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You must set your JAVA_HOME
environment variable to point to the directory where the Java Development Kit (JDK) is installed on the computer. Typically, the JDK is installed in a directory under C:/Program Files/Java
, such as C:/Program Files/Java/jdk1.7.0_45
. If you have multiple versions installed, choose the latest one, which you can find by sorting by date.
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- Right-click the My Computer icon on the desktop and choose Properties.
- In the System Properties window, click the Advanced tab, and then click the Environment Variables button.
- Click the New button under System variables (for all users) or under User variables (just for the user who is currently logged in).
- Enter the following information:
- In the Variable name field, enter:
JAVA_HOME
- In the Variable value field, enter the installation path of the Java Development Kit, such as:
c:/Program Files/Java
jdk1.67.0_2745
- In the Variable name field, enter:
The JAVA_HOME variable is now set and will apply to any subsequent command prompt windows you open. If you have existing command prompt windows running, you must close and reopen them for the JAVA_HOME variable to take effect, or manually set the JAVA_HOME variable in those command prompt windows as described in the next section. To verify that the JAVA_HOME
variable is set correctly, open a command window (from the Start menu, click Run, and then type CMD
and click Enter) and execute the following command:
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In the command prompt window, enter the following command where <JDK_INSTALLATION_PATH> is the JDK installation directory and press Enter.
set JAVA_HOME=<JDK_INSTALLATION_PATH>
For example:
set JAVA_HOME=c:/Program Files/java/jdk1.67.0_2745
The JAVA_HOME variable is now set for the current CMD session only.
- To verify that the
JAVA_HOME
variable is set correctly, execute the following command:set JAVA_HOME
- The system returns the JDK installation path.
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- Set the properties from a script: Setting your system properties in the startup script is ideal, because it ensures that you set the properties every time you start the server. To avoid having to modify the script each time you upgrade, the best approach is to create your own startup script that wraps the WSO2 startup script and adds the properties you want to set, rather than editing the WSO2 startup script directly.
- Set the properties from an external registry: If you want to access properties from an external registry, you could create Java code that reads the properties at runtime from that registry. Be sure to store sensitive data such as username and password to connect to the registry in a properties file instead of in the Java code and secure the properties file with the secure vault.
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When DAS is run on Windows 7, you may get the following exception at server start up.
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title | Click here to view the complete exception |
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- .
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To avoid this exception, follow the steps below.
- Download the latest Hadoop version from here.
- Set the following property in the <
HADOOP_HOME>/bin
file.
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You are now ready to run the product.