author | rfield |
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changeset 38608 | 691b607bbcd6 |
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child 41039 | 54596b00162b |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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![OpenJDK](http://openjdk.java.net/images/openjdk.png) |
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# OpenJDK Build README |
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***** |
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<a name="introduction"></a> |
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## Introduction |
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This README file contains build instructions for the |
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[OpenJDK](http://openjdk.java.net). Building the source code for the OpenJDK |
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requires a certain degree of technical expertise. |
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### !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THIS IS A MAJOR RE-WRITE of this document. !!!!!!!!!!!!! |
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Some Headlines: |
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* The build is now a "`configure && make`" style build |
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* Any GNU make 3.81 or newer should work, except on Windows where 4.0 or newer |
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is recommended. |
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* The build should scale, i.e. more processors should cause the build to be |
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done in less wall-clock time |
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* Nested or recursive make invocations have been significantly reduced, |
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as has the total fork/exec or spawning of sub processes during the build |
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* Windows MKS usage is no longer supported |
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* Windows Visual Studio `vsvars*.bat` and `vcvars*.bat` files are run |
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automatically |
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* Ant is no longer used when building the OpenJDK |
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* Use of ALT_* environment variables for configuring the build is no longer |
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supported |
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***** |
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## Contents |
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* [Introduction](#introduction) |
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* [Use of Mercurial](#hg) |
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* [Getting the Source](#get_source) |
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* [Repositories](#repositories) |
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* [Building](#building) |
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* [System Setup](#setup) |
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* [Linux](#linux) |
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* [Solaris](#solaris) |
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* [Mac OS X](#macosx) |
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* [Windows](#windows) |
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* [Configure](#configure) |
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* [Make](#make) |
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* [Testing](#testing) |
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***** |
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* [Appendix A: Hints and Tips](#hints) |
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* [FAQ](#faq) |
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* [Build Performance Tips](#performance) |
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* [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) |
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* [Appendix B: GNU Make Information](#gmake) |
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* [Appendix C: Build Environments](#buildenvironments) |
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***** |
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<a name="hg"></a> |
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## Use of Mercurial |
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The OpenJDK sources are maintained with the revision control system |
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[Mercurial](http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/Mercurial). If you are new to |
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Mercurial, please see the [Beginner Guides](http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ |
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BeginnersGuides) or refer to the [Mercurial Book](http://hgbook.red-bean.com/). |
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The first few chapters of the book provide an excellent overview of Mercurial, |
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what it is and how it works. |
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For using Mercurial with the OpenJDK refer to the [Developer Guide: Installing |
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and Configuring Mercurial](http://openjdk.java.net/guide/ |
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repositories.html#installConfig) section for more information. |
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<a name="get_source"></a> |
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### Getting the Source |
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To get the entire set of OpenJDK Mercurial repositories use the script |
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`get_source.sh` located in the root repository: |
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hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk9/jdk9 YourOpenJDK |
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cd YourOpenJDK |
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bash ./get_source.sh |
