Installing Oxygen XML Editor on a Linux / UNIX Server
System Requirements
- Operating system
-
The product has been fully tested on Ubuntu 22.04. The latest version of Oxygen XML Editor might work on other flavors/versions of Linux, but they have not been officially tested.
- CPU
-
- Minimum - Intel/AMD Dual-core class CPU, 2 GHz
- Recommended - Quad-core class processor
- Memory
-
- Minimum - 3 GB of RAM
- Recommended - 8 GB of RAM
- Storage
-
- Minimum - 1 GB free disk space
- Recommended - 2 GB free disk space
- Java
-
Oxygen XML Editor only officially supports Java Virtual Machines with version 17 from Oracle or Eclipse Adoptium. If you use the Linux installer, Oxygen XML Editor will be installed with its own copy of Java with the specific update version that has been thoroughly tested.
- All Platforms Package
-
If you use the all platforms package, your system must have a compatible Java 17 virtual machine installed. To see the exact Java update version that is supported, go to www.oxygenxml.com, navigate to the Download page for the particular product you are installing, and click on the tab for your particular platform.Note: Oxygen XML Editor may work with other versions of Java, but since Oxygen XML Editor has only been thoroughly tested with specific versions, there is no guarantee that it will be stable with any other Java version.Attention: 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_HOME
is 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.
Linux Installer
To install Oxygen XML Editor using the Linux installer, follow these steps:
- Make sure that your system meets the system requirements.
- Download the Linux installer.
- [Optional] Validate the integrity of the downloaded file by checking it against the MD5 sum published on the download page.
- Run the installer and follow the instructions in the installation program.Note: For example, open a shell,
cd
to the installation directory, and at the prompt type sh ./oxygen-32bit.sh or sh ./oxygen-64bit.sh, depending on which installer you downloaded. - Start Oxygen XML Editor using one of the following methods:
- Use the oxygen shortcut created by the installer.
- From a command line, type
sh oxygen.sh
. This file is located in the installation folder.
- To license your copy of Oxygen XML Editor go to and enter your license information.
Unix/Linux Server Configuration
- Install Oxygen XML Editor on the server and make sure the oxygen.sh script is executable and the installation directory is in the PATH of the users that need to use the application.
- Make sure you allocate sufficient memory to Oxygen XML Editor
by setting an appropriate value for the
-Xmx
parameter in the .sh startup script.Note: The default value of the-Xmx
parameter is about a quarter of the maximum internal memory available on the machine. To avoid performance issues with large documents, you may need to adjust it. - Make sure the X server processes located on the workstations allow connections from
the server host. For this, use the
xhost
command. - Start telnet (or ssh) on the server host.
- Start an xterm process with the display parameter set on the current workstation. For example: xterm -display workstationip:0.0.
- Start Oxygen XML Editor by typing sh oxygen.sh from the command line. This file is located in the installation folder.