Installing Java
Many flavors of Java exist and also many versions of each flavor. If you want to just run a specific application, check the documentation of that software to see what versions of Java are supported or have been tested. Most Java applications run on one of the following:
OpenJDK — an open-source implementation of the Java Platform, Standard Edition. This version is preferred, and included in Fedora.
Oracle Java SE — a free JDK from Oracle. This version is not open-source and we recommend that it only be used if OpenJDK is not sufficient.
You can find the following Versions:
Version (Ex. 8)
Latest
To install OpenJDK from the Fedora repository:
- Run the following command to list available versions:
- Copy the version of OpenJDK you want to install.
- Run the following command to install OpenJDK:
sudo dnf install <openjdk-package-name>
Examples:
sudo dnf install java-1.8.0-openjdk.x86_64
sudo dnf install java-latest-openjdk.x86_64
In order to install the Java Development Kit, runtime environment and associated development tools.
sudo dnf install <openjdk-package-name>-devel
Examples:
sudo dnf install java-11-openjdk-devel.x86_64
sudo dnf install java-latest-openjdk-devel.x86_64
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To install Oracle Java SE:
Accept the license agreement and download the appropriate tar.gz file for your systems architecture. Do NOT use Oracle rpms as these are NOT compatible with fedora/openjdk packages. Download the tar.gz archive instead, unpack it somewhere and set to path if necessary.
Note: Always make sure to download latest version available.
You might have installed several versions of Java on your system, you can switch from one
After running this command, you will see a a list of all installed Java versions, select t
Simply enter a selection number to choose which java executable should be used by default.
- verify:
java --version
See the following list of Java-related acronyms for reference:
JRE
Java Runtime Environment; equired to run Java code and applications
JVM
Java Virtual Machine; main component of the JRE
JDK
Java Development Kit; required only for development, coding
SDK
Software Development Kit; see JDK
JavaWS
Java Web Start is a framework to start application from the Internet
JavaFX
is a plateform to create and deliver desktop and Rich Internet Apps
OpenJFX
is the JavaFX Open Source implementation
OpenJDK
Open Source project behind the Java Platform openjdk.java.net.
IcedTea
is a support project for OpenJDK (concern only developers)
IcedTea-Web
applets
are obsolete technology; Not implemented in any recent package
JSE, J2SE, JEE, …
obsolete acronyms for Java Standard & Enterprise Edition; JavaSE is like JRE
JDK components
The JDK has as its primary components a collection of programming tools, including:
appletviewer
this tool can be used to run and debug Java applets without a web browser
apt
the annotation-processing tool
extcheck
a utility which can detect JAR-file conflicts
idlj
the IDL-to-Java compiler. This utility generates Java bindings from a given Java IDL file.
jabswitch
the Java Access Bridge. Exposes assistive technologies on Microsoft Windows systems.
the loader for Java applications. This tool is an interpreter and can interpret the class files generated by the javac compiler. Now a single launcher is used for both development and deployment. The old deployment launcher, jre, no longer comes with Sun JDK, and instead it has been replaced by this new java loader.
javac
the Java compiler, which converts source code into Java bytecode
javadoc
the documentation generator, which automatically generates documentation from source code comments
jar
the archiver, which packages related class libraries into a single JAR file. This tool also helps manage JAR files.
javafxpackager
tool to package and sign JavaFX applications
jarsigner
the jar signing and verification tool
javah
the C header and stub generator, used to write native methods
javap
the class file disassembler
javaws
the Java Web Start launcher for JNLP applications
JConsole
Java Monitoring and Management Console
jdb
the debugger
jhat
Java Heap Analysis Tool (experimental)
This utility gets configuration information from a running Java process or crash dump. (experimental)
This utility outputs the memory map for Java and can print shared object memory maps or heap memory details of a given process or core dump. (experimental)
jmc
Java Mission Control
jps
Java Virtual Machine Process Status Tool lists the instrumented HotSpot Java Virtual Machines (JVMs) on the target system. (experimental)
jrunscript
Java command-line script shell.
jstack
utility which prints Java stack traces of Java threads (experimental)
jstat
Java Virtual Machine statistics monitoring tool (experimental)
jstatd
jstat daemon (experimental)
keytool
tool for manipulating the keystore
pack200
JAR compression tool
policytool
the policy creation and management tool, which can determine policy for a Java runtime, specifying which permissions are available for code from various sources
VisualVM
visual tool integrating several command-line JDK tools and lightweight clarification needed] performance and memory profiling capabilities
wsimport
generates portable JAX-WS artifacts for invoking a web service.
xjc
Part of the Java API for XML Binding (JAXB) API. It accepts an XML schema and generates Java classes.
The JDK also comes with a complete Java Runtime Environment, usually called a private runtime, due to the fact that it is separated from the “regular” JRE and has extra contents. It consists of a Java Virtual Machine and all of the class libraries present in the production environment, as well as additional libraries only useful to developers, such as the internationalization libraries and the IDL libraries.
For Java in Fedora, see:
Freenode IRC channel #fedora-java
For more information about Java in general, see:
To develop Java applications, consider the following open-source IDEs: