tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post8158727398942543666..comments2023-12-07T09:33:55.121+01:00Comments on blog.pursuit.be: JSmooth Windows Service with custom JREJo Voordeckershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11242695885151892027noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-37762491393558169852013-04-25T07:44:08.045+02:002013-04-25T07:44:08.045+02:00Thanks it saved my day!.... Cheers....Thanks it saved my day!.... Cheers....Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-75057016422887691012011-07-13T12:20:26.749+02:002011-07-13T12:20:26.749+02:00Your fix has solved a massive problem I was having...Your fix has solved a massive problem I was having with 64 bit machines with 64 bit jre. As jsmooth doesn't support 64 bit jre this was a great way to bundle a 32 bit version with my .exe.<br /><br />Thanks for saving my day!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-22248993285994772652011-04-08T02:06:22.424+02:002011-04-08T02:06:22.424+02:00Hi,
I'am new working with JSmooth 0.9.9-7, and...Hi,<br />I'am new working with JSmooth 0.9.9-7, and I have a problem with my window service created. My window service don't found a JVM. <br />the SO is windows XP pro and I have configured the next environment variables:<br /><br />PATH=C:\WINDOWS\system32;C:\WINDOWS;C:\WINDOWS\System32\Wbem;"C:\Archivos de programa\Java\jre6\bin";"C:\Archivos de programa\Java\jre6\bin\client"<br /><br />JAVA_HOME="C:\Archivos de programa\Java\jdk1.6.0_22"<br /><br />JRE_PATH="C:\Archivos de programa\Java\jre6"<br /><br />Can you give me some idea how fix the problem?<br /><br />ThanksAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-7385718324057362222010-12-10T10:16:16.605+01:002010-12-10T10:16:16.605+01:00I agreed with Jo Voordeckers. But i got error code...I agreed with Jo Voordeckers. But i got error code 1067 once i tried to start window service. Any idea about this issue? Thanks a lot. 11596803(at)163.com.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-46653786984720979092010-03-05T13:03:29.194+01:002010-03-05T13:03:29.194+01:00I did evaluate JSW, and it's forked OpenSource...I did evaluate JSW, and it's forked OpenSource version http://yajsw.sourceforge.net/. The main thing that I disliked about it is the fact that it requires a lot of dependent files, EXE, DLL, BAT, etc... <br />JSmooth on the other hand is entirely self-contained. Your service's EXE file is a single EXE file with your application JAR embedded. No other scripts or DLL's are necessary, this is a lot cleaner and it's easier to "patch", just overwrite a single EXE file and you're done and less things can go wrong in case the user started messing around in those files. <br />At some point in the future I know that we will have to look for another service wrapper solution as JSmooth doesn't support 64bit Windows, which we don't have to support at the moment.Jo Voordeckershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11242695885151892027noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2194501260274521490.post-6751237756643198512010-03-05T12:33:14.744+01:002010-03-05T12:33:14.744+01:00We use the Java Service Wrapper by Tanuki Sofware ...We use the Java Service Wrapper by Tanuki Sofware (http://wrapper.tanukisoftware.org/).<br />Did you evaluate this and if so, why wasn't it a good solution?Filip Blondeelnoreply@blogger.com