Can't install jdk on Fedora with yum nor with rpm - centos

Help! I can't figure out how to install a jdk!
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ su -c "yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel"
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
No package java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel available.
Error: Nothing to do
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ su -c "yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk"
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
No package java-1.7.0-openjdk available.
Error: Nothing to do
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ su -c "yum install java-1.6.0-openjdk-devel"
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
No package java-1.6.0-openjdk-devel available.
Error: Nothing to do
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ su -c "yum install java-1.6.0-openjdk"
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
No package java-1.6.0-openjdk available.
Error: Nothing to do
Here I've manually downloaded some rpm's, the last one from oracle's website:
[~]$ rpm -ivh java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel-1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20.x86_64.rpm
error: Failed dependencies:
java-1.7.0-openjdk = 1:1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20 is needed by java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel-1:1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20.x86_64
[~]$ sudo rpm -ivh java-1.7.0-openjdk-1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20.x86_64.rpm
Preparing... ################################# [100%]
file /usr/lib/jvm-exports/jre-1.7.0-openjdk.x86_64 from install of java-1.7.0-openjdk-1:1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20.x86_64 conflicts with file from package java-1.7.0-openjdk-1:1.7.0.9-2.3.7.0.fc18.x86_64
file /usr/lib/jvm/jre-1.7.0-openjdk.x86_64 from install of java-1.7.0-openjdk-1:1.7.0.19-2.3.9.3.fc20.x86_64 conflicts with file from package java-1.7.0-openjdk-1:1.7.0.9-2.3.7.0.fc18.x86_64
[~]$ sudo rpm -ivh jdk-7u21-linux-x64.rpm
Preparing... ################################# [100%]
file /etc/init.d/jexec from install of jdk-2000:1.7.0_21-fcs.x86_64 conflicts with file from package jdk-2000:1.6.0_38-fcs.x86_64
Debug
Here's some debug information:
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ yum search jdk
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
=========================================================== N/S Matched: jdk ============================================================
java-1.7.0-openjdk-javadoc.noarch : OpenJDK API Documentation
jdk.x86_64 : Java(TM) Platform Standard Edition Development Kit
ldapjdk.noarch : The Mozilla LDAP Java SDK
Name and summary matches only, use "search all" for everything.
.
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ yum list java*
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit
Installed Packages
java-1.5.0-gcj.x86_64
.
[/usr/lib/jvm]$ cat /etc/fedora-release
Fedora release 18 (Spherical Cow)
Requirements
I must have "jni.h", "libjava.so", "libhpi.so", "lipverify.so" and "libjvm.so" included.
So far I've found out that these DO NOT have what I need:
Undesired Versions (for sure):
jdk1.7.0_06 <-- I'm surprised about this one, but it doesn't have libjvm nor libhpi
java-1.7.0
java-openjdk
java-1.7.0-openjdk-1.7.0.9.x86_64
java-1.5.0-gcj-4.4
java-1.6.0-openjdk
java-1.7.0-openjdk.x86_64
jre-1.5.0-gcj
jre-1.7.0-openjdk.x86_64
jre-openjdk
jre-1.7.0
jre-7u11-linux-x64.rpm java-1.5.0-gcj-1.5.0.0
jre-1.5.0
jre1.7.0_11
jre-gcj
And these do:
Desired Versions (that I know of, there could be more):
jdk1.6.0_34-x86
jdk1.5.0_22-x86
java-6-openjdk
Can someone help me install jdk1.6 or java-6-openjdk please?

The problem here is that you cannot use the Oracle rpm to install JDK 7 when you already have the Oracle JDK 6 as it tries to install the /etc/init.d/jexec script which is already installed and required for JDK 6.
I would advise sticking to the tarball or self extracting *.bin and using JAVA_HOME if you are going to use the Oracle distribution as it does not have this problem and you will probably not need jexec anyway.

In general I would suggest that you install the Oracle JDK not the OpenJDK. Otherwise you might risk running into some issues. I always found problems of all sorts and sizes with OpenJDK that I don't even bother trying it any more.
Download the JDK RPM from here and follow the usual instructions. Its usually very straightforward and without problems.
Full detailed instructions including how to install it here.
Make sure you choose the right version you need (JDK 1.7 or JDK 1.6, dont mix) because from your question you seem to have a confusion of library versions from 1.5 to 1.7.
And another thing, uninstall whatever you have installed already before installing a fresh one to avoid conflicts.

Check my answer here Transaction check error when installing Sun JDK 7
Basically you may use rpm --force to install one JDK on top of the other. This scenario is completely valid specially when you have to develop for different JAVA versions.

