The patch removes the Hadoop dependency from muCommander's runnable fat JAR, and makes it possible to provide an arbitrary Hadoop/QFS version via command line parameters. Loading of the classes are done dynamically during application startup. MuCommander is a lightweight, cross-platform file manager with a dual-pane interface. It runs on any operating system with Java support (Mac OS X, Windows, Linux,.BSD, Solaris). In other words, muCommander is a long-standing (since 2002) open-source (GPLv3) file manager with a dual-pane interface (similar to that of Norton Commander ) that. Main features of muCommander. One of the most striking features that we are going to find in muCommander is the graphical interface that it presents to us, since most will like it. Of course, for us to run it, the computer needs to have Java installed on a mandatory basis. To say that this proposal has a two-panel interface that we can.
Developer(s) | Arik Hadas |
---|---|
Stable release | |
Repository | |
Written in | Java |
Operating system | Unix-like, Microsoft Windows, macOS |
Available in | 23 languages |
Type | File manager |
License | GPL v3[2] |
Website | www.mucommander.com |
muCommander is a lightweight, open-source, cross-platform file manager that will run on any operating system supporting Java. It features a Norton Commander style, dual-pane interface to allow easy manipulation of files with many keyboard shortcuts. Pre-compiled builds are available for Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenVMS, and the software can be run from the Internet via Java Web Start.
In 2009, muCommmander was recognized as one of the best file managers on Linux.[3] In 2010, it ranked 76th on the best free software list of PCMag.[4]
muCommander is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License[...] Version 3, 29 June 2007^CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
|url=
value (help). Retrieved 2010-04-02.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)