| 
 | 
That is true. What strikes me as weird though is that the following piece of CL 
code I inherited (with file.encoding for whatever reason specified as 1253, not 
Cp1253) worked fine on V5R1 w/ JRE 1.2.2.
    RUNJVA CLASS(<classname goes here>) 
        PARM(&USRID &PASSWD) CHKPATH(*IGNORE) 
        PROP((os400.stderr 'file:/JAVAAPPS/SRVCLASS_ErrorLog.doc') 
        (os400.stdio.convert 6) 
        (file.encoding 1253) 
        (os400.stdout 'file:/JAVAAPPS/SRVCLASS_Console.doc'))) 
  
"Clapham, Paul" <pclapham@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
  "1253" isn't a valid encoding, it's a CCSID. The encoding that corresponds to 
it is "Cp1253".
PC2 
-----Original Message-----
From: java400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:java400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of Panagiotis Varlagas
Sent: November 23, 2005 06:31
To: Java Programming on and around the iSeries / AS400
Subject: Re: Strange problem
We could distinguish between two types of files here: 
- The files that standard output and standard error are redirected to 
- The log files to which we write directly (via Java I/O) from the application 
When we specify -Dfile.encoding=1253 on the java command then neither a log 
file gets created nor do the stdout and stderr get written to their respective 
files. 
When we do not pass a -Dfile.encoding flag to the java command at all, or when 
we use -Dfile.encoding=ISO8859_7, both types of files get written to. 
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