vote up 3 vote down star

I have an application that starts a Swing gui using java web start. The user has 4 versions of java 1.6 installed (1.6.0.3, 1.6.0.5, 1.6.0.7. 1.6.0.11)

Webstart is selecting java version 1.6.0.11 but JAVA_HOME is set to java version 1.6.0.3. Could this cause any potential problems for webstart?

  • rich
flag

68% accept rate

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

In this thread, it is mentioned a Java Web Start application check the version of an available JRE in this path:

C:\Documents and Settings\[User]\Application Data\Sun\Java\Deployment\deployment.properties
(for Windows XP)

C:\Users\[User]\AppData\LocalLow\Sun\Java\Deployment\deployment.properties
(for Windows Vista)

In it, lines like:

deployment.javaws.jre.0.path=C\:\\Program Files\\Java\\jre6\\bin\\javaw.exe
deployment.javaws.jre.0.product=1.6.0_11

are found.

I believe the JWS will start with those settings, not the ones from a JAVA_HOME variable, which should not be a problem.

As detailed here,

The deployment.properties file is used for storing and retrieving deployment configuration properties in the Java Control Panel. They are also used for customizing runtime behavior for both Java Plug-in and Java Web Start.

There is always a User-Level deployment.properties file. Its location, which is non-configurable, is described below. There may also be an (optional) System-Level deployment.properties file.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Take a look inside the jave web start script. They might have their own JRE or JDK path inside it. The user might be even using a version that is not listed on the list above. This is usually done to easy installation on the end-user.

Hope you find the solution.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.