diff -r 88e28f2ccee4 -r 47129a5cacd3 hotspot/src/os/linux/vm/os_linux.cpp --- a/hotspot/src/os/linux/vm/os_linux.cpp Tue Jun 10 16:39:20 2008 -0700 +++ b/hotspot/src/os/linux/vm/os_linux.cpp Tue Jun 17 09:59:59 2008 -0700 @@ -75,8 +75,8 @@ bool os::Linux::_is_floating_stack = false; bool os::Linux::_is_NPTL = false; bool os::Linux::_supports_fast_thread_cpu_time = false; -char * os::Linux::_glibc_version = NULL; -char * os::Linux::_libpthread_version = NULL; +const char * os::Linux::_glibc_version = NULL; +const char * os::Linux::_libpthread_version = NULL; static jlong initial_time_count=0; @@ -213,9 +213,9 @@ // the system call returns 1. This causes the VM to act as if it is // a single processor and elide locking (see is_MP() call). static bool unsafe_chroot_detected = false; -static char *unstable_chroot_error = "/proc file system not found.\n" - "Java may be unstable running multithreaded in a chroot " - "environment on Linux when /proc filesystem is not mounted."; +static const char *unstable_chroot_error = "/proc file system not found.\n" + "Java may be unstable running multithreaded in a chroot " + "environment on Linux when /proc filesystem is not mounted."; void os::Linux::initialize_system_info() { _processor_count = sysconf(_SC_NPROCESSORS_CONF); @@ -544,26 +544,23 @@ if (n > 0) { char *str = (char *)malloc(n); confstr(_CS_GNU_LIBPTHREAD_VERSION, str, n); - // Vanilla RH-9 (glibc 2.3.2) has a bug that confstr() always tells // us "NPTL-0.29" even we are running with LinuxThreads. Check if this - // is the case: + // is the case. LinuxThreads has a hard limit on max number of threads. + // So sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) will return a positive value. + // On the other hand, NPTL does not have such a limit, sysconf() + // will return -1 and errno is not changed. Check if it is really NPTL. if (strcmp(os::Linux::glibc_version(), "glibc 2.3.2") == 0 && - strstr(str, "NPTL")) { - // LinuxThreads has a hard limit on max number of threads. So - // sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) will return a positive value. - // On the other hand, NPTL does not have such a limit, sysconf() - // will return -1 and errno is not changed. Check if it is really - // NPTL: - if (sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) > 0) { - free(str); - str = "linuxthreads"; - } + strstr(str, "NPTL") && + sysconf(_SC_THREAD_THREADS_MAX) > 0) { + free(str); + os::Linux::set_libpthread_version("linuxthreads"); + } else { + os::Linux::set_libpthread_version(str); } - os::Linux::set_libpthread_version(str); } else { - // glibc before 2.3.2 only has LinuxThreads. - os::Linux::set_libpthread_version("linuxthreads"); + // glibc before 2.3.2 only has LinuxThreads. + os::Linux::set_libpthread_version("linuxthreads"); } if (strstr(libpthread_version(), "NPTL")) { @@ -4632,11 +4629,7 @@ // Unlike system(), this function can be called from signal handler. It // doesn't block SIGINT et al. int os::fork_and_exec(char* cmd) { - char * argv[4]; - argv[0] = "sh"; - argv[1] = "-c"; - argv[2] = cmd; - argv[3] = NULL; + const char * argv[4] = {"sh", "-c", cmd, NULL}; // fork() in LinuxThreads/NPTL is not async-safe. It needs to run // pthread_atfork handlers and reset pthread library. All we need is a @@ -4661,7 +4654,7 @@ // IA64 should use normal execve() from glibc to match the glibc fork() // above. NOT_IA64(syscall(__NR_execve, "/bin/sh", argv, environ);) - IA64_ONLY(execve("/bin/sh", argv, environ);) + IA64_ONLY(execve("/bin/sh", (char* const*)argv, environ);) // execve failed _exit(-1);