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Once you have all the repositories, keep in mind that each repository is its |
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own independent repository. You can also re-run `./get_source.sh` anytime to |
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pull over all the latest changesets in all the repositories. This set of |
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nested repositories has been given the term "forest" and there are various |
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ways to apply the same `hg` command to each of the repositories. For |
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example, the script `make/scripts/hgforest.sh` can be used to repeat the |
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same `hg` command on every repository, e.g. |
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cd YourOpenJDK |
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bash ./make/scripts/hgforest.sh status |
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<a name="repositories"></a> |
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### Repositories |
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The set of repositories and what they contain: |
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* **. (root)** contains common configure and makefile logic |
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* **hotspot** contains source code and make files for building the OpenJDK |
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Hotspot Virtual Machine |
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* **langtools** contains source code for the OpenJDK javac and language tools |
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* **jdk** contains source code and make files for building the OpenJDK runtime |
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libraries and misc files |
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* **jaxp** contains source code for the OpenJDK JAXP functionality |
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* **jaxws** contains source code for the OpenJDK JAX-WS functionality |
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* **corba** contains source code for the OpenJDK Corba functionality |
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* **nashorn** contains source code for the OpenJDK JavaScript implementation |
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### Repository Source Guidelines |
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There are some very basic guidelines: |
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* Use of whitespace in source files (.java, .c, .h, .cpp, and .hpp files) is |
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restricted. No TABs, no trailing whitespace on lines, and files should not |
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terminate in more than one blank line. |
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* Files with execute permissions should not be added to the source |
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repositories. |
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* All generated files need to be kept isolated from the files maintained or |
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managed by the source control system. The standard area for generated files |
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is the top level `build/` directory. |
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* The default build process should be to build the product and nothing else, |
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in one form, e.g. a product (optimized), debug (non-optimized, -g plus |
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assert logic), or fastdebug (optimized, -g plus assert logic). |
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* The `.hgignore` file in each repository must exist and should include |
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`^build/`, `^dist/` and optionally any `nbproject/private` directories. **It |
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should NEVER** include anything in the `src/` or `test/` or any managed |
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directory area of a repository. |
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* Directory names and file names should never contain blanks or non-printing |
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characters. |
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* Generated source or binary files should NEVER be added to the repository |
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(that includes `javah` output). There are some exceptions to this rule, in |
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particular with some of the generated configure scripts. |
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* Files not needed for typical building or testing of the repository should |
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not be added to the repository. |
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***** |
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<a name="building"></a> |
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## Building |
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The very first step in building the OpenJDK is making sure the system itself |
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has everything it needs to do OpenJDK builds. Once a system is setup, it |
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generally doesn't need to be done again. |
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Building the OpenJDK is now done with running a `configure` script which will |
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try and find and verify you have everything you need, followed by running |
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`make`, e.g. |
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> **`bash ./configure`** |
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> **`make all`** |
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Where possible the `configure` script will attempt to located the various |
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components in the default locations or via component specific variable |
