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  • Java version '1.6.037' Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.037-b06-4) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.12-b01-434, mixed mode) but for some reason when i run the JNLP file a prompt pops up saying that to open this web start application I need to download the Java Runtime Environment. Which I already did.
  • If you're looking to download Rodney Black's CATS application, see the CATS download page. JMRI 3.10.1 - Production release for Java 1.6 Release 3.10.1 is recommended for JMRI users with computers that can only run Java 1.6.

10.8 (Mountain Lion) 10.9 (Mavericks) 10.10 (Yosemite) 10.11 (El Capitan) 10.12 (Sierra) 10.13 (High Sierra) 10.14 (Mojave) and 10.15 (Catalina) Installation

Installation of Jim on Macintosh computers is restricted to 64-bit systems running Mac OS X 10.8 or later, since Jim requires Java version 1.8, and this version of java has only been released by Oracle for these versions of Mac OS. Installation of Jim is in six stages:

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A: If you have not yet installed Apple's Java Mac OS X 2012-006 update, then you are still using a version of Apple Java 6 that includes the plug-in and the Java Preferences app. See Note for Users of Macs that Include Apple Java 6 Plug-in. There can be multiple JDKs installed on a system – as many as you wish.

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  1. Install Java
  2. Install the Jim software
  3. Request a license
  4. Install the license
  5. Customise the installation (optional)
  6. Download some example images (optional)
  1. Installing Java. We strongly recommend that you install Java version 1.8.0 (also known as Java 8), which can be downloaded from the Oracle web site. Jim will not install or run with Java versions earlier than 1.8.0. If you use a Java version later than 1.8.0, either the program may not run or you may experience problems with the program crashing when you try to start the 3-D display.

    After installing Java, reboot your computer so that the new Java version is recognised.

    Note: if your institution has a purchased floating (network) license for Jim , then please note that you need to install Java version no later than 1.8.0_192. If you install a version of Java 8 later than this, you will not be able to connect to the license server to obtain a license. You can access archived versions of Java 8 here, or search on 'Java Archive Downloads Java SE 8 Oracle'.

    Note: if you wish to do some Java programming, perhaps using Jim's A.P.I. to process images, then you will need to install the Java Development Kit (JDK), not the Java Runtime Environment (JRE).

  2. Installing Jim. Download the Jim jim-8-installer.jar installer from this link. When the download is complete, drag the downloaded file onto your Desktop. Next, open a terminal window (use Finder to search for 'terminal' if you are not sure how to do this) and type the following commands: To install for personal use in your home folder, you can then type: When prompted by the installer for the installation folder, you should select Applications/Xinapse/Jim8 in your home folder. To install system-wide for all user, you will need Administrator rights. Type: When prompted by the installer for the installation folder, you should select /Applications/Xinapse/Jim8 in the root folder.

    Note: on Mac OS 10.9 or later, you may see an error like the one below:

    Click the 'OK' button, and then from the Apple menu, select 'System Preferences ...'

    Then click on the 'Security & Privacy' icon:

    This will bring up the Security & Privacy settings:

    Click the 'Open Anyway' button, which will enable Jim's installer to run.

  3. License request. The easiest way to obtain the details needed to send for a license is to try starting Jim. If you have not yet received a license file, you will see a pop-up error dialog like the one shown below. If, at the top of this dialog, you see a message like This computer's Host ID is '00123FDB5B8C' then your computer has only one network card. If, however, you see more than one Host ID (as above), then your computer has more than one network adapter and you need to choose which HostID to send. You can simply send the complete list of Host IDs to us, and we will select the most suitable. If you want to choose one yourself, then you can list your network adapters, by starting the terminal program (use Finder to search for 'terminal' if you are not sure how to do this) and type the command:

    /sbin/ifconfig -a

    Please send the hardware address to , and we will then send you in return by e-mail a license file for Jim.

    Note: this is not an automated service, and there will be a delay before you receive your license file.

    Note: If you have a network of computers, installation of Jim need not be done on the same computer that you intend to use to run Jim. The name and hardware address you send should be for the computer on which you intend to run Jim.

    If you believe that you have received and correctly installed your license file, then you can get Jim to print out more detailed messages about why licensing has failed. Press the button. This will pop up a further dialog containing detailed license debugging messages. You can use these to diagnose the problem, or e-mail the messages shown in this window to , to help us to diagnose the problem.

    If you have purchased network (floating) licenses, you can set up the connection to your license server by clicking on the . See the instructions for setting up a connection to a license server.

  4. You may want use Finder to go to the Applications/Xinapse/Jim8 installation folder and drag the Jim icon onto your Desktop for easier access to starting Jim. Now see the section on customising a Mac OS X installation.
  5. You may also wish to download some example images to get you going with Jim.

Keeping track of which Java version you have, and whether it’s the latest and most secure, can be a bit tricky, especially for Apple users.

Oracle, the custodian of Java, patches its products on Tuesdays, like Microsoft and Adobe. But it uses a different Tuesday, and a different set of months for different products. (Most Oracle products are patched quarterly; for Java, it’s three times a year.)

For Your Diary: Oracle Critical Patch Updates

Critical Patch Updates (CPUs) are collections of security fixes, released on the Tuesday closest to the 17th day of the month. For most products, the patches come four times a year:

15 Jan 2013 - 16 Apr 2013 - 16 Jul 2013 - 15 Oct 2013

For Oracle Java SE, the patches come three times a year:

19 Feb 2013 - 18 Jun 2013 - 15 Oct 2013

Fixes deemed too critical to wait for the next CPU are issued ad hoc as Security Alerts.

Once Oracle has patched Java, Apple then sucks the changes into its Java code tree and issues its own updates, but you can never be quite sure how long that’s going to take.

Apple infamously took until April 2012 to push out a patch that had been available to everyone else since February, thus leaving a lengthy window of opportunity for malware authors. The crooks used this window (no pun intended) to build a giant-sized botnet of Macs infected with a Trojan known as OSX/Flshplyr-B.

This month, things have been calmer and more predictable. Oracle updated Java on Tuesday 16 October 2012, as expected; Apple followed suit a day later.

The latest versions are:

VendorReleaseCurrent version
Oracle (all OSes)Java SE 71.7.0_09-b05
Apple (OS X only)Java SE 61.6.0_37-b06

For some time, Naked Security’s advice has been to get rid of Java altogether if you don’t need it, or to ban it from your browser if you use Java only for running pre-installed applications.

Keeping Java out of your browser removes the risk of hostile applets – special stripped-down Java programs embedded into web pages.

It seems as though Apple has been listening.

First, it stopped shipping OS X with Java pre-installed when OS X Lion (10.7) came out. Lion and Mountain Lion (10.8) include a program stub (/usr/bin/java) that offers to fetch and install Java if ever you try to use it, but it’s not installed by default.

Then, Apple issued an update that would tell your browser to turn off Java if you hadn’t used it for a while, thus reducing your needless exposure to hostile Java code on the web.

And in its latest security update, Apple has been even more aggressive.

Java 1.6 Osx

Cupertino’s coders not only bumped up their Java version to Oracle’s latest release of Java SE 6 (1.6.0_37), but also ripped out the browser plugin component entirely.

So, after you apply the latest OS X Java update – which you only need if you have already chosen to install Java – you will no longer be able to run applets in your browser

That may sound like a bug, but for most users, it’s a feature. You’ll soon find out if you really need Java in your browser, because Apple adds a placeholder plugin that fills any applet window with a “Missing Plug-in” warning and a download button.

You can then choose whether to install the missing plugin or to learn to live without it.


The only downside is that to acquire the needed applet plugin, you have to install Oracle’s Java runtime in parallel with Apple’s Java.

Java 1.6 For Mac

This leaves you with twice as much Java on your Mac: Apple’s latest version of Java SE 6, and Oracle’s latest version of Java SE 7. (You can’t get an Oracle Java runtime to match the Apple one – Oracle doesn’t build a 1.6.0-flavoured Java for OS X because that’s seen as Apple’s job.)


The question you’ll want answered now is, “Should I get the updates right away, or wait?” (Don’t forget that if you’re an OS X user, you may need to update from both Apple and Oracle.)

I suggest that you shouldn’t wait.

These latest Java updates fix 30 security holes in total; all the holes but one potentially allow remote code execution; and 23 of them are categorised as having what Oracle calls an access complexity of “low”. The lower the access complexity, the more likely it is that a working exploit can be found and used.

Oracle has published a detailed Risk Matrix, if you aren’t convinced to update already.

For further information, here are some useful links, both general and specific:

• Apple security notification: General landing page (HT1222)

• Apple security notification: Java fixes for October 2012 (HT5549)

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• Oracle CPUs and security alerts: General landing page

• Oracle Java SE release notes: General landing page

• Oracle Java SE release notes: 1.6.0_37-b06 (Apple’s Oct 2012 version)

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• Oracle Java SE release notes: 1.7.0_09-b05 (Oracle’s Oct 2012 version)

• Oracle Java SE risk matrix: October 2012 Critical Patch Update

Hope this helps.