>>> Installing (1 of 1) dev-lang/j-701 * checking 23 files for package collisions * This package will overwrite one or more files that may belong to other * packages (see list below). You can use a command such as `portageq * owners / <filename>` to identify the installed package that owns a * file. If portageq reports that only one package owns a file then do * NOT file a bug report. A bug report is only useful if it identifies at * least two or more packages that are known to install the same file(s). * If a collision occurs and you can not explain where the file came from * then you should simply ignore the collision since there is not enough * information to determine if a real problem exists. Please do NOT file * a bug report at http://bugs.gentoo.org unless you report exactly which * two packages install the same file(s). Once again, please do NOT file * a bug report unless you have completely understood the above message. * * Detected file collision(s): * * /usr/bin/jconsole * * Searching all installed packages for file collisions... * * Press Ctrl-C to Stop * * dev-java/java-config-2.1.11-r3:2::gentoo * /usr/bin/jconsole * * Package 'dev-lang/j-701' NOT merged due to file collisions. If * necessary, refer to your elog messages for the whole content of the * above message. Reproducible: Always
Exact same problem here. Would like to give the J language a try but don't really want to get rid of Java. (I am using Iced Tea.)
Google for jconsole and it's kind of obvious who owns this name. Also according to wikipedia [1] J uses the oddly /bin/jc on unix systems. Are there examples of how other distros handled this name collision? [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J_(programming_language)
+ 26 Nov 2012; Patrick Lauer <patrick@gentoo.org> +j-701-r1.ebuild, + -j-701.ebuild: + Rename jconsole to jc because of java-config, #444220 Should do the trick ...