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java-1.4.2-bea: BEA WebLogic JRockit
- Summary
- BEA WebLogic JRockit is the only Java VM designed specifically to
simplify the task of developing and managing Java applications for
large-scale enterprise-wide environments. With BEA WebLogic JRockit,
developers do not need to know JVM internals to create performant,
scalable, reliable applications. BEA WebLogic JRockit speeds
application development through fast startup performance. It provides
out-of-the-box application performance and scalability through
progressive optimization features that enable the JVM to automatically
deliver the best possible application performance without requiring a
lot of manual configuration or tuning. Unique manageability features
give developers the real-time visibility and control to ensure top
application performance and health while delivering
industrial-strength system stability and reliability under heavy user
and transaction loads. And BEA WebLogic JRockit is the only JVM
designed for top performance with open standards-based Intel
platforms, which allows it to deliver the best price/performance and
lowest total cost of ownership (TCO) for enterprise Java applications.
See http://edocs.bea.com/wljrockit/docs142/ for more information,
including info about supported platforms.
Changelog
- * Tue Jul 20 10:00:00 2004 Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta at iki.fi> - 0:1.4.2.04-2jpp
-
- Fix javaws* executable permissions.
- Include plugin control panel and web start in (freedesktop.org) menus.
- * Sat Jul 17 10:00:00 2004 Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta at iki.fi> - 0:1.4.2.04-1jpp
-
- Update to 1.4.2_04, now includes Java Web Start.
- Sync with updates in java-1.4.2-sun.
- * Sun Jan 4 09:00:00 2004 Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta at iki.fi> - 0:1.4.2.03-2jpp
-
- Disable automatic requires for -jdbc, require
%{_libdir}/libodbc(inst).so instead. Many distros ship the unversioned
libodbc(inst).so in -devel packages as symlinks, and rpm does not
autogenerate the *.so provides for such files, and only a few distros
explicitly list those. Thanks to Kaj J. Niemi and Joe Christy.
- Use grep -F for non-regexp grepping.