I guessing that maybe there was another java rpm installed when you installed the RHEL system. RHEL and Centos SHOULD be the same with the exception of the names. --- Wayne Johnson, | There are two kinds of people: Those 3943 Penn Ave. N. | who say to God, "Thy will be done," Minneapolis, MN 55412-1908 | and those to whom God says, "All right, (612) 522-7003 | then, have it your way." --C.S. Lewis ________________________________ From: Sean Waite <swaite at sbn-services.com> To: TCLUG Mailing List <tclug-list at mn-linux.org> Sent: Tue, September 14, 2010 2:47:23 PM Subject: [tclug-list] Sun java on Redhat 5.5 When I installed Sun's java 1.6 in CentOS, I merely made /usr/java folder, downloaded the file and extracted. Then added: # JAVA JAVA_HOME="/usr/java/jre1.6.0_21/bin" export JAVA_HOME export JAVA_PATH="$JAVA_HOME" export PATH="$PATH:$JAVA_HOME" to /etc/profile, and then "java -version" correctly displayed my version, and the app that requires java 1.6 ran just fine. However I am unfamiliar with Red Hat enterprise. I repeated the same steps as I did for CentOS (which had no java version installed anyways). Also, doing "whereis java" shows /usr/share/java" as the path. This version being 1.4.2 we are told is not compatible, so that is why I need to get 1.6 (Sun's version) installed. What exactly am I missing here? I always thought that if I put the path to "/etc/profile" that this would be sufficient. Redhat does have a config file in "/etc/java/java.conf" that I can edit, but do not know if I should touch this or not. Please help a very dim nub out here. Sean -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20100914/31901d39/attachment-0001.htm