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How can I change the Java Runtime Version on Windows (7)?

How can I change the Java Runtime Version on Windows.

I installed Java 7 for some tests, and now I need the old java6 as system default, but I don't want to uninstall the Java 7 (I need it for later tests). Can I change the system-used JRE in the control panel/Java/JRE tab? I can change/edit/add/delete the user-used version, but not the system-used.

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tomkpunkt Avatar asked Jul 26 '10 09:07

tomkpunkt


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How do I change the Java Runtime version?

In the Java Control Panel, click on the Java tab. Verify that the latest Java Runtime version is enabled by checking the Enabled box. Click OK in Java Control Panel window to confirm changes and close the window. Try to run same applet and verify it is now running using latest version of Java installed in your system.


1 Answers

For Java applications, i.e. programs that are delivered (usually) as .jar files and started with java -jar xxx.jar or via a shortcut that does the same, the JRE that will be launched will be the first one found on the PATH.

If you installed a JRE or JDK, the likely places to find the .exes are below directories like C:\Program Files\JavaSoft\JRE\x.y.z. However, I've found some "out of the box" Windows installations to (also?) have copies of java.exe and javaw.exe in C:\winnt\system32 (NT and 2000) or C:\windows\system (Windows 95, 98). This is usually a pretty elderly version of Java: 1.3, maybe? You'll want to do java -version in a command window to check that you're not running some antiquated version of Java.

You can of course override the PATH setting or even do without it by explicitly stating the path to java.exe / javaw.exe in your command line or shortcut definition.


If you're running applets from the browser, or possibly also Java Web Start applications (they look like applications insofar as they have their own window, but you start them from the browser), the choice of JRE is determined by a set of registry settings:

Key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\JavaSoft\Java Runtime Environment Name: CurrentVersion Value: (e.g.) 1.3 

More registry keys are created using this scheme:

(e.g.)  HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\JavaSoft\Java Runtime Environment\1.3    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\JavaSoft\Java Runtime Environment\1.3.1 

i.e. one for the major and one including the minor version number. Each of these keys has values like these (examples shown):

JavaHome    : C:\program Files\JavaSoft\JRE\1.3.1 RuntimeLib  : C:\Program Files\JavaSoft\JRE\1.3.1\bin\hotspot\jvm.dll MicroVersion: 1 

... and your browser will look to these settings to determine which JRE to fire up.

Since Java versions are changing pretty frequently, there's now a "wizard" called the "Java Control Panel" for manually switching your browser's Java version. This works for IE, Firefox and probably others like Opera and Chrome as well: It's the 'Java' applet in Windows' System Settings app. You get to pick any one of the installed JREs. I believe that wizard fiddles with those registry entries.

If you're like me and have "uninstalled" old Java versions by simply wiping out directories, you'll find these "ghosts" among the choices too; so make sure the JRE you choose corresponds to an intact Java installation!


Some other answers are recommending setting the environment variable JAVA_HOME. This is meanwhile outdated advice. Sun came to realize, around Java 2, that this environment setting is

  1. unreliable, as users often set it incorrectly, and
  2. unnecessary, as it's easy enough for the runtime to find the Java library directories, knowing they're in a fixed path relative to the path from which java.exe or javaw.exe was launched.

There's hardly any modern Java software left that needs or respects the JAVA_HOME environment variable.


More Information:

  • http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.3/runtime_win32.html
  • http://www.rgagnon.com/javadetails/java-0604.html

...and some useful information on multi-version support:

  • http://www.rgagnon.com/javadetails/java-0604.html
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Carl Smotricz Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 12:10

Carl Smotricz