Before proceeding to use the SkyVault SDK, you should do one final check of your system
to ensure you have the prerequisites correctly installed.
Check you have the JDK and Maven correctly installed, and the correct versions of
both, and that Maven is configured to use the correct version of the JDK.
Check your configuration by running the command mvn --version
and listing Maven environment. This will display information similar to the
following:
$ mvn --version Apache Maven 3.3.3 (7994120775791599e205a5524ec3e0dfe41d4a06; 2015-04-22T12:57:37+01:00) Maven home: /home/martin/apps/apache-maven-3.3.3 Java version: 1.8.0_45, vendor: Oracle Corporation Java home: /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre Default locale: en_GB, platform encoding: UTF-8 OS name: "linux", version: "3.13.0-58-generic", arch: "amd64", family: "unix" $ env|egrep "M2|MAV" MAVEN_OPTS=-Xms256m -Xmx1G -javaagent:/home/martin/libs/springloaded-1.2.5.RELEASE.jar -noverify M2_HOME=/home/martin/apps/apache-maven-3.3.3
Make sure that the correct version of Maven is installed (3.2.5+) and that the correct version of the JDK is installed (1.8+ or IBM SDK 7.1 if on IBM WebSphere). If you have multiple JDKs installed double check that Maven is using the correct version of the JDK. If you do not see this kind of output, and your operating system cannot find the mvn command, make sure that your PATH environment variable and M2_HOME environment variable have been properly set.
You are now ready to start using the SkyVault SDK.