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settings. When the normal defaults fail or components cannot be found, |
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additional `configure` options may be necessary to help `configure` find the |
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necessary tools for the build, or you may need to re-visit the setup of your |
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system due to missing software packages. |
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**NOTE:** The `configure` script file does not have execute permissions and |
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will need to be explicitly run with `bash`, see the source guidelines. |
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***** |
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<a name="setup"></a> |
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### System Setup |
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Before even attempting to use a system to build the OpenJDK there are some very |
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basic system setups needed. For all systems: |
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* Be sure the GNU make utility is version 3.81 (4.0 on windows) or newer, e.g. |
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run "`make -version`" |
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<a name="bootjdk"></a> |
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* Install a Bootstrap JDK. All OpenJDK builds require access to a previously |
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released JDK called the _bootstrap JDK_ or _boot JDK._ The general rule is |
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that the bootstrap JDK must be an instance of the previous major release of |
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the JDK. In addition, there may be a requirement to use a release at or |
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beyond a particular update level. |
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**_Building JDK 9 requires JDK 8. JDK 9 developers should not use JDK 9 as |
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the boot JDK, to ensure that JDK 9 dependencies are not introduced into the |
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parts of the system that are built with JDK 8._** |
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The JDK 8 binaries can be downloaded from Oracle's [JDK 8 download |
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site](http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html). |
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For build performance reasons it is very important that this bootstrap JDK |
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be made available on the local disk of the machine doing the build. You |
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should add its `bin` directory to the `PATH` environment variable. If |
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`configure` has any issues finding this JDK, you may need to use the |
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`configure` option `--with-boot-jdk`. |
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* Ensure that GNU make, the Bootstrap JDK, and the compilers are all in your |
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PATH environment variable. |
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And for specific systems: |
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* **Linux** |
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Install all the software development packages needed including |
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[alsa](#alsa), [freetype](#freetype), [cups](#cups), and |
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[xrender](#xrender). See [specific system packages](#SDBE). |
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* **Solaris** |
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Install all the software development packages needed including [Studio |
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Compilers](#studio), [freetype](#freetype), [cups](#cups), and |
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[xrender](#xrender). See [specific system packages](#SDBE). |
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* **Windows** |
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* Install one of [CYGWIN](#cygwin) or [MinGW/MSYS](#msys) |
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* Install [Visual Studio 2013](#vs2013) |
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* **Mac OS X** |
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Install [XCode 6.3](https://developer.apple.com/xcode/) |
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<a name="linux"></a> |
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#### Linux |
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With Linux, try and favor the system packages over building your own or getting |
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packages from other areas. Most Linux builds should be possible with the |
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system's available packages. |
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Note that some Linux systems have a habit of pre-populating your environment |
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variables for you, for example `JAVA_HOME` might get pre-defined for you to |
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refer to the JDK installed on your Linux system. You will need to unset |
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`JAVA_HOME`. It's a good idea to run `env` and verify the environment variables |
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you are getting from the default system settings make sense for building the |
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OpenJDK. |
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<a name="solaris"></a> |
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#### Solaris |
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<a name="studio"></a> |
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##### Studio Compilers |
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At a minimum, the [Studio 12 Update 4 Compilers](http://www.oracle.com/ |
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technetwork/server-storage/solarisstudio/downloads/index.htm) (containing |
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version 5.13 of the C and C++ compilers) is required, including specific |
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patches. |
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The Solaris Studio installation should contain at least these packages: |
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> <table border="1"> |
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<thead> |
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<tr> |
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<td>**Package**</td> |
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<td>**Version**</td> |
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</tr> |
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</thead> |
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<tbody> |
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<tr> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/backend</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.6.0</td> |
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</tr> |
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<tr> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/c++</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.10.0</td> |
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<tr> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/cc</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.4.0</td> |
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</tr> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/library/c++-libs</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.10.0</td> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/library/math-libs</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/library/studio-gccrt</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/studio-common</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/studio-ja</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/studio-legal</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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<tr> |
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<td>developer/solarisstudio-124/studio-zhCN</td> |
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<td>12.4-1.0.0.1</td> |
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</tr> |
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</tbody> |
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</table> |
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In particular backend 12.4-1.0.6.0 contains a critical patch for the sparc |
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version. |
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|
301 |
Place the `bin` directory in `PATH`. |
|
302 |
||
303 |
The Oracle Solaris Studio Express compilers at: [Oracle Solaris Studio Express |
|
304 |
Download site](http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/solarisstudio/ |
|
305 |
downloads/index-jsp-142582.html) are also an option, although these compilers |
|
306 |
have not been extensively used yet. |
|
307 |
||
308 |
<a name="windows"></a> |
|
309 |
#### Windows |
|
310 |
||
311 |
##### Windows Unix Toolkit |
|
312 |
||
313 |
Building on Windows requires a Unix-like environment, notably a Unix-like |
|
314 |
shell. There are several such environments available of which |
|
315 |
[Cygwin](http://www.cygwin.com/) and |
|
316 |
[MinGW/MSYS](http://www.mingw.org/wiki/MSYS) are currently supported for the |
|
317 |
OpenJDK build. One of the differences of these systems from standard Windows |
|
318 |
tools is the way they handle Windows path names, particularly path names which |
|
319 |
contain spaces, backslashes as path separators and possibly drive letters. |
|
320 |
Depending on the use case and the specifics of each environment these path |
|
321 |
problems can be solved by a combination of quoting whole paths, translating |
|
322 |
backslashes to forward slashes, escaping backslashes with additional |
|
323 |
backslashes and translating the path names to their ["8.3" |
|
324 |
version](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename). |
|
325 |
||
326 |
<a name="cygwin"></a> |
|
327 |
###### CYGWIN |
|
328 |
||
329 |
CYGWIN is an open source, Linux-like environment which tries to emulate a |
|
330 |
complete POSIX layer on Windows. It tries to be smart about path names and can |
|
331 |
usually handle all kinds of paths if they are correctly quoted or escaped |
|
332 |
although internally it maps drive letters `<drive>:` to a virtual directory |
|
333 |
`/cygdrive/<drive>`. |
|
334 |
||
335 |
You can always use the `cygpath` utility to map pathnames with spaces or the |
|
336 |
backslash character into the `C:/` style of pathname (called 'mixed'), e.g. |
|
337 |
`cygpath -s -m "<path>"`. |
|
338 |
||
339 |
Note that the use of CYGWIN creates a unique problem with regards to setting |
|
340 |
[`PATH`](#path). Normally on Windows the `PATH` variable contains directories |
|
341 |
separated with the ";" character (Solaris and Linux use ":"). With CYGWIN, it |
|
342 |
uses ":", but that means that paths like "C:/path" cannot be placed in the |
|
343 |
CYGWIN version of `PATH` and instead CYGWIN uses something like |
|
344 |
`/cygdrive/c/path` which CYGWIN understands, but only CYGWIN understands. |
|
345 |
||
346 |
The OpenJDK build requires CYGWIN version 1.7.16 or newer. Information about |
|
347 |
CYGWIN can be obtained from the CYGWIN website at |
|
348 |
[www.cygwin.com](http://www.cygwin.com). |
|
349 |
||
350 |
By default CYGWIN doesn't install all the tools required for building the |
|
351 |
OpenJDK. Along with the default installation, you need to install the following |
|
352 |
tools. |
|
353 |
||
354 |
> <table border="1"> |
|
355 |
<thead> |
|
356 |
<tr> |
|
357 |
<td>Binary Name</td> |
|
358 |
<td>Category</td> |
|
359 |
<td>Package</td> |
|
360 |
<td>Description</td> |
|
361 |
</tr> |
|
362 |
</thead> |
|
363 |
<tbody> |
|
364 |
<tr> |
|
365 |
<td>ar.exe</td> |
|
366 |
<td>Devel</td> |
|
367 |
<td>binutils</td> |
|
368 |
<td>The GNU assembler, linker and binary utilities</td> |
|
369 |
</tr> |
|
370 |
<tr> |
|
371 |
<td>make.exe</td> |
|
372 |
<td>Devel</td> |
|
373 |
<td>make</td> |
|
374 |
<td>The GNU version of the 'make' utility built for CYGWIN</td> |
|
375 |
</tr> |
|
376 |
<tr> |
|
377 |
<td>m4.exe</td> |
|
378 |
<td>Interpreters</td> |
|
379 |
<td>m4</td> |
|
380 |
<td>GNU implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor</td> |
|
381 |
</tr> |
|
382 |
<tr> |
|
383 |
<td>cpio.exe</td> |
|
384 |
<td>Utils</td> |
|
385 |
<td>cpio</td> |
|
386 |
<td>A program to manage archives of files</td> |
|
387 |
</tr> |
|
388 |
<tr> |
|
389 |
<td>gawk.exe</td> |
|
390 |
<td>Utils</td> |
|
391 |
<td>awk</td> |
|
392 |
<td>Pattern-directed scanning and processing language</td> |
|
393 |
</tr> |
|
394 |
<tr> |
|
395 |
<td>file.exe</td> |
|
396 |
<td>Utils</td> |
|
397 |
<td>file</td> |
|
398 |
<td>Determines file type using 'magic' numbers</td> |
|
399 |
</tr> |
|
400 |
<tr> |
|
401 |
<td>zip.exe</td> |
|
402 |
<td>Archive</td> |
|
403 |
<td>zip</td> |
|
404 |
<td>Package and compress (archive) files</td> |
|
405 |
</tr> |
|
406 |
<tr> |
|
407 |
<td>unzip.exe</td> |
|
408 |
<td>Archive</td> |
|
409 |
<td>unzip</td> |
|
410 |
<td>Extract compressed files in a ZIP archive</td> |
|
411 |
</tr> |
|
412 |
<tr> |
|
413 |
<td>free.exe</td> |
|
414 |
<td>System</td> |
|
415 |
<td>procps</td> |
|
416 |
<td>Display amount of free and used memory in the system</td> |
|
417 |
</tr> |
|
418 |
</tbody> |
|
419 |
</table> |
|
420 |
||
421 |
Note that the CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN software on |
|
422 |
your Windows system. CYGWIN provides a [FAQ](http://cygwin.com/faq/ |
|
423 |
faq.using.html) for known issues and problems, of particular interest is the |
|
424 |
section on [BLODA (applications that interfere with |
|
425 |
CYGWIN)](http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda). |
|
426 |
||
427 |
<a name="msys"></a> |
|
428 |
###### MinGW/MSYS |
|
429 |
||
430 |
MinGW ("Minimalist GNU for Windows") is a collection of free Windows specific |
|
431 |
header files and import libraries combined with GNU toolsets that allow one to |
|
432 |
produce native Windows programs that do not rely on any 3rd-party C runtime |
|
433 |
DLLs. MSYS is a supplement to MinGW which allows building applications and |
|
434 |
programs which rely on traditional UNIX tools to be present. Among others this |
|
435 |
includes tools like `bash` and `make`. See [MinGW/MSYS](http://www.mingw.org/ |
|
436 |
wiki/MSYS) for more information. |
|
437 |
||
438 |
Like Cygwin, MinGW/MSYS can handle different types of path formats. They are |
|
439 |
internally converted to paths with forward slashes and drive letters |
|
440 |
`<drive>:` replaced by a virtual directory `/<drive>`. Additionally, MSYS |
|
441 |
automatically detects binaries compiled for the MSYS environment and feeds them |
|
442 |
with the internal, Unix-style path names. If native Windows applications are |
|
443 |
called from within MSYS programs their path arguments are automatically |
|
444 |
converted back to Windows style path names with drive letters and backslashes |
|
445 |
as path separators. This may cause problems for Windows applications which use |
|
446 |
forward slashes as parameter separator (e.g. `cl /nologo /I`) because MSYS may |
|
447 |
wrongly [replace such parameters by drive letters](http://mingw.org/wiki/ |
|
448 |
Posix_path_conversion). |
|
449 |
||
450 |
In addition to the tools which will be installed by default, you have to |
|
451 |
manually install the `msys-zip` and `msys-unzip` packages. This can be easily |
|
452 |
done with the MinGW command line installer: |
|
453 |
||
454 |
mingw-get.exe install msys-zip |
|
455 |
mingw-get.exe install msys-unzip |
|
456 |
||
457 |
<a name="vs2013"></a> |
|
458 |
##### Visual Studio 2013 Compilers |
|
459 |
||
460 |
The 32-bit and 64-bit OpenJDK Windows build requires Microsoft Visual Studio |
|
461 |
C++ 2013 (VS2013) Professional Edition or Express compiler. The compiler and |
|
462 |
other tools are expected to reside in the location defined by the variable |
|
463 |
`VS120COMNTOOLS` which is set by the Microsoft Visual Studio installer. |
|
464 |
||
465 |
Only the C++ part of VS2013 is needed. Try to let the installation go to the |
|
466 |
default install directory. Always reboot your system after installing VS2013. |
|
467 |
The system environment variable VS120COMNTOOLS should be set in your |
|
468 |
environment. |
|
469 |
||
470 |
Make sure that TMP and TEMP are also set in the environment and refer to |
|
471 |
Windows paths that exist, like `C:\temp`, not `/tmp`, not `/cygdrive/c/temp`, |
|
472 |
and not `C:/temp`. `C:\temp` is just an example, it is assumed that this area |
|
473 |
is private to the user, so by default after installs you should see a unique |
|
474 |
user path in these variables. |
|
475 |
||
476 |
<a name="macosx"></a> |
|
477 |
#### Mac OS X |
|
478 |
||
479 |
Make sure you get the right XCode version. |
|
480 |
||
481 |
***** |
|
482 |
||
483 |
<a name="configure"></a> |
|
484 |
### Configure |
|
485 |
||
486 |
The basic invocation of the `configure` script looks like: |
|
487 |
||
488 |
> **`bash ./configure [options]`** |
|
489 |
||
490 |
This will create an output directory containing the "configuration" and setup |
|
491 |
an area for the build result. This directory typically looks like: |
|
492 |
||
493 |
> **`build/linux-x64-normal-server-release`** |
|
494 |
||
495 |
`configure` will try to figure out what system you are running on and where all |
|
496 |
necessary build components are. If you have all prerequisites for building |
|
497 |
installed, it should find everything. If it fails to detect any component |
|
498 |
automatically, it will exit and inform you about the problem. When this |
|
499 |
happens, read more below in [the `configure` options](#configureoptions). |
|
500 |
||
501 |
Some examples: |
|
502 |
||
503 |
> **Windows 32bit build with freetype specified:** |
|
504 |
> `bash ./configure --with-freetype=/cygdrive/c/freetype-i586 --with-target- |
|
505 |
bits=32` |
|
506 |
||
507 |
> **Debug 64bit Build:** |
|
508 |
> `bash ./configure --enable-debug --with-target-bits=64` |
|
509 |
||
510 |
<a name="configureoptions"></a> |
|
511 |
#### Configure Options |
|
512 |
||
513 |
Complete details on all the OpenJDK `configure` options can be seen with: |
|
514 |
||
515 |
> **`bash ./configure --help=short`** |
|
516 |
||
517 |
Use `-help` to see all the `configure` options available. You can generate any |
|
518 |
number of different configurations, e.g. debug, release, 32, 64, etc. |
|
519 |
||
520 |
Some of the more commonly used `configure` options are: |
|
521 |
||
522 |
> **`--enable-debug`** |
|
523 |
> set the debug level to fastdebug (this is a shorthand for `--with-debug- |
|
524 |
level=fastdebug`) |
|
525 |
||
526 |
<a name="alsa"></a> |
|
527 |
> **`--with-alsa=`**_path_ |
|
528 |
> select the location of the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) |
|
529 |
||
530 |
> Version 0.9.1 or newer of the ALSA files are required for building the |
|
531 |
OpenJDK on Linux. These Linux files are usually available from an "alsa" of |
|
532 |
"libasound" development package, and it's highly recommended that you try |
|
533 |
and use the package provided by the particular version of Linux that you are |
|
534 |
using. |
|
535 |
||
536 |
> **`--with-boot-jdk=`**_path_ |
|
537 |
> select the [Bootstrap JDK](#bootjdk) |
|
538 |
||
539 |
> **`--with-boot-jdk-jvmargs=`**"_args_" |
|
540 |
> provide the JVM options to be used to run the [Bootstrap JDK](#bootjdk) |
|
541 |
||
542 |
> **`--with-cacerts=`**_path_ |
|
543 |
> select the path to the cacerts file. |
|
544 |
||
545 |
> See [Certificate Authority on Wikipedia](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ |
|
546 |
Certificate_Authority) for a better understanding of the Certificate |
|
547 |
Authority (CA). A certificates file named "cacerts" represents a system-wide |
|
548 |
keystore with CA certificates. In JDK and JRE binary bundles, the "cacerts" |
|
549 |
file contains root CA certificates from several public CAs (e.g., VeriSign, |
|
550 |
Thawte, and Baltimore). The source contain a cacerts file without CA root |
|
551 |
certificates. Formal JDK builders will need to secure permission from each |
|
552 |
public CA and include the certificates into their own custom cacerts file. |
|
553 |
Failure to provide a populated cacerts file will result in verification |
|
554 |
errors of a certificate chain during runtime. By default an empty cacerts |
|
555 |
file is provided and that should be fine for most JDK developers. |
|
556 |
||
557 |
<a name="cups"></a> |
|
558 |
> **`--with-cups=`**_path_ |
|
559 |
> select the CUPS install location |
|
560 |
||
561 |
> The Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS) Headers are required for building the |
|
562 |
OpenJDK on Solaris and Linux. The Solaris header files can be obtained by |
|
563 |
installing the package **SFWcups** from the Solaris Software Companion |
|
564 |
CD/DVD, these often will be installed into the directory `/opt/sfw/cups`. |
|
565 |
||
566 |
> The CUPS header files can always be downloaded from |
|
567 |
[www.cups.org](http://www.cups.org). |
|
568 |
||
569 |
> **`--with-cups-include=`**_path_ |
|
570 |
> select the CUPS include directory location |
|
571 |
||
572 |
> **`--with-debug-level=`**_level_ |
|
573 |
> select the debug information level of release, fastdebug, or slowdebug |
|
574 |
||
575 |
> **`--with-dev-kit=`**_path_ |
|
576 |
> select location of the compiler install or developer install location |
|
577 |
||
578 |
<a name="freetype"></a> |
|
579 |
> **`--with-freetype=`**_path_ |
|
580 |
> select the freetype files to use. |
|
581 |
||
582 |
> Expecting the freetype libraries under `lib/` and the headers under |
|
583 |
`include/`. |
|
584 |
||
585 |
> Version 2.3 or newer of FreeType is required. On Unix systems required files |
|
586 |
can be available as part of your distribution (while you still may need to |
|
587 |
upgrade them). Note that you need development version of package that |
|
588 |
includes both the FreeType library and header files. |
|
589 |
||
590 |
> You can always download latest FreeType version from the [FreeType |
|
591 |
website](http://www.freetype.org). Building the freetype 2 libraries from |
|
592 |
scratch is also possible, however on Windows refer to the [Windows FreeType |
|
593 |
DLL build instructions](http://freetype.freedesktop.org/wiki/FreeType_DLL). |
|
594 |
||
595 |
> Note that by default FreeType is built with byte code hinting support |
|
596 |
disabled due to licensing restrictions. In this case, text appearance and |
|
597 |
metrics are expected to differ from Sun's official JDK build. See the |
|
598 |
[SourceForge FreeType2 Home Page](http://freetype.sourceforge.net/freetype2) |
|
599 |
for more information. |
|
600 |
||
601 |
> **`--with-import-hotspot=`**_path_ |
|
602 |
> select the location to find hotspot binaries from a previous build to avoid |
|
603 |
building hotspot |
|
604 |
||
605 |
> **`--with-target-bits=`**_arg_ |
|
606 |
> select 32 or 64 bit build |
|
607 |
||
608 |
> **`--with-jvm-variants=`**_variants_ |
|
609 |
> select the JVM variants to build from, comma separated list that can |
|
610 |
include: server, client, kernel, zero and zeroshark |
|
611 |
||
612 |
> **`--with-memory-size=`**_size_ |
|
613 |
> select the RAM size that GNU make will think this system has |
|
614 |
||
615 |
> **`--with-msvcr-dll=`**_path_ |
|
616 |
> select the `msvcr100.dll` file to include in the Windows builds (C/C++ |
|
617 |
runtime library for Visual Studio). |
|
618 |
||
619 |
> This is usually picked up automatically from the redist directories of |
|
620 |
Visual Studio 2013. |
|
621 |
||
622 |
> **`--with-num-cores=`**_cores_ |
|
623 |
> select the number of cores to use (processor count or CPU count) |
|
624 |
||
625 |
<a name="xrender"></a> |
|
626 |
> **`--with-x=`**_path_ |
|
627 |
> select the location of the X11 and xrender files. |
|
628 |
||
629 |
> The XRender Extension Headers are required for building the OpenJDK on |
|
630 |
Solaris and Linux. The Linux header files are usually available from a |
|
631 |
"Xrender" development package, it's recommended that you try and use the |
|
632 |
package provided by the particular distribution of Linux that you are using. |
|
633 |
The Solaris XRender header files is included with the other X11 header files |
|
634 |
in the package **SFWxwinc** on new enough versions of Solaris and will be |
|
635 |
installed in `/usr/X11/include/X11/extensions/Xrender.h` or |
|
636 |
`/usr/openwin/share/include/X11/extensions/Xrender.h` |
|
637 |
||
638 |
***** |
|
639 |
||
640 |
<a name="make"></a> |
|
641 |
### Make |
|
642 |
||
643 |
The basic invocation of the `make` utility looks like: |
|
644 |
||
645 |
> **`make all`** |
|
646 |
||
647 |
This will start the build to the output directory containing the |
|
648 |
"configuration" that was created by the `configure` script. Run `make help` for |
|
649 |
more information on the available targets. |
|
650 |
||
651 |
There are some of the make targets that are of general interest: |
|
652 |
||
653 |
> _empty_ |
|
654 |
> build everything but no images |
|
655 |
||
656 |
> **`all`** |
|
657 |
> build everything including images |
|
658 |
||
659 |
> **`all-conf`** |
|
660 |
> build all configurations |
|
661 |
||
662 |
> **`images`** |
|
663 |
> create complete j2sdk and j2re images |
|
664 |
||
665 |
> **`install`** |
|
666 |
> install the generated images locally, typically in `/usr/local` |
|
667 |
||
668 |
> **`clean`** |
|
669 |
> remove all files generated by make, but not those generated by `configure` |
|
670 |
||
671 |
> **`dist-clean`** |
|
672 |
> remove all files generated by both and `configure` (basically killing the |
|
673 |
configuration) |
|
674 |
||
675 |
> **`help`** |
|
676 |
> give some help on using `make`, including some interesting make targets |
|
677 |
||
678 |
***** |
|
679 |
||
680 |
<a name="testing"></a> |
|
681 |
## Testing |
|
682 |
||
683 |
When the build is completed, you should see the generated binaries and |
|
684 |
associated files in the `j2sdk-image` directory in the output directory. In |
|
685 |
particular, the `build/*/images/j2sdk-image/bin` directory should contain |
|
686 |
executables for the OpenJDK tools and utilities for that configuration. The |
|
687 |
testing tool `jtreg` will be needed and can be found at: [the jtreg |
|
688 |
site](http://openjdk.java.net/jtreg/). The provided regression tests in the |
|
689 |
repositories can be run with the command: |
|
690 |
||
691 |
> **``cd test && make PRODUCT_HOME=`pwd`/../build/*/images/j2sdk-image all``** |
|
692 |
||
693 |
***** |
|
694 |
||
695 |
<a name="hints"></a> |
|
696 |
## Appendix A: Hints and Tips |
|
697 |
||
698 |
<a name="faq"></a> |
|
699 |
### FAQ |
|
700 |
||
701 |
**Q:** The `generated-configure.sh` file looks horrible! How are you going to |
|
702 |
edit it? |
|
703 |
**A:** The `generated-configure.sh` file is generated (think "compiled") by the |
|
704 |
autoconf tools. The source code is in `configure.ac` and various .m4 files in |
|
705 |
common/autoconf, which are much more readable. |
|
706 |
||
707 |
**Q:** Why is the `generated-configure.sh` file checked in, if it is |
|
708 |
generated? |
|
709 |
**A:** If it was not generated, every user would need to have the autoconf |
|
710 |
tools installed, and re-generate the `configure` file as the first step. Our |
|
711 |
goal is to minimize the work needed to be done by the user to start building |
|
712 |
OpenJDK, and to minimize the number of external dependencies required. |
|
713 |
||
714 |
**Q:** Do you require a specific version of autoconf for regenerating |
|
715 |
`generated-configure.sh`? |
|
716 |
**A:** Yes, version 2.69 is required and should be easy enough to aquire on all |
|
717 |
supported operating systems. The reason for this is to avoid large spurious |
|
718 |
changes in `generated-configure.sh`. |
|
719 |
||
720 |
**Q:** How do you regenerate `generated-configure.sh` after making changes to |
|
721 |
the input files? |
|
722 |
**A:** Regnerating `generated-configure.sh` should always be done using the |
|
723 |
script `common/autoconf/autogen.sh` to ensure that the correct files get |
|
724 |
updated. This script should also be run after mercurial tries to merge |
|
725 |
`generated-configure.sh` as a merge of the generated file is not guaranteed to |
|
726 |
be correct. |
|
727 |
||
728 |
**Q:** What are the files in `common/makefiles/support/*` for? They look like |
|
729 |
gibberish. |
|
730 |
**A:** They are a somewhat ugly hack to compensate for command line length |
|
731 |
limitations on certain platforms (Windows, Solaris). Due to a combination of |
|
732 |
limitations in make and the shell, command lines containing too many files will |
|
733 |
not work properly. These helper files are part of an elaborate hack that will |
|
734 |
compress the command line in the makefile and then uncompress it safely. We're |
|
735 |
not proud of it, but it does fix the problem. If you have any better |
|
736 |
suggestions, we're all ears! :-) |
|
737 |
||
738 |
**Q:** I want to see the output of the commands that make runs, like in the old |
|
739 |
build. How do I do that? |
|
740 |
**A:** You specify the `LOG` variable to make. There are several log levels: |
|
741 |
||
742 |
* **`warn`** -- Default and very quiet. |
|
743 |
* **`info`** -- Shows more progress information than warn. |
|
744 |
* **`debug`** -- Echos all command lines and prints all macro calls for |
|
745 |
compilation definitions. |
|
746 |
* **`trace`** -- Echos all $(shell) command lines as well. |
|
747 |
||
748 |
**Q:** When do I have to re-run `configure`? |
|
749 |
**A:** Normally you will run `configure` only once for creating a |
|
750 |
configuration. You need to re-run configuration only if you want to change any |
|
751 |
configuration options, or if you pull down changes to the `configure` script. |
|
752 |
||
753 |
**Q:** I have added a new source file. Do I need to modify the makefiles? |
|
754 |
**A:** Normally, no. If you want to create e.g. a new native library, you will |
|
755 |
need to modify the makefiles. But for normal file additions or removals, no |
|
756 |
changes are needed. There are certan exceptions for some native libraries where |
|
757 |
the source files are spread over many directories which also contain sources |
|
758 |
for other libraries. In these cases it was simply easier to create include |
|
759 |
lists rather than excludes. |
|
760 |
||
761 |
**Q:** When I run `configure --help`, I see many strange options, like |
|
762 |
`--dvidir`. What is this? |
|
763 |
**A:** Configure provides a slew of options by default, to all projects that |
|
764 |
use autoconf. Most of them are not used in OpenJDK, so you can safely ignore |
|
765 |
them. To list only OpenJDK specific features, use `configure --help=short` |
|
766 |
instead. |
|
767 |
||
768 |
**Q:** `configure` provides OpenJDK-specific features such as `--with- |
|
769 |
builddeps-server` that are not described in this document. What about those? |
|
770 |
**A:** Try them out if you like! But be aware that most of these are |
|
771 |
experimental features. Many of them don't do anything at all at the moment; the |
|
772 |
