General :: Automatically Agree To License Agreement When Using "apt-get Install Sun-java6-jre"
Mar 4, 2010
I am creating a slient setup script on an ubuntu machine that also installs additional packages. one problem i am having is that the sun java package needs a manual confirmation of the license agreement. is there a chance that i can automate the installation so, that the process does not wait until i manually confirm the dialog?
Installed Fedora 13 on an old computer (Sony Vaio RX660 with a 1.8 gig P4 cpu). Downloaded java 21 bin file and as root, placed it in a folder I created: /usr/java so it would be accessible to all users.as root in terminal I did a chmod a+x to the file. Then ls -l, which showed I had full read/write with it. Finally, still root, and in terminal, I did the ./jre <etc>.bin and the package immediately unpacked and created files, but never showed me a license agreement to accept.Java, of course, does not work. What am I doing wrong
When I try to install this extension in OpenOffice, I'm asked to read (and scroll through) the "Extension Software License Agreement" and accept it - but there are no buttons and no scroll bars. I tried clicking all over in case it was just invisible, but no luck.If I close the window, installation doesn't proceed.I'm on Mandriva 2009.0, but thinking of trying out Debian.
Ubuntu 10.4 -- I am trying to install Java into my browser following the instruction below. But I am stuck because when I get to the screen with the license agreement I hit enter and nothing happens. So I cannot agree to the license and cannot finish the installation. Can anyone get me out of this bind?sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jre sun-java6-plugin sun-java6-fontsThe above command will download all the required packages and begins the installation, you�ll get a screen that contains the Sun Operating System Distributor License for Java and hit Enter to continue.You�ll see a dialog that asks you if you agree with the DLJ license terms
how do I uninstall Java? Tried with Synaptic and apt-get remove, but uninstalling sun-java6 automatically adds default-jre (openjdk) and uninstalling openJdk automatically installs sun-java ... but I don't want ANY Java on my machine - am I missing something? Already thought I maybe have a package that requires SOME kind of Java, but how do I find out?
I have a tar of .deb files that contains all the packages I need to install on a new system. I know that by using
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There are several packages, however, that require that I accept a license agreement. I have been unable to find a dpkg parameter that will make it automatically respond "yes" when it needs to. I know there is an apt-get parameter like this, and my understanding is that apt-get invokes dpkg, so I have to assume there is one for dpkg.
I've been through the man page (maybe I missed it) and searched around, but all the answers I find are for apt-get.
Is there a parameter for dpkg that will allow me to automatically accept license agreements?
When I try to add a new new package (such as sun-java6-jre or sun-java6-jdk) using 'Synaptic Package Manager', I can see no activity going on and upon canceling it, I get the following response.
I need to install sun-java6-jdk for my red hat server rather than than the free alternative GNU compiler for java (GCJ); but i can't install it...on Debian i can, but on red hat is impossible...
i have to agree the term of agreement before runing it becase i want to automate my installation with a scripti have already tried "yes | ./myfile " but the problem is the agreement is more than one page and i need to hit space couple of times .. so it's not working .
Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done Reading extended state information
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I then went to the Ubuntu Software Center under Applications. I found sun java6 but there was no "install" button,as there is for the other software available.
I'm using rpm either debian as an installation package for our developed product (multi-targets)I have to display a EULA (end-user license agreement) during its installation.How can I design that requirement ?
Is it possible to get them to show the same result.
update-manager says I need 315 files @ 302mb to download synaptic says 315 @ 318mb (using "mark all upgrades" button, then going the summary via the apply button )
this is on a machine with a clean install of maverick without anything new installed/changed from the defaults. Are these the same 315 packages and is it just a discrepancy in the way they calculate the size?
I used "sudo apt-get dist-upgrade -s --print-uris > upgrade.txt" to get me the same 315 packages, but unfortunately it seems the simulation switch (-s) stops it from actually printing the uris (which would include the size info) so no help in trying to establish where/what the discrepancy is.
This is just the 1st step in me understanding the whole process so I can do what I outline in my long rambling post [URL]
I am developing a GUI program, and I use as OS the linux kernel (it is for an embedded device). I am wondering if I have to make available the GNU license from the GUI itself?
Create the file ~/license_counts, which tables the number of occurrences of packages which are licensed under a given license, for the top 5 most commonly used licenses, sorted in numerically descending order. If performed correctly, your file should be formatted similarly to the following. (Do not be concerned if the actual counts or license names are different. Also, you might notice logically similar licenses, such as LGPL/GPL and GPL/LGPL. Do not make any attempt to combine them into a single entry.)
My application is an integration of all the open source components with customized heavily including OS. I would need to know how to generate license keys for my application. Does any one have any clue?
I am using Maverick and I like to update through the terminal using sudo apt-get update and then the subsequent upgrade command but this time it asked me to to agree to EULA's end user agreement. The agreement popped up and I can't figure out how to accept it. I don't have very extensive knowledge of the terminal. I already pressed enter and Y. Neither worked. what button to press?
while installing ... Installing python2.4-2.4-1pydotorg.src.rpm
warning: user jafo does not exist - using root warning: group jafo does not exist - using root warning: user jafo does not exist - using root warning: group jafo does not exist - using root error: Legacy syntax is unsupported: copyright
error: line 55: Unknown tag: Copyright: Modified CNRI Open Source License
what to do for lock automatically slackware 13 if not used for n minutes ?What can i do to start automatically the ktorrent (a bittorrent program for linux) on system starts on slackware 13 ?
I am using Lucid Lynx. sun-java6-jre in the repository is 1.6.0_22, i am trying to run an application that needs sun-java6-jre 1.6.0_2. Is there anyway i can get this version via synaptic?
I need to install sun-java6-plugin on Debian 6. I already have a Web browser installed in /usr/local/, but it seems sun-java6-plugin requires me to install 1 browser from their list in order to install it. The thing is, I don't want to install any of those browsers, and disk space is kind of limited. How can I install jun-java6-plugin without installing a browser which it depends on?