Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming Incompatible types for returned object Post 302992872 by yifangt on Thursday 2nd of March 2017 05:37:08 PM
Old 03-02-2017
Thank you so much for pointing out the CLASSPATH issue, which indeed is the problem!
I upgraded my java to 1.8.0_121 and extracted their library to a sub-folder I forgot. According to you clue I edited CLASSPATH and it seems working now .....
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

rpc.rstatd: incompatible...

Hi, I'm working with Mercury tools: Loadrunner, and I'm trying to monitor a unix server by rstatd, and I got next error: Mar 4 11:25:56 sacindt rpc.rstatd: incompatible to /proc. Could not read disk_io: data does any one have an idea about this.. regards (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: toto2000ff
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

-pg incompatible with -shared

while compiling my code with -pg option i got the following error: ld (prelink): -pg incompatible with -shared; assuming -nopg any idea to overcome this problem? how can i use gprof profiler for a program using shared libraries? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yakari
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

UNIX patches with incompatible packages

I have a Sun Sparc machine with Solaris 9 on it as oracle server. We added two patches (112233-11: SunOS 5.9:Kernel Patch and 111722-04: SunOS 5.9:MathLibrary(libm)patch). When I prepared the server for Oracle installation, I checked patch with command: $/usr/sbin/patchadd -p | grep <patch_number>.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: duke0001
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Object reference not set to an instance of an object

I am new to PHP and UNIX. I am using Apache to do my testing on a Windows Vista machine. I am getting this error when I am trying to connect to a web service. I did a search and did not see any posts that pertain to this. Here is my function: <?php function TRECSend($a, $b, $c, $d,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: EddiRae
0 Replies

5. Programming

GCC - Incompatible Pointer Types

Hi guys, here is my code written in C and the compiler error message. int i; int (*a); for (i = 1;i <= 9;i++) a = (int *)malloc(sizeof(int) * 10);here is the error: incompatible types when assigning to type ‘int’ from type ‘int *’I want to make a two dimensional array. I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: majid.merkava
2 Replies

6. Red Hat

Incompatible Level of gcc?

I'm compiling an application someone gave me. It uses XLC on a Power7, running Red Hat (4? 5?). It compiles and links, but I get the following message for every .o and .exe... xlc_r: 1501-274 (W) An incompatible level of gcc has been specified. I've tried googling on this error, and I'll I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Harper21
2 Replies

7. Programming

How to initialize an object with another object of different class?

How to initialize an object of class say "A", with an object of type say "B". The following code give the error message "error: conversion from âAâ to non-scalar type âBâ requested" #include <iostream> using namespace std; class B; class A{ public: A() { cout <<"\nA()" << endl; } ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: techmonk
1 Replies

8. Programming

Incompatible data type fpos_t in C

This is from a program I wrote over in 1998 that I am trying to compile on a linux machine: void write_line (FILE *fp, int rec_no, line_rec *arec) { fpos_t woffset; woffset = (rec_no - 1) * sizeof(line_rec); fsetpos(fp,&woffset); fwrite(arec,sizeof(line_rec),1,fp); }On the line... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wbport
2 Replies
java(5) 							File Formats Manual							   java(5)