Just faced the same issue. I was not comfortable using --force command; did not want to risk messing-up the existing Java that came installed at system setup.
I ended up doing the following and running the app server with a different version of Java under a different user ID.
downloaded the Java tar.gz version and uncompressed:
tar -zxvf jdk-7u45-linux-x64.gz
Created the directory:
mkdir /usr/java/jdk1.7.0_45
Copied the contents to the new directory manually:
cp -r /.../jdk1.7.0_45/* /usr/java/jdk1.7.0_45
Set the java_home under the user ID home directory in .bashrc and .bash_profile files:
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.7.0_45
export PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin:$PATH
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/sfw/lib/gcc:/usr/sfw/bin

sudo rpm -i jdk-11.0.9_linux-x64_bin.rpm
or whatever package you are trying to install

Related

How to install Oracle SQL Developer on Linux (Pop!_OS)

I am trying to install SQL Developer on my laptop. I've download the file from Oracle and follow the instruction, I have RPM installed, but when I run rpm -Uhv sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch.rpm, I encountered the following:
rpm: RPM should not be used directly install RPM packages, use Alien instead!
rpm: However assuming you know what you are doing...
warning: RPM v3 packages are deprecated: sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch
error: Failed dependencies:
/bin/sh is needed by sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch
What can I try next?
It looks like you are trying to run a package made for redhat based systems, but PopOS is debian based.
To proceed with the installation you must first install rpm2cpio, then you can extract it by running the command "# rpm2cpio datamodeler-21.4.2.059.0838-1.noarch.rpm", then you can access the extracted directory.
Then you can use the command "# ./sqldeveloper.sh" to run the application.
But, ensure you have a JDK installed You will be prompted to enter a jdk path. (ie usr/java/jdk1.8.0_181) SQL Developer will automatically launch once jdk location is provided

Install other dependency rpm during the rpm installation

i need to install openjdk 11 along with my rpm. my software runs on java 11 but our pc have different version of java already installed.
please help me to install openjdk11 along with my rpm installation
i tried using yum install inside %pre
%pre
java-11-openjdk
You cannot manipulate the RPM database in scriptlets. You need to put Requires: java-11-openjdk and then provide the RPM in the same manner as your own software, e.g. yum/dnf repository, burned to a CD, etc.

The db2prereqcheck utility could not find the library file libnuma.so.1. on ubi7/ubi:latest docker image

i have a problem to install numactl-libs (or libnuma.so.1) on a ubi7/ubi:latest Docker image to run the db2 installation.
I have built a Docker image for db2 and wanted to test whether the DB2 installation runs successfully.
However, I get the following error message:
Requirement not matched for DB2 database "Server" . Version: "11.1.4.6".
Summary of prerequisites that are not met on the current system:
DBT3609E The db2prereqcheck utility could not find the library file libnuma.so.1.
The image has ubi7/ubi:latest as base image and the following libraries are also installed as follows:
RUN yum install -y libaio numactl-libs libpam.so.0 binutils gcc gcc-c++ ksh numactl && yum clean all
All libraries are successfully installed except numactl-libs (or libnuma.so.1?).
Note: a manual installation of numactl-libs worked without problems and thus the DB2 installation was successful:
ADD http://mirror.centos.org/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/numactl-libs-2.0.12-5.el7.x86_64.rpm numactl.rpm
RUN rpm -i numactl.rpm
However, I would like the installation of numactl-libs to be done automatically with e.g. the command yum install -y numactl-libs or another equivalent command.
Unfortunately, an attempt with the command yum install -y libnuma.so.1 or yum install -y libnuma.so.* did not change anything and the same error message was displayed.
Can you please help me? I would be very grateful
Note: in my case a 64-bit version is used.
Update:
Unfortunately even trying to install libnuma-dev and libnuma1 has not changed anything and the error message is still the same .
The output of yum provides libnuma.so.1 is:
Loaded plugins: ovl, product-id, search-disabled-repos,
subscription-manager This system is not registered with an
entitlement server. You can use subscription-manager to register.
No matches found
It seems that the problem is that numactl-libs cannot be installed:
The output of yum install numactl-libs is:
Loaded plugins: ovl, product-id, search-disabled-repos, subscription-manager.
This system is not registered with an entitlement server. You can use subscription-manager to register.
No package numactl-libs available.
Solution:
The problem was fixed and numactl-libs could finally be installed:
After I created a Red Hat user account and registered and subscribed to a system for the Red Hat Customer Portal with Red Hat Subscription Manager, numactl-libs installed without any problems.
To register and subscribe to a system for the Red Hat Customer Portal with Red Hat Subscription Manager.
See the following link: (https://access.redhat.com/solutions/253273)
I added the following line in my Dockerfile before the command yum install numactl-libs:
subscription-manager register --username=[USER_NAME] --password=[PASSWORD] --auto-attach
After these steps the DB2 installation ran without problems.
Thank you very much for your tips and help!

