You can extract the JDK folder from the Installation EXE.
Check this link for the steps. The post was for JDK 1.7 it will work for JDK 1.8 also
Do the following.
Steps
- Download JDK from Oracle
- Download and Install 7-zip from here
- Open installition exe using 7-Zip
- Extract the tools.zip
- Extract the content of tools.zip to a folder (e.g. c:\jdk).
- Open the extracted folder in cmd prompt.
- Execute
for /r %x in (*.pack) do .\bin\unpack200 -r "%x" "%~dx%~px%~nx.jar"command - Set
JAVA_HOMEto the jdk (e.g c:\jdk) folder. - Add
%JAVA_HOME%/binto the PATH env variable.
Testing
Run the following command to check the installation, it will print the version of JDK.
c:> javac -version
javac 1.7.0_51
NOTE: Tested with JDK 1.7 and 1.8
Update 1
Edited the answer to add the steps in the answer itself instead of the link to a blog post.
Update 2
For 64-Bit please check unpack-jdk-x64.bat by grabantot
Answer from seenukarthi on Stack OverflowVideos
You can extract the JDK folder from the Installation EXE.
Check this link for the steps. The post was for JDK 1.7 it will work for JDK 1.8 also
Do the following.
Steps
- Download JDK from Oracle
- Download and Install 7-zip from here
- Open installition exe using 7-Zip
- Extract the tools.zip
- Extract the content of tools.zip to a folder (e.g. c:\jdk).
- Open the extracted folder in cmd prompt.
- Execute
for /r %x in (*.pack) do .\bin\unpack200 -r "%x" "%~dx%~px%~nx.jar"command - Set
JAVA_HOMEto the jdk (e.g c:\jdk) folder. - Add
%JAVA_HOME%/binto the PATH env variable.
Testing
Run the following command to check the installation, it will print the version of JDK.
c:> javac -version
javac 1.7.0_51
NOTE: Tested with JDK 1.7 and 1.8
Update 1
Edited the answer to add the steps in the answer itself instead of the link to a blog post.
Update 2
For 64-Bit please check unpack-jdk-x64.bat by grabantot
I was looking for a solution to this as well. I'm not sure why the OP wanted to do this. I'm just trying to get a newer version of java for new development while not interfering with an older Java install which a legacy application requires (I'd like to update the legacy app, but it's not an option, now)
I think the hack I am going to try is this:
- Install 1.8
- Take a copy of the install folder
- Uninstall 1.8
- Reinstall / Repair 1.7
- restore the copy of 1.
I'm sure if I had a better understanding of what the install is doing, this would not be necessary.