NAME
java, javac, jre, jdb, javah, javap, javadoc, appletviewer, rmic, rmiregistry, serialver, native2ascii, jar, javakey - The Java Develop- ment Kit tools SYNOPSIS
java [ options ] classname <args> java_g [ options ] classname <args> DESCRIPTION
This reference page describes the java command only. The Java Development Kit (JDK) is part of the Java Virtual Machine (VM). If the JDK documentation was installed on your Tru64 UNIX system, you can view documentation on all of the JDK tools, and other Java reference mate- rial, at the following location: /usr/share/doclib/java/index.html The java command invokes an interpreter that executes Java bytecodes. It executes Java class files created by a Java compiler, for instance, javac. NOTES
Any arguments that appear after classname on the command line are passed to the main method of the class. The java command expects the binary representation of the class to be in a file called classname.class, which is generated by compiling the corresponding source file with javac. All Java class files end with the filename extension .class which the compiler automatically adds when the class is compiled. classname must contain a main method defined as follows: class Aclass { public static void main(String argv[]){ . . . } } java executes the main method and then exits unless main creates one or more threads. If any threads are created by main then java doesn't exit until the last thread exits. Ordinarily, you compile source files with javac then run the program using java. However, java can be used to compile and run programs when the -cs option is used. As each class file is loaded its modification date is compared to the modification date of the class source file. If the source has been modified more recently, it is recompiled and the new class file is loaded. java repeats this procedure until all the classes are correctly compiled and loaded. The interpreter can determine whether a class is legitimate through the mechanism of verification. Verification ensures prior to their exe- cution that class files do not violate any language constraints. java_g is a non-optimized version of java suitable for use with debuggers like jdb. EXAMPLES
The classname argument is the name of the class to be executed. classname must be fully qualified by including its package in the name, for example: % java java.lang.String When you define your own classes you need to specify their location. Use CLASSPATH to do this. CLASSPATH consists of a colon separated list of directories that specifies the path. For example: .:/home/xyz/classes The system always appends the location of the system classes onto the end of the class path unless you use the -classpath option to specify a path. OPTIONS
Allows the Java debugger, jdb, to attach itself to this java session. When -debug is specified on the command line, java displays a pass- word which must be used when starting the debugging session. When a compiled class is loaded, this option causes the modification time of the class bytecode file to be compared to that of the class source file. If the source has been modified more recently, it is recompiled and the new class file is loaded. Specifies the path java uses to look up classes. Overrides the default or the CLASSPATH environment variable if it is set. Directories are separated by colons. Thus the general format for path is: .:<your_path> For example: .:/home/xyz/classes:/usr/local/java/classes Sets the maximum size of the memory allocation pool (the garbage collected heap) to x. The default is 16 megabytes of memory. x must be greater than or equal to 1000 bytes. By default, x is measured in bytes. You can specify x in either kilobytes or megabytes by appending the letter k for kilobytes or the letter m for megabytes. Sets the startup size of the memory allocation pool (the garbage collected heap) to x. The default is 1 megabyte of memory. x must be > 1000 bytes. By default, x is measured in bytes. You can specify x in either kilobytes or megabytes by appending the letter k for kilobytes or the letter m for megabytes. Turns off asynchronous garbage collection. When activated no garbage collection takes place unless it is explicitly called or the program runs out of memory. Normally garbage collection runs as an asynchronous thread in parallel with other threads. Turns off garbage collection of Java classes. By default, the Java interpreter reclaims space for unused Java classes during garbage collection. Prints the build version information. Prints a usage message. Each Java thread has two stacks: one for Java code and one for C code. The -ss option sets the maximum stack size that can be used by C code in a thread to x. Every thread that is spawned during the execution of the program passed to java has x as its C stack size. The default units for x are bytes. The value of x must be greater than or equal to 1000 bytes. You can modify the meaning of x by appending either the letter k for kilobytes or the letter m for megabytes. The default stack size is 128 kilobytes (-ss 128k). Each Java thread has two stacks: one for Java code and one for C code. The -oss option sets the maximum stack size that can be used by Java code in a thread to x. Every thread that is spawned during the execution of the program passed to java has x as its Java stack size. The default units for x are bytes. The value of x must be greater than or equal to 1000 bytes. You can modify the meaning of x by appending either the letter k for kilobytes or the letter m for megabytes. The default stack size is 400 kilobytes (-oss 400k). Prints a trace of the instructions executed (java_g only). Causes java to print a message to stdout each time a class file is loaded. Runs the verifier on all code. Runs the verifier on all code that is loaded into the sys- tem via a classloader. verifyremote is the default for the interpreter. Turns verification off. Causes the garbage collector to print out messages whenever it frees memory. Redefines a property value. propertyName is the name of the property whose value you want to change and newValue is the value to change it to. For example, this command line % java -Dawt.button.color=green ... sets the value of the property awt.button.color to "green". java accepts any number of -D options on the command line. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Used to provide the system a path to user-defined classes. Directories are separated by colons, for example, .:/home/xyz/classes:/usr/local/java/classes SEE ALSO
If the JDK documentation was installed on your Tru64 UNIX system, you can view it at the following location: /usr/share/doclib/java/index.html delim off java(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:00 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy