11/06/2020 | ShareX 13.3.0 |
11/06/2020 | Freemake Video Converter 4.1.11.100 |
11/06/2020 | Macrium Reflect Free Edition 7.3.5321 |
08/08/2018 | SysInternals Suite 2018-08.08 |
11/06/2020 | GoodSync 11.4.5.5 |
11/03/2020 | Another security update for Chrome 86 available |
11/01/2020 | Tools to help with a full hard disk drive |
10/27/2020 | Firefox 82.0.1 update fixes causes of crashes |
10/26/2020 | New version of CCleaner available |
10/25/2020 | Kodi 18.9 release available |
/usr/libexec/java_home: This will show you where the current JDK home is, for example:
/usr/libexec/java_home -V: This lists all installed JDKs, which is shown below:
To switch between JDKs, use /usr/libexec/java_home -v version (e.g. 10):
Knowing that your available JDKs are installed to /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/ by default, moving the contents of the downloaded OpenJDK 11 dir from inside the .gz file to the same location would make sense.
Once you’ve moved it there, java_home -V now shows the new JDK in place:
Updating my aliases to quickly switch versions in my .bash_profile, I now have:
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Sourcing the .bash_profile (source .bash_profile) and then running each alias, now I’ve got OpenJDK 11 set up and ready to go!