for the -localinstall option to work.
add a comment |
If you need an elder version of Sun Java (bought by Oracle), you need to download it from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/archive-139210.html, unpack it yourself, and update your $PATH to point to it. Possibly also your $JAVA_HOME for some tooling.
The oficial Installation Notes for Linux
Make sure that execute permissions are set Run this command:
chmod +x j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Run the self-extracting binary.
Execute the downloaded file, prepended by the path to it. For
example, if the file is in the current directory, prepend it with "
./" (necessary if " ." is not in the PATH environment variable):
./j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Note about System Preferences: By default, the installation script
configures the system such that the backing store for system
preferences is created inside the Java 2 Runtime Environment's
installation directory. If the J2RE is installed on a network-mounted
drive, it and the system preferences can be exported for sharing with
Java runtime environments on other machines. As an alternative, root
users can use the -localinstall option when running the installation
script, as in this example:
j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin -localinstall This option causes
the system preferences to be stored in the /etc directory from which
they can be shared only by VMs running on the local machine. You must
be root user for the -localinstall option to work.
If you need an elder version of Sun Java (bought by Oracle), you need to download it from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/archive-139210.html, unpack it yourself, and update your $PATH to point to it. Possibly also your $JAVA_HOME for some tooling.
The oficial Installation Notes for Linux
Make sure that execute permissions are set Run this command:
chmod +x j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Run the self-extracting binary.
Execute the downloaded file, prepended by the path to it. For
example, if the file is in the current directory, prepend it with "
./" (necessary if " ." is not in the PATH environment variable):
./j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin
Note about System Preferences: By default, the installation script
configures the system such that the backing store for system
preferences is created inside the Java 2 Runtime Environment's
installation directory. If the J2RE is installed on a network-mounted
drive, it and the system preferences can be exported for sharing with
Java runtime environments on other machines. As an alternative, root
users can use the -localinstall option when running the installation
script, as in this example:
j2re-1_4_2_-linux-i586.bin -localinstall This option causes
the system preferences to be stored in the /etc directory from which
they can be shared only by VMs running on the local machine. You must
be root user for the -localinstall option to work.
answered Apr 20 '16 at 21:14
Valeriy SolovyovValeriy Solovyov
24115
24115
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
I'm confused...you installed it, what seems to be the problem here? What is wrong? If you are getting an error, what error?
– Zzzach...
Sep 28 '15 at 1:51
1
the things is that when I go and try to use the tool I mentioned before, it keeps telling I should install JVM 1.4.2. I open the installation file to see what happened and even thou it say "Done", "./install.sfx.5638" it´s just the beginning. It just quit the installation and says "I don´t find this file.... done".
– J.C.T.
Sep 29 '15 at 7:12