JAVA_HOME not found as Sudo

那年仲夏 提交于 2020-04-29 09:09:11

问题


I have a bash script on a Linux box that runs a Jar file. When logged in as a regular user I don't have permission to run the script, but it prints the following log:

*INFO * Using JVM found at /opt/jdk6/bin/java

When I try to use the script with Sudo though, it gives:

*ERROR* Unable to locate java, please make sure java is installed and JAVA_HOME set

I've set JAVA_HOME to the same path above — can see it with echo $JAVA_HOME & it's also set as an option within the script. I'm happy that the script isn't the issue — it's a default CQ5 control script & I'm using it on dozens of other boxes without issue. Just unsure what I'm doing wrong above & presume it's something I'm missing re Linux set-up?

When I run the sudo command, does it have access to the JAVA_HOME that I set up as myself?


回答1:


By default, sudo will cleanup the environment of the spawned commands. Pass -E to keep it:

sudo -E env

Compare to:

sudo env



回答2:


"sudo -E " didn't solve the problem when JAVA_HOME was not exported. And when it was exported, "sudo " without -E works the same.

So you can add export JAVA_HOME=.../jdk<version> in your .bash_profile and .bashrc file.

In case you wondered what's the difference of .bash_profile and .bashrc, .bash_profile is executed upon login (e.g., show some diagnostic/welcome information). .bash_rc is executed when you open a new terminal (e.g., shift-ctrl-T).

In order to run some commands for both cases, you can put it in .bashrc file, and let .bash_profile source .bashrc:

if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then
   source ~/.bashrc
fi



回答3:


You could always just pass it to java explicitly like this:

sudo java -Djava.home=$JAVA_HOME Test



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11469247/java-home-not-found-as-sudo

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