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Introduction
Manual installation of Oracle Java (which is preferred to Open Java, which often doesn't work right) is a bit tedious: one needs to find and download the latest release and manually set up all the path variables.
The PPA from webupd8 developer team simplifies our task and provides us with an installer which does all this for us and enables auto-updates.
Installation
Run the following commands in order to install or update the Oracle Java. The idea is applicable to others JVM.
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The installer takes a while since it needs to download the latest Java installer from the Oracle site.
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To automatically set up the Java 8 environment variables, you can install the following package:
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Close and re-open a session and check your environment with a printenv command.
Verification
Make sure something silly didn't happen and your alternatives were set to Oracle Java:
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java -version |
Expected output (with Oracle Java 8):
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java version "1.8.0_40"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_40-b25)
Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM (build 25.40-b25, mixed mode) |
Wrong output (with OpenJRE)
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OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.13.6) (6b34-1.13.6-1ubuntu0.12.04.1)
OpenJDK Server VM (build 23.25-b01, mixed mode) |
Then
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javac -version |
Expected output (with Oracle Java 8):
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javac 1.8.0_40 |
(Without Oracle Java, OpenJDK is rarely installed)
If the wrong Java is chosen, run:
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update-alternatives --config java
update-alternatives --config javac
update-alternatives --config javaws |
and choose Oracle's needed version.
Then run
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update-initramfs -u |
Troubleshooting
Firewall/cacher
The installer fetches the latest Java binary via wget. Most of the time, the download fails because either the firewall blocks it or because the cacher doesn't allow it. Since Java updates are not very frequent, we can turn off the firewall while installing, but the cacher can at least be configured for a permanent bypass. Create /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/03java-bypass with the following contents:
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This will ensure that downloads from download.oracle.com initiated by pre/post-install scripts do not go through the cacher. The ideal solution would be to make them cached but that needs a regex hack for apt-cacher-ng (to stop it from rejecting this site as a cacheable source) which I was not able to develop yet.
Architecture
If your host architecture differs from LTSP chroot, you won't be able to install Java this way. Chrooting will make the chroot report the host's architecture to the installer, which causes it to download the wrong binary. Generally, chroots should be kept the same architecture as host, but if they must be different, one can still install Java this way if live-boot from the correct architecture media is done and chroot is entered from it.
Browser Plugin
In some cases, the presence of IcedTea Java Browser plugin (OpenJRE implementation) will prevent Oracle Java plugin from working or even being installed.
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