What could be wrong in UNIX environment if following command says that user.dir set to “.”?
/home/user> $ANT_DIR/bin/ant -diagnostics | grep dir
user.dir : .
If I run this command on different computer- user.dir is set to current directory:
/home/user2> $ANT_DIR/bin/ant -diagnostics | grep dir
user.dir : /home/user2
Java does not work also.
/home/user> java -cp .:$CLASSPATH test
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: test
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: test
at java.net.URLClassLoader.findClass(URLClassLoader.java:434)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:653)
at sun.misc.Launcher$AppClassLoader.loadClass(Launcher.java:358)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:619)
Could not find the main class: test. Program will exit.
Add current dir to classpath.
/home/user> java -cp /home/user:$CLASSPATH test
Hello World!
As you can see, java have found test class only when I added current directory, not ".", to classpath.
As far as I understand some unix environment variable has wrong value. But what environment variable?

.) vs the$HOMEdirectory? – maerics May 3 '12 at 16:25pwdsay? What is the value ofUSER_HOME? – Angelo Neuschitzer May 3 '12 at 16:35