Thanks for the feedback
I have now run an update on my machine to the XProtect file and it seems to have cured the problem at my end at least
Now to try to explain what to do to the clients who have the problems !
That will be fun
Cheers
lewis wrote:Can I ask for some guidance from anyone, if possible, in relation to this Apple / Java issue, please
I now have a couple of sites using OS X who have several of their users not able to access the solution because it will not launch the Servoy app
There is a lot of information on this thread and I am confused as to which path is the best to take here
Could someone distil the best option to resolve this issue please
Apologies for throwing myself on your mercy
Thanks
What am I doing wrong?To open “servoy.app,” you need a Java SE 6 runtime. Would you like to install one now?
tgs wrote:Hi all experts,
I could fix the problem on the Macs with Robert's instruction except two Macs running Mac OS X 10.7.5.
The customers have installed Java 7 because of the error dialog for a missing JRE. But their solution is running on Servoy 5 and not ready for Java 7!
To solve that I uninstalled Java 7, checked out the XProtect.meta.plist file because I got the java -version info 1.6.0_37, but always the JRE error dialog.
Next I uninstalled also Java 6 and reinstalled Java für OS X 2012-006. The XProtect.meta.plist looks as it should and the system preferences setting in Security & Privacy is unchecked, but no success.
I always get the JRE error dialog while doubleclicking the .jnlp file and/or by executing javaws pathtothe.jnlp in the Terminal.
Do I missing something on this last two Macs?
Regards
rioba wrote:There is something I don't understand about Java 7 on the Mac. It seems that some people can run Servoy using Java 7 (although with some limitations). I tried to do so in one newly configured Mac with MacOS X 10.8.2 and the latest Java 7 update, but when I try to start Servoy Developer this is the message I always getWhat am I doing wrong?To open “servoy.app,” you need a Java SE 6 runtime. Would you like to install one now?
IT2Be wrote:A few posts higher I explained what helped me to solve the issue.
Hope this helps you too!
jcompagner wrote:what happens if you also reinstall with java 7 on your system.
So if you only have java 7 on your system, then install servoy first with that vm also
I could fix the problem on the Macs with Robert's instruction except two Macs running Mac OS X 10.7.5.
<key>com.oracle.java.JavaAppletPlugin</key>
<dict>
<key>MinimumPlugInBundleVersion</key>
<string>1.7.11.22</string>
Harjo wrote:lewis wrote:Can I ask for some guidance from anyone, if possible, in relation to this Apple / Java issue, please
I now have a couple of sites using OS X who have several of their users not able to access the solution because it will not launch the Servoy app
There is a lot of information on this thread and I am confused as to which path is the best to take here
Could someone distil the best option to resolve this issue please
Apologies for throwing myself on your mercy
Thanks
if you want to stay at Java 6, this is what you need to do:
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=19299&start=15#p103801
and after that this:
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=19299&start=15#p103810
If you want to run Java 7, you can update to the latest Oracle Java 7 version, but there are still some issues in combination with Servoy, like opening comboboxes with the mouse does not work (only when you give it focus with the mouse and hit the space-bar) and the browser-suite bean does not work with it (yet)
lewis wrote: 'dataservice could not be found'
swingman wrote:lewis wrote: 'dataservice could not be found'
on Java 7? Go to the Java Control Panel network settings and use 'direct connection', or, you can try 'http&socket' in the network settings on the Servoy server on the server side.
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