Install perl module Net:SSH2 on redhat/centos 7

As the title says I am trying to install the perl module perl-Net-SSH2. I have tried via yum but get an error that no package is available.
yum install perl-Net-SSH2
I have tried by downloading an rpm file but the only one I can find is for el6 and it complains about the version of perl
yum localinstall perl-Net-SSH2-0.45-4.el6.x86_64.rpm
Requires: perl(:MODULE_COMPAT_5.10.1)
I have tried downloading the source code but get told "Unable to find a working version of library ssh2 in the following directories" even though it is installed. (via yum install libssh2 libssh2-devel)
I have tried via cpan but get the same error "Unable to find a working version of library ssh2 in the following directories"
Any ideas? Google is very sketchy on this and only
OK, I solved this while writing the question. Seeing as information on this is limited I thought it would be worth posting the question anyway. The error message was giving the wrong information in that it was actually gcc that was missing, not libssh2. These are the steps I followed. I've tried to make it as verbatim as possible. I have not verified all these modules are required but this is what I installed before compiling it.
yum install libssh2 libssh2-devel
yum install openssl openssl-devel
yum install perl-Net-SSLeay
yum install gcc
Search for Net::SSH2 in google
Click the link "Net::SSH2 - search.cpan.org"
Download source code (tar.gz file)
Copy it to your redhat 7 machine
tar -xvf Net-SSH2-0.62.tar.gz
cd Net-SSH2-x.xx
perl Makefile.PL
make
make install
Should all be working now, test it with
perl -e 'use Net::SSH2;'

What does "The APR based Apache Tomcat Native library was not found" mean?

I am using Tomcat 7 in Eclipse on Windows. When starting Tomcat, I am getting the following info message:
The APR based Apache Tomcat Native library which allows optimal performance in production environments was not found on the java.library.path
What does this mean and how can I provide the APR library?
It means exactly what it says: "The APR based Apache Tomcat Native library which allows optimal performance in production environments was not found on the java.library.path"
The library referred to is bundled into an OS specific dll (tcnative-1.dll) loaded via JNI. It allows tomcat to use OS functionalities not provided in the Java Runtime (such as sendfile, epoll, OpenSSL, system status, etc.). Tomcat will run just fine without it, but for some use cases, it will be faster with the native libraries.
If you really want it, download the tcnative-1.dll (or libtcnative.so for Linux) and put it in the bin folder, and add a system property to the launch configuration of the tomcat server in eclipse.
-Djava.library.path=c:\dev\tomcat\bin
Unless you're running a production server, don't worry about this message. This is a library which is used to improve performance (on production systems). From Apache Portable Runtime (APR) based Native library for Tomcat:
Tomcat can use the Apache Portable Runtime to provide superior
scalability, performance, and better integration with native server
technologies. The Apache Portable Runtime is a highly portable library
that is at the heart of Apache HTTP Server 2.x. APR has many uses,
including access to advanced IO functionality (such as sendfile, epoll
and OpenSSL), OS level functionality (random number generation, system
status, etc), and native process handling (shared memory, NT pipes and
Unix sockets).
On RHEL Linux just issue:
yum install tomcat-native.x86_64
/Note:depending on Your architecture 64bit or 32bit package may have different extension/
That is all. After that You will find in the log file next informational message:
INFO: APR capabilities: IPv6 [true], sendfile [true], accept filters [false], random [true].
All operations will be noticeably faster than before.
Installation the native library on Ubuntu server with:
sudo apt-get install libtcnative-1
If that does not work tomcat-native needs to be installed
Install Oracle java7:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install oracle-java7-installer
sudo apt-get install oracle-java7-set-default
Install tomcat apr:
wget http://apache.mirror.anlx.net//apr/apr-1.5.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf apr-1.5.0.tar.gz
rm apr-1.5.0.tar.gz
cd apr-1.5.0
sudo ./configure
sudo make
sudo make install
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH='$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/apr/lib'
Install tomcat tomcat-native:
wget http://mirrors.ukfast.co.uk/sites/ftp.apache.org//tomcat/tomcat-connectors/native/1.1.29/source/tomcat-native-1.1.29-src.tar.gz
tar zxvf tomcat-native-1.1.29-src.tar.gz
rm tomcat-native-1.1.29-src.tar.gz
cd tomcat-native-1.1.29-src/jni/native
JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-oracle
sudo ./configure --with-apr=/usr/local/apr --with-java-home=$JAVA_HOME
sudo make
sudo make install
I just went through this and configured it with the following:
Ubuntu 16.04
Tomcat 8.5.9
Apache2.4.25
APR 1.5.2
Tomcat-native 1.2.10
Java 8
These are the steps i used based on the older posts here:
Install package
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libtcnative-1
Verify these packages are installed
sudo apt-get install make
sudo apt-get install gcc
sudo apt-get install openssl
Install package
sudo apt-get install libssl-dev
Install and compile Apache APR
cd /opt/tomcat/bin
sudo wget http://apache.mirror.anlx.net//apr/apr-1.5.2.tar.gz
sudo tar -xzvf apr-1.5.2.tar.gz
cd apr-1.5.2
sudo ./configure
sudo make
sudo make install
verify installation
cd /usr/local/apr/lib/
ls
you should see the compiled file as
libapr-1.la
Download and install Tomcat Native source package
cd /opt/tomcat/bin
sudo wget https://archive.apache.org/dist/tomcat/tomcat-connectors/native/1.2.10/source/tomcat-native-1.2.10-src.tar.gz
sudo tar -xzvf tomcat-native-1.2.10-src.tar.gz
cd tomcat-native-1.2.10-src/native
verify JAVA_HOME
sudo pico ~/.bashrc
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64
source ~/.bashrc
sudo ./configure --with-apr=/usr/local/apr --with-java-home=$JAVA_HOME
sudo make
sudo make install
Edit the /opt/tomcat/bin/setenv.sh file with following line:
sudo pico /opt/tomcat/bin/setenv.sh
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH='$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/apr/lib'
restart tomcat
sudo service tomcat restart
On Mac OS X:
$ brew install tomcat-native
==> tomcat-native
In order for tomcat's APR lifecycle listener to find this library, you'll
need to add it to java.library.path. This can be done by adding this line
to $CATALINA_HOME/bin/setenv.sh
CATALINA_OPTS="$CATALINA_OPTS -Djava.library.path=/usr/local/opt/tomcat-native/lib"
If $CATALINA_HOME/bin/setenv.sh doesn't exist, create it and make it executable.
Then add it to the eclipse's tomcat arguments (double-click Server > Open Launch Configuration > Arguments tab > VM arguments)
-Djava.library.path=/usr/local/opt/tomcat-native/lib
on debian 8 I fix it with installing libapr1-dev:
apt-get install libtcnative-1 libapr1-dev
Had this problem as well. If you do have the libraries, but still have this error, it may be a configuration error. Your server.xml may be missing the following line:
<Listener className="org.apache.catalina.core.AprLifecycleListener" SSLEngine="on" />
(Alternatively, it may be commented out). This <Listener>, like other listeners is a child of the top-level <Server>.
Without the <Listener> line, there's no attempt to load the APR library, so LD_LIBRARY_PATH and -Djava.library.path= settings are ignored.
I had this issue upgrading from Java 8 to 11. After adding this dependency, my app launched without issue:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.javassist</groupId>
<artifactId>javassist</artifactId>
<version>3.25.0-GA</version>
</dependency>
I had the same problem when tomсat could not find the class. Try to view other log files. Sometimes No class def found error appears in different log files:
tomcat8-stdout
tomcat8-stderr
localhost
If you don't have Tomcat Native library install it with:
sudo apt-get install libtcnative-1
and if it's still there an old version upgrade it with:
sudo apt-get upgrade libtcnative-1
My problem was in add some library from tomcat to eclipse class path i just going to
eclipse click right to project and going to debug configuration -> classpath -> Add External JARs add all jars files from apache-tomcat-7.0.35\bin this was my problem and it's worked for me .
For future readers:
I had faced this issue myself when trying to run a Spring Boot application in Spring STS. This issue didn't resurface initially. I was able to work on my project without any issues for quite some time until one fine day I started getting this particular error.
From what I am able to recall I had not made any configuration changes to my project and neither changed the Java/Tomcat version being used.
None of the discussions/suggestions regarding installing the tomcat native library made any sense to me since the project was already working fine before.
SOLUTION that worked for me:
So lastly I though of trying to delete and reimport my project.
I deleted my project from Spring STS, restarted the Spring STS and then reimported the project. It worked like a charm and never faced the issue ever since.
You may also try deleting any IDE generated files/folders(if there are any) in your project, before restarting the IDE and reimporting the project.
I still happen to work on this project from time to time and haven't faced the issue as of now. My current development IDE is IntelliJ.
I'm not sure if the error was IDE specific.