Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How can i understand if a Java Virtual Machine is installed on Unix?? Post 302502510 by g_p on Tuesday 8th of March 2011 06:31:18 AM
Old 03-08-2011
How can i understand if a Java Virtual Machine is installed on Unix??

Hello,

i would like to figute out, if there is any JVM installed on my unix account.

How can i figure that out??

Thanks
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

About Java Virtual Machine

How can I Install Java Virtual Machine on Unix AIX 4.3 . (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Niko
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

About Java Virtual Machine

Can Someone help me for Java VM? How can I see version of JVM and JDK on UNIX AIX 4.3? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Niko
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix Virtual Machine?

Hey everyone... I'm currently doing a Bachelor of Information Technology at university, and next semesters work is going to involve quite a lot of unix and c. I am a windows XP user and I was wondering if anyone knew of any way to get unix to run as some sort of 'sub operating system' below... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Smeeg
3 Replies

4. Solaris

Change hostID of Solaris 10 virtual/guest machine installed by Virtual Box 4.1.12 on Windows-XP host

Trying to set or modify the randomly set hostID of a Solaris 10 virtual/guest machine that I installed on a Windows-XP host machine (using Virtual Box 4.1.12). I was able to set/modify the hostname of the Solaris 10 virtual/guest machine during installation as well as via the Virtual Box... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Matt_VB
4 Replies

5. Red Hat

My RHEL virtual Machine Does not have Virtual Machine Manager Desktop Tool

My RHEL virtual Machine Does not have Virtual Machine Manager Desktop Tool Hi, I don't seem to have the Virtual Machine Manager Desktop tool set up on my RHEL6 Machine. The Linux machine runs off VMWare player and I'm not sure whether it is a VMWare software issue or a problem with the RHEL6... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: accipiter1
2 Replies

6. AIX

IBM Virtual Machine OS on intel x86 and x64? IBM AIX OS on IBM Virtual Machine?

Hi There, I have zero information and zero knowledge for IBM virtual machine except Amazon cloud and VMware ESXi (Only Linux OS available). Anyone could provide me the following answer - Can IBM VM been deploy on X86 and X64 (Intel Chip)? If answer is yes any chance to deploy AIX OS... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: chenyung
13 Replies

7. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Providing virtual machine priority in kvm based virtual machines

Hi All, Is there any way I can prioritize my VMs when there is resource crunch in host machine so that some VMs will be allocated more vcpu, more memory than other VMs in kvm/qemu hypervisor based virtual machines? Lets say in my cloud environment my Ubuntu 16 compute hosts are running some... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: SanjayK
0 Replies
asadmin-create-jvm-options(1AS) 				   User Commands				   asadmin-create-jvm-options(1AS)

NAME
asadmin-create-jvm-options, create-jvm-options - creates the JVM options from the Java configuration or profiler elements SYNOPSIS
create-jvm-options --user admin_user [--password admin_password][--host localhost] [--port 4848] [--secure|-s] [--passwordfile filename] [--terse=false] [--echo=false] [--interactive=true] [--profiler=false ](jvm_option_name=jvm_option_value)[:jvm_option_name=jvm_option_value]* Creates the JVM options in the Java configuration or Profiler elements of the domain.xml file. You can enter more than one JVM option sepa- rated by a colon (:) . If the JVM option starts with a dash (-) then use two dashes (--) before the operand to distinguish that JVM option is an operand and not an option. JVM options are used to record the settings needed to get a particular profiler going. You must restart the server for the newly created JVM options to take affect. Use the start-domain command to restart the server domain. OPTIONS
--user authorized domain application server administrative username. --password password to administer the domain application server. --host machine name where the domain application server is running. --port port number of the domain application server listening for administration requests. --secure if true, uses SSL/TLS to communicate with the domain application server. --passwordfile file containing the domain application server password. --terse indicates that any output data must be very concise, typically avoiding human-friendly sentences and favoring well- formatted data for consumption by a script. Default is false. --echo setting to true will echo the command line statement on the standard output. Default is false. --interactive if set to true (default), only the required password options are prompted. --profiler indicates if the JVM options is for the profiler. Profiler must exist for this option to be true. OPERANDS
jvm_option_name=jvm_optithevleft side of the equal sign (=) is the JVM option name. The right side of the equal sign (=) is the jvm_option_value. Additionally, you can use ":" as a delimiter for more than one jvm-option. If the jvm-option contains a ":", use the escape character to offset the ":" delimiter. Example 1: Using create-jvm-options asadmin> create-jvm-options --user admin --password adminadmin --host localhost --port 4848 --profiler=false --DDebug=true:"-Xmx256m":" -Dcom.sun.aas.imqBin"="/export/as7se/imq/bin" Command create-jvm-options executed successfully Where the JVM options are created. The double dash (--) is used between --profiler options and the operand because - indicated the end of the options and the following text is the operand. The double dash (--) is necessary here since there are single dashes (i.e., --DDebug) in the operand. To distinguish between the options and the operand, the double dash (--) is used. EXIT STATUS
0 command executed successfully 1 error in executing the command asadmin-delete-jvm-options(1AS) J2EE 1.4 SDK March 2004 asadmin-create-jvm-options(1AS)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:46 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy