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I have the older NetBeans 6.7, NetBeans 6.9, and NetBeans 7.0, which used to run on jdk1.6.0_21 and jdk1.6.0_25. Now I've removed those JDKs and only have jdk1.6.0_26 and jdk1.7.0 left, but I still want to keep the older versions of NetBeans, but now when I run them, I get this message:

"Cannot locate java installation in specified jdkhome C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.6.0_25
Do you want to try to use default version?"

I tried to find where it's looking for the "jdk1.6.0_25", and updated a few configuration files in "C:\Program Files (x86)\NetBeans 6.7" and "C:\Users\USER.nbi\registry.xml", and yet the message keeps coming. Where and what do I need to change to point it to C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.6.0_26?

10 Answers 10

402

Thanks to Kasun Gajasinghe's tip, I found the solution in the "suggested" link. Update the following file (replace 7.x with your NetBeans version):

C:\Program Files\NetBeans 7.x\etc\netbeans.conf

Change the following line to point it where your Java installation is:

netbeans_jdkhome="C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7xxxxx"

You may need administrator privileges to edit netbeans.conf.

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  • 2
    @asciimo For completion, you can even customize the properties on a per-user basis by writing a netbeans.conf under ~/.netbeans/version/etc that overrides the /usr/local... properties file. (I assume /usr/local/netbeans-7.3/etc is your distro installation folder--I'm developing with a manual installed version in customized folder and cannot be 100% sure--.)
    – Alberto
    Commented Apr 7, 2014 at 14:23
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    NB: As of Netbeans 8 there is also a netbeans.conf in C:\Users\You\AppData\Roaming\NetBeans\8.0\etc\netbeans.conf. Commented Jul 17, 2014 at 8:47
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    As noted in the comments in that file, you can comment out the line to let the launcher decide which version to use. This normally manages to automatically pick the most recent version.
    – Bob
    Commented Feb 17, 2015 at 22:24
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    @OldCurmudgeon Not for me there isn't.
    – BadHorsie
    Commented Feb 24, 2015 at 10:36
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    Heed the suggestion that Administrator privileges are needed to edit netbeans.conf, at least under Windows 7. I tried editing the file without Administrator privileges and while it appeared to work, apparently Windows actually saved the updated file as a separate copy that was only visible to me via Windows Explorer. When NetBeans ran, it read the original file, which still referenced the old JDK. What bizarre and confusing behavior on the part of Windows.
    – Kevin Rahe
    Commented Apr 23, 2015 at 20:16
70

Go to Tools* → Java Platforms. There, click on Add Platform and point it to C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.6.0_25. You can either set the another JDK version or remove existing versions.

Another solution suggested on the Oracle (Sun) site is,

netbeans.exe --jdkhome "C:\Program Files\jdk1.6.0_20"

I tried this on 6.9.1. You may change the JDK per project as well. You need to set the available JDKs via the Java Platforms dialog. Then, go to RunSet Project ConfigurationCustomize. After that, in the opened dialog box, go to menu BuildCompile. Set the version.

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    There is no Java Platforms menu item in Netbeans 8.2
    – andreszs
    Commented Apr 25, 2018 at 22:30
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For those not using Windows, the file to change is netbeans-8.0/etc/netbeans.conf.

And the line(s) to change is:

netbeans_jdkhome="/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle"

Comment out the old value and insert the new value.

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  • This worked for me using Ubuntu 18.04 and NetBeans IDE 8.2. Thank you! Commented Jul 22, 2018 at 11:14
7

As a further useful solution for those of you on Windows 7 and above - if you use

cd "C:\Program Files\Java"
mklink /D jdk8 jdk1.8.0_25

you get a symbolic link folder that can be adjusted whenever a new JDK comes out.

All you need to do then is set your

netbeans_jdkhome="C:\Program Files\Java\jdk8"

(in both locations for NetBeans 8) and you never have to edit the configuration again. Just tweak the symlink each time your JDK is updated.

6

I had this message too because today I decided to relocate my different JDK in the same directory. I have decided to uninstall all through the program manager of Windows. After that, of course I had the message below.

"Cannot locate java installation in specified jdkhome C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.7.0_60. Do you want to try to use the default version?"

A new install of the JDK does not resolve the problem. OK, you can configure that in menu ToolsJava platforms, but in my case I had to fix my netbeans.conf file.

I had the line below:

netbeans_jdkhome="C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_60"

And I replaced it by:

netbeans_jdkhome="C:\devtools\Java\jdk1.8.0_25"
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    You probably want to just comment out that line. In that case, Netbeans will search and find the latest version on startup.
    – Duncan
    Commented Mar 22, 2016 at 14:52
5

It does not exactly answer your question, but to get around the problem,

  1. you can either create a .cmd file with following content:

    start netbeans --jdkhome c:\path\to\jdk

  2. or in the shortcut of Netbeans set the above option.

4

Where you already have a project in NetBeans and you wish to change the compiler (e.g. from 1.7 to 1.) then you would need to also change the Java source compiler for that project.

Right-click on the project and choose Properties as outlined below:

Java Project Properties

Then check that the project has the necessary source circled below:

Project Source Compiler

Then check that the Java compiler is correct for the project:

Enter image description here

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All the other answers have described how to explicitly specify the location of the Java platform, which is fine if you really want to use a specific version of Java. However, if you just want to use the most up-to-date version of the JDK, and you have that installed in a "normal" place for your operating system, then the best solution is to not specify a JDK location. Instead, let the NetBeans launcher search for the JDK every time you start it up.

To do this, do not specify jdkhome on the command line, and comment out the line setting netbeans_jdkhome variable in any netbeans.conf files. (See other answers for where to look for these files.)

If you do this, when you install a new version of Java, your NetBeans installation will automagically use it. In most cases, that's probably exactly what you want.

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In Windows, open cmd.

Go to the directory where your NetBeans file downloaded.

Then run the below command. The JDK path may be different from the path I mentioned.

netbeans-8.2-windows.exe --javahome "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk-9.0.1"
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  • Use --jdkhome and not --javahome instead and link leads to spam page. Commented Jul 9, 2022 at 11:38
0

For Apache Netbeans IDE 17 go to Tools -> Java Platforms: enter image description here

Then in the Java Platform Manager click on Add Platform...: enter image description here

Then go through the next menu options and select the jdk version you downloaded that you want to add to netbeans, then click on Finish, now you'll see a new platform listed with the jdk you just added: enter image description here

Now go to Tools -> Options then go to the Java -> Maven tab and for the Default JDK option you can now select the new jdk you added above:

enter image description here

Now when you compile your application on Netbeans you can see the Java version it is using:

enter image description here

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