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Note

Before you begin, to find out if this version of the product is fully tested on Linux or Mac OS X, see our compatibility matrix  

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  1. In your home directory, open the BASHRC file (.bash_profile file
 on Mac) using editors such as vi, emacs, pico, or mcedit.
  2. Assuming you have JDK 1.67.0_25 80 in your system, add the following two lines at the bottom of the file, replacing /usr/java/jdk1.67.0_2580 with the actual directory where the JDK is installed.

    Code Block
    On Linux:
    export JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.67.0_2580
    export PATH=${JAVA_HOME}/bin:${PATH}
     
    On OS X:
    export JAVA_HOME=/System/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/1.67.0.jdk/Contents/Home
  3. Save the file.

    Info

    If you do not know how to work with text editors in a Linux SSH session, run the following command: cat >> .bashrc. Paste the string from the clipboard and press "Ctrl+D."

  4. To verify that the JAVA_HOME variable is set correctly, execute the following command:

    Code Block
    On Linux:
    echo $JAVA_HOME
     
    On OS X:
    which java
    
    If the above command gives you a path like /usr/bin/java, then it is a symbolic link to the real location. To get the real location, run the following:
    ls -l `which java`
  5. The system returns the JDK installation path.

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Info

When using SUSE Linux, it ignores /etc/resolv.conf and only looks at the /etc/hosts file. This means that the server will throw an exception on startup if you have not specified anything besides localhost. To avoid this error, add the following line above 127.0.0.1 localhost in the /etc/hosts file: <ip_address> <machine_name> localhost

You are now ready to run the product.