src/solaris/doc/sun/man/man1/javah.1
branchhttp-client-branch
changeset 56378 41fe61be5930
parent 56377 eef94a3576a4
parent 49493 814bd31f8da0
child 56379 c59f684f1eda
--- a/src/solaris/doc/sun/man/man1/javah.1	Fri Mar 30 14:48:28 2018 +0100
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,158 +0,0 @@
-'\" t
-.\" Copyright (c) 1994, 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
-.\" DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
-.\"
-.\" This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
-.\" under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
-.\" published by the Free Software Foundation.
-.\"
-.\" This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
-.\" ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
-.\" FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
-.\" version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
-.\" accompanied this code).
-.\"
-.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
-.\" 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
-.\" Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
-.\"
-.\" Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
-.\" or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
-.\" questions.
-.\"
-.\"     Arch: generic
-.\"     Software: JDK 8
-.\"     Date: 21 November 2013
-.\"     SectDesc: Basic Tools
-.\"     Title: javah.1
-.\"
-.if n .pl 99999
-.TH javah 1 "21 November 2013" "JDK 8" "Basic Tools"
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" * Define some portability stuff
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-.\" http://bugs.debian.org/507673
-.\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html
-.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-.ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq
-.el       .ds Aq '
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" * set default formatting
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" disable hyphenation
-.nh
-.\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only)
-.ad l
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE *
-.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-.SH NAME    
-javah \- Generates C header and source files from a Java class\&.
-.SH SYNOPSIS    
-.sp     
-.nf     
-
-\fBjavah\fR [ \fIoptions\fR ] f\fIully\-qualified\-class\-name \&.\&.\&.\fR
-.fi     
-.sp     
-.TP     
-\fIoptions\fR
-The command-line options\&. See Options\&.
-.TP     
-\fIfully-qualified-class-name\fR
-The fully qualified location of the classes to be converted to C header and source files\&.
-.SH DESCRIPTION    
-The \f3javah\fR command generates C header and source files that are needed to implement native methods\&. The generated header and source files are used by C programs to reference an object\&'s instance variables from native source code\&. The \f3\&.h\fR file contains a \f3struct\fR definition with a layout that parallels the layout of the corresponding class\&. The fields in the \f3struct\fR correspond to instance variables in the class\&.
-.PP
-The name of the header file and the structure declared within it are derived from the name of the class\&. When the class passed to the \f3javah\fR command is inside a package, the package name is added to the beginning of both the header file name and the structure name\&. Underscores (_) are used as name delimiters\&.
-.PP
-By default the \f3javah\fR command creates a header file for each class listed on the command line and puts the files in the current directory\&. Use the \f3-stubs\fR option to create source files\&. Use the \f3-o\fR option to concatenate the results for all listed classes into a single file\&.
-.PP
-The Java Native Interface (JNI) does not require header information or stub files\&. The \f3javah\fR command can still be used to generate native method function prototypes needed for JNI-style native methods\&. The \f3javah\fR command produces JNI-style output by default and places the result in the \f3\&.h\fR file\&.
-.SH OPTIONS    
-.TP
--o \fIoutputfile\fR
-.br
-Concatenates the resulting header or source files for all the classes listed on the command line into an output file\&. Only one of \f3-o\fR or \f3-d\fR can be used\&.
-.TP
--d \fIdirectory\fR
-.br
-Sets the directory where the \f3javah\fR command saves the header files or the stub files\&. Only one of \f3-d\fR or \f3-o\fR can be used\&.
-.TP
--stubs
-.br
-Causes the \f3javah\fR command to generate C declarations from the Java object file\&.
-.TP
--verbose
-.br
-Indicates verbose output and causes the \f3javah\fR command to print a message to \f3stdout\fR about the status of the generated files\&.
-.TP
--help
-.br
-Prints a help message for \f3javah\fR usage\&.
-.TP
--version
-.br
-Prints \f3javah\fR command release information\&.
-.TP
--jni
-.br
-Causes the \f3javah\fR command to create an output file containing JNI-style native method function prototypes\&. This is the default output; use of \f3-jni\fR is optional\&.
-.TP
--classpath \fIpath\fR
-.br
-Specifies the path the \f3javah\fR command uses to look up classes\&. Overrides the default or the \f3CLASSPATH\fR environment variable when it is set\&. Directories are separated by colons on Oracle Solaris and semicolons on Windows\&. The general format for path is:
-
-\fIOracle Solaris\fR:
-
-\&.:\fIyour-path\fR
-
-Example: \f3\&.:/home/avh/classes:/usr/local/java/classes\fR
-
-\fIWindows\fR:
-
-\&.;\fIyour-path\fR
-
-Example: \f3\&.;C:\eusers\edac\eclasses;C:\etools\ejava\eclasses\fR
-
-As a special convenience, a class path element that contains a base name of * is considered equivalent to specifying a list of all the files in the directory with the extension \f3\&.jar\fR or \f3\&.JAR\fR\&.
-
-For example, if directory \f3mydir\fR contains \f3a\&.jar\fR and \f3b\&.JAR\fR, then the class path element \f3mydir/*\fR is expanded to a \f3A\fR\f3\&.jar:b\&.JAR\fR, except that the order of jar files is unspecified\&. All JAR files in the specified directory, including hidden ones, are included in the list\&. A class path entry that consists of * expands to a list of all the JAR files in the current directory\&. The \f3CLASSPATH\fR environment variable, where defined, is similarly expanded\&. Any class path wild card expansion occurs before the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) is started\&. A Java program will never see unexpanded wild cards except by querying the environment\&. For example, by calling \f3System\&.getenv("CLASSPATH")\fR\&.
-.TP
--bootclasspath \fIpath\fR
-.br
-Specifies the path from which to load bootstrap classes\&. By default, the bootstrap classes are the classes that implement the core Java platform located in \f3jre\elib\ert\&.jar\fR and several other JAR files\&.
-.TP
--old
-.br
-Specifies that old JDK 1\&.0-style header files should be generated\&.
-.TP
--force
-.br
-Specifies that output files should always be written\&.
-.TP
--J\fIoption\fR
-.br
-Passes \f3option\fR to the Java Virtual Machine, where \f3option\fR is one of the options described on the reference page for the Java application launcher\&. For example, \f3-J-Xms48m\fR sets the startup memory to 48 MB\&. See java(1)\&.
-.SH SEE\ ALSO    
-.TP 0.2i    
-\(bu
-javah(1)
-.TP 0.2i    
-\(bu
-java(1)
-.TP 0.2i    
-\(bu
-jdb(1)
-.TP 0.2i    
-\(bu
-javap(1)
-.TP 0.2i    
-\(bu
-javadoc(1)
-.RE
-.br
-'pl 8.5i
-'bp