Install Oxygen XML Editor on Linux
Choosing an Installer
You can install Oxygen XML Editor on Linux using any of the following methods:
- Install using the Linux installer.
- Install using the Linux installer in unattended mode.
- Install using the all platforms installer. Choose the all platforms installer if you have trouble installing using the Linux installer.
System Requirements
System requirements for a Linux install:
- Operating system
-
Any Unix/Linux distribution with an available Java SE Runtime Environment version 1.6.0 or later from Oracle
- CPU
-
- Minimum - Intel Pentium III™/AMD Athlon™ class processor, 1 GHz
- Recommended - Dual Core class processor
- Memory
-
- Minimum - 2 GB of RAM
- Recommended - 4 GB of RAM
- Storage
-
- Minimum - 400 MB free disk space
- Recommended - 1 GB free disk space
- Java
-
Oxygen XML Editor requires Java. Oxygen XML Editor only supports official and stable Java Virtual Machines with the version number 1.6.0 or later (the recommended version is 1.6.0) from Oracle available at http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html. Oxygen XML Editor may work with JVM implementations from other vendors, but there is no guarantee that other implementations will work with future Oxygen XML Editor updates and releases. Oxygen XML Editor does not work with the GNU libgcj Java Virtual Machine.
Oxygen XML Editor uses the following rules to determine which installed version of Java to use:
- If you used the Linux installer, which installs a version of Java as part of the Oxygen XML Editor installation, the version in the jre subdirectory of the installation directory is used.
- Otherwise, if the Linux environment variable
JAVA_HOMEis set, Oxygen XML Editor uses the Java version pointed to by this variable. - Otherwise the version of Java pointed to by your PATH environment variable is used.
You can also change the version of the Java Virtual Machine that runs Oxygen XML Editor by editing the script file, oxygen.sh. Go to the Java command at the end of the script file and specify the full path to the Java executable of the desired JVM version. For example:
/usr/bin/jre1.6.0_45/bin/java -Xmx256m ...
Linux Installation
Linux installation procedure.
Unattended Installation
You can run the installation in unattended mode by running the installer from the command line with the -q parameter. By default, running the installer in unattended mode installs Oxygen XML Editor with the default options and does not overwrite existing files. You can change many options for the unattended installer using the installer command line parameters.