For some reason the installation of the oracle JDK didn't work on the machine I am using. It was installed before I started using it so I figured I would uninstall it and install it properly. When I try to uninstall it in Windows I get the following error message:
Error 1316: A network error occurred while attempting to read from the file C:\Installer\jdk1.7.0_51.msi
This file doesn't exist on this machine, I think it was somehow deleted. Does anyone know how to get around this problem.
I recently experienced the same problem. I solved it using Microsoft Fix it tool.
I just launch it and it removes completly the JDK on my computer.
Related
This morning I downloaded Cytoscape v3.8.0 and I can no longer successfully open the app.
Before this, I was using v3.7.4 (I believe?) and did not encounter any issues. I am working off a laptop with Windows 10.
After realizing that I could not open Cytoscape I went and downloaded the most recent version of Java but that did not appear to help.
I also tried downloading the Cytoscape troubleshooter for Windows, however, it only downloads as a .txt file and I cannot figure out how to use that to test my system.
If I try opening the app, it appears very quickly with "Cytoscape 3.8.0 - Initializing OSGi container..." before crashing.
Any help or insight would be greatly appreciated!
It's a little hard to diagnose your issues without a little more information, unfortunately. When you say you downloaded the latest Java -- which version did you actually download? If you open up a command (cmd) window and change directory to the Cytoscape install, can you try to run cytoscape.bat? What does it do, and what error messages are printed? If that doesn't work, in that same window, type "java -version" and let us know which version of Java is set to be the default. That will help us figure things out.
If you are on a Mac, a recent update has caused OpenCL based Cytoscape Apps to fail and prevents Cytoscape from launching.
This will be fixed in future updates, but you can fix your Mac installation immediately by disabling OpenCL by either of the two following methods:
Download the disable-opencl.dummy file to your CytoscapeConfiguration
directory (in your user home directory).
Or, you can create an empty dummy file by running this command in Terminal:
touch ~/CytoscapeConfiguration/disable-opencl.dummy
These fixes are described at Cytoscape.org.
<= "Error 1335. The cabinet file 'sj180121.cab' required for this installation is corrupt and cannot be used. This could indicate a network error, an error reading from the CD-ROM, or a problem with this package." =>
There is a big problem occurs when I try to install the JDK 8 on Windows 8.1. Although this is not the first time I installed them. I have tried to find out and fix it on the thread Error installing JDK, but there seems no better.
I tried some of those other solutions too but nothing worked. I can't tell you exactly what fixed the problem but I ran the following programs, rebooted and was able to successfully download and install.
Windows "Disk Cleanup"
CCleaner
Malwarebytes
I tried to download Java on my laptop (which has windows 10) but i keep getting a 1603 error. My computer used to have windows 8.1 and it did not work back then either
I appreciate any advice to solve or work around this problem
I have had this problem. I was able to fix it thanks to a co-worker. The problem started happening after I installed HP Unified Functional Testing (UFT, aka QTP). Installing this product changes the Windows environment variables used by Java. He told me the following: "So change the names of JAVA_OPTIONS, IBM_JAVA_OPTIONS, JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS to something else (both in system and user variables) and delete any Java folder(in Program Files (x86) or Program Files) which gets installed despite the error. Restart the system and then try installing Java."
Actually, all I did was rename the environment variables and run the installer. This worked.
My answer is not related to win 10, but might help someone who is having similar problem in windows 7 machine and not able to install jre 32 bit version.
the work around to this is once you downloaded the jre, copy the path "C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre1.8.0_121\bin\javaw.exe" and paste it under java runtime environment settings which is found -Java Control panel>java>view
I think you downloaded the wrong version. If your laptop support x64 bit software you should download Java 1.8 x64 version.
Here is the link.
https://www.java.com/en/download/manual.jsp
I had this problem for a month now. I tried everything on my windows 8, but I couldn't get the latest java on it. When I tried to install java on an empty computer, the 64 bit version did not go through (error 1603) and I realized the problem didn't come from an old java install and I install 32 bit. it worked on the new computer with windows 7 and on my computer running 8.1.
note: I had deleted all the java versions before going through with it.
To fix java 1603 error you have to follow few simple steps.
First of all remove all old java version.
Then remove some windows update file which might be reason of this
error. Like KB2918614 update.
After that download and Install latest version of java and activate
java in browser. Now everything will be fine you can test the java
version on java website...
For explained and easy solution to java 1603 error follow this link: http://protechguides.com/java-error-code-1603-solved/
I encountered this error on Windows 8.1 and when I checked with Oracle web site, they said that is is not yet resolved, and under investigation. They also showed a link for off-line installation as an alternative arrangement. However, upon investigation of my system, i found out that the available space in C drive was only about 20 MB or so. I cleared my system and provided enough space. When I tried with the extra space, I didn't encounter any error. May be, you could try with a better free space...
First you should close the browser because if any webpage will use Java, it will cause conflict. Then do custom installation, i.e. install in some other folder other than default folder and point environment variable to newly installed Java location. It will resolve your issue.
I have IntelliJ IDEA and other JetBrains products installed and they worked great (PyCharm, Android Studio, Clion, WebStorm) till today, now I just get opening message:
Error launching Intellij Platform - Error invoking main method
I have installed:
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_25
C:\Program Files\Java\jre1.8.0_25
and JAVA_HOME is pointing to jdk.
I posted at: https://devnet.jetbrains.com/message/5533036#5533036 and https://devnet.jetbrains.com/thread/459951
I installed (clean) Windows 8.1 and now it works, but there should be option to wipe all java configs from Windows to avoid such mess, cause this is not the solution.
I meet this error today. Java update message jump out when I work with AndroidStudio. I accept it but my AS can't display res files after installation. I restart AS and see the error.
I guess new version java produce the error. The updated java part is jre, version is 1.8.0_101, but jdk's version is still 1.8.0_92. So I download and install new version jdk(1.8.0_101, the same as jre).
AndroidStudio successfully starts now.
Maybe this solution can also work to IDEA.
For people who couldn't solve it by having the same version of JDK and JRE.
Uninstall IntelliJ and also clean all the files that are not swept automatically by uninstalling. you can find them in C:\Users\Usuario\AppData on Local and LocalLow find the JetBrains folder and delete all the files related to IntelliJ.
Then proceed to reinstalling it. That solved it for me.
After a couple of months with no Android development, I ran the SDK Manager yesterday, and upgraded from r16 to r18. After that upgrade, everything stopped working. I downloaded a fresh copy of the SDK tools from Google. The Windows installer complains there's no Java installed (the solution here , which used to work before, doesn't work).
I downloaded the ZIP file instead and put it in the right place. Running SDK Manager.EXE does nothing (it just returns immediately to the command prompt). Running tools\android.bat displays an error complaining "Failed to convert path to a short DOS path: c:\windows\system32\java.exe", and then suggests I install Java.
I'm running Windows 7 64-bit, with Java 1.7 (64 bit) properly installed (Eclipse runs well, the Android tools r16 ran very well until yesterday). c:\windows\system32\java.exe exists and works as it should.
What am I doing wrong?
UPDATE: I found an old r16 setup around. I installed it and everything went back to normal.
I put this one aside for a while, but now I had to get it back running. I didn't want to install a 32-bit Java VM alongside the 64 bit one I have.
I found the culprit. in android_sdk\tools\lib there's a batch-file called find_java.bat. It calls find_java.exe -s to find a list of potential Java locations. Running the exe file like this returns the error I've been seeing:
Failed to convert path to short DOS path: c:\windows\system32\java.exe
-s stands for short. Running it without the -s causes find_java.exe to work, causing find_java.bat to work, causing everything else to work. So the fix was to edit find_java.bat, and remove the -s .
I honestly don't know what Google is thinking.
My fix was to remove /bin from my JAVA_HOME, as in C:\Java\jdk1.6.0_26\bin --> C:\Java\jdk1.6.0_26\
I'm running 64bit java on W7.
This google issue was helpful:
http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=23648
This is just a guess, but I advise you to install JDK 6. It is said in the SDK requirements that you have to use it. I remember that I installed JDK 7 and I had some kind of trouble with it too.
Also it is safer to use the 32-bit version.
You need to also update the Eclipse plugins via Help > Install New Software.
I was able to fix same like problem by adding the jdk path to PATH variable in environment variables.