Or, if your company or org has a support contract in place for at least one copy of the Oracle Database, you can open a Service Request with My Oracle Support.# tnsnames.ora Network Configuration FILE: You can visit the forums! There’s a nice thread here for example with the M1 crowd. At least in this case, you have two options that both work well. The ARM chip architecture will become more and more commonplace and the softwares around it will adapt, but I fear for a little while early adapters might be forced to pay the tax. I’d write one myself, but my 2018 MacMini is running the ‘old’ hardware like a champ, and I have no plans on replacing it anytime soon. JDK 17 or GraalVM, either way, there is a very nice how-to on this subject here. That seems to be the least path of resistance currently. What you MAY want to look into is the GraalVM (GraalVM CE 21.3.0) that takes the place of a Java 11 JDK. The bigger problem is that Java FX Jars aren’t included with 17 JDKs, but you CAN download those separately and add them to the lib folder. The Java we have for this hardware is limited to Java 17, and Java 17 isn’t technically supported by SQL Developer, yet. This is probably the people I’m hearing from the most. I should STILL really, really update that though. In the above example I’m being ‘bad’ on purpose by running a really old Java 8 Home. What do you see then? See what I mean about Java being chatty? Same difference, open a terminal, cd INTO the app, then go into the bin folder, and launch via sqldeveloper.sh. When the application crashes, look for error messages – like where the green area I highlight below. And you could see this in the stack dump and then know to go update that driver.ĬD to where you have SQL Developer unzipped. This was somewhat common about 5 years ago – a Windows video driver was notorious for crashing Java. Sometimes when it crashes it’s fairly nice about it and tells you why. Java is pretty chatty/noisy, especially when errors pop up. What happens if you start SQL Developer from the console/terminal? If you have that information, and nothing sounds ‘weird’, I’ll ask the following: In general, I’d say right now you’re best off with 21.4.2 of SQL Developer and Java 11 update 13. If the answers you come back with are ‘SQL Developer 17.2’ or ‘Java 8 update 201’ – I’m going to ask you politely to upgrade to software from 2021 or even 2022 and try again. I need to know those things, and if you don’t tell me upfront, I’m just going to ask. Ok, here’s what we need to know, what version is everything? My Mac is just being a pain Just be sure you’re running 21.2 or higher and this has all been sorted! 2. TL DR – Just download the archive that INCLUDES the JDK, and you should be find. TL DR – run this and make sure you get an Oracle 8 or 11 JDK back (or 17, but we’ll talk about that later). I’ve talked about how to to fix this problem before, and I’m not going to do it again. This isn’t a crash or application failure. This is generally best described as the ‘bouncing icon’ in your taskbar, as SQL Developer tries to start for a second or two, and then gives up. Java is crashing and the application ‘goes away’.These problems fall into 1 of two buckets: With 7,000,000 users, give or take a million, I get quite a few notes from folks who are having problems getting SQL Developer to open, or to STAY open.
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