option is just a placeholder. Others depend on pieces of code or infrastructure |
|
773 |
that is currently not ready for prime time. |
|
774 |
||
775 |
**Q:** How will you make sure you don't break anything? |
|
776 |
**A:** We have a script that compares the result of the new build system with |
|
777 |
the result of the old. For most part, we aim for (and achieve) byte-by-byte |
|
778 |
identical output. There are however technical issues with e.g. native binaries, |
|
779 |
which might differ in a byte-by-byte comparison, even when building twice with |
|
780 |
the old build system. For these, we compare relevant aspects (e.g. the symbol |
|
781 |
table and file size). Note that we still don't have 100% equivalence, but we're |
|
782 |
close. |
|
783 |
||
784 |
**Q:** I noticed this thing X in the build that looks very broken by design. |
|
785 |
Why don't you fix it? |
|
786 |
**A:** Our goal is to produce a build output that is as close as technically |
|
787 |
possible to the old build output. If things were weird in the old build, they |
|
788 |
will be weird in the new build. Often, things were weird before due to |
|
789 |
obscurity, but in the new build system the weird stuff comes up to the surface. |
|
790 |
The plan is to attack these things at a later stage, after the new build system |
|
791 |
is established. |
|
792 |
||
793 |
**Q:** The code in the new build system is not that well-structured. Will you |
|
794 |
fix this? |
|
795 |
**A:** Yes! The new build system has grown bit by bit as we converted the old |
|
796 |
system. When all of the old build system is converted, we can take a step back |
|
797 |
and clean up the structure of the new build system. Some of this we plan to do |
|
798 |
before replacing the old build system and some will need to wait until after. |
|
799 |
||
800 |
**Q:** Is anything able to use the results of the new build's default make |
|
801 |
target? |
|
802 |
**A:** Yes, this is the minimal (or roughly minimal) set of compiled output |
|
803 |
needed for a developer to actually execute the newly built JDK. The idea is |
|
804 |
that in an incremental development fashion, when doing a normal make, you |
|
805 |
should only spend time recompiling what's changed (making it purely |
|
806 |
incremental) and only do the work that's needed to actually run and test your |
|
807 |
code. The packaging stuff that is part of the `images` target is not needed for |
|
808 |
a normal developer who wants to test his new code. Even if it's quite fast, |
|
809 |
it's still unnecessary. We're targeting sub-second incremental rebuilds! ;-) |
|
810 |
(Or, well, at least single-digit seconds...) |
|
811 |
||
812 |
**Q:** I usually set a specific environment variable when building, but I can't |
|
813 |
find the equivalent in the new build. What should I do? |
|
814 |
**A:** It might very well be that we have neglected to add support for an |
|
815 |
option that was actually used from outside the build system. Email us and we |
|
816 |
will add support for it! |
|
817 |
||
818 |
<a name="performance"></a> |
|
819 |
### Build Performance Tips |
|
820 |
||
821 |
Building OpenJDK requires a lot of horsepower. Some of the build tools can be |
|
822 |
adjusted to utilize more or less of resources such as parallel threads and |
|
823 |
memory. The `configure` script analyzes your system and selects reasonable |
|
824 |
values for such options based on your hardware. If you encounter resource |
|
825 |
problems, such as out of memory conditions, you can modify the detected values |
|
826 |
with: |
|
827 |
||
828 |
* **`--with-num-cores`** -- number of cores in the build system, e.g. |
|
829 |
`--with-num-cores=8` |
|
830 |
* **`--with-memory-size`** -- memory (in MB) available in the build system, |
|
831 |
e.g. `--with-memory-size=1024` |
|
832 |
||
833 |
It might also be necessary to specify the JVM arguments passed to the Bootstrap |
|
834 |
JDK, using e.g. `--with-boot-jdk-jvmargs="-Xmx8G -enableassertions"`. Doing |
|
835 |
this will override the default JVM arguments passed to the Bootstrap JDK. |
|
836 |
||
837 |
One of the top goals of the new build system is to improve the build |
|
838 |
performance and decrease the time needed to build. This will soon also apply to |
|
839 |
the java compilation when the Smart Javac wrapper is fully supported. |
|
840 |
||
841 |
At the end of a successful execution of `configure`, you will get a performance |
|
842 |
summary, indicating how well the build will perform. Here you will also get |
|
843 |
performance hints. If you want to build fast, pay attention to those! |
|
844 |
||
845 |
#### Building with ccache |
|
846 |
||
847 |
The OpenJDK build supports building with ccache when using gcc or clang. Using |
|
848 |
ccache can radically speed up compilation of native code if you often rebuild |
|
849 |
the same sources. Your milage may vary however so we recommend evaluating it |
|
850 |
for yourself. To enable it, make sure it's on the path and configure with |
|
851 |
`--enable-ccache`. |
|
852 |
||
853 |
#### Building on local disk |
|
854 |
||
855 |
If you are using network shares, e.g. via NFS, for your source code, make sure |
|
856 |
the build directory is situated on local disk. The performance penalty is |
|
857 |
extremely high for building on a network share, close to unusable. |
|
858 |
||
859 |
#### Building only one JVM |
|
860 |
||
861 |
The old build builds multiple JVMs on 32-bit systems (client and server; and on |
|
862 |
Windows kernel as well). In the new build we have changed this default to only |
|
863 |
build server when it's available. This improves build times for those not |
|
864 |
interested in multiple JVMs. To mimic the old behavior on platforms that |
|
865 |
support it, use `--with-jvm-variants=client,server`. |
|
866 |
||
867 |
#### Selecting the number of cores to build on |
|
868 |
||
869 |
By default, `configure` will analyze your machine and run the make process in |
|
870 |
parallel with as many threads as you have cores. This behavior can be |
|
871 |
overridden, either "permanently" (on a `configure` basis) using |
|
872 |
`--with-num-cores=N` or for a single build only (on a make basis), using |
|
873 |
`make JOBS=N`. |
|
874 |
||
875 |
If you want to make a slower build just this time, to save some CPU power for |
|
876 |
other processes, you can run e.g. `make JOBS=2`. This will force the makefiles |
|
877 |
to only run 2 parallel processes, or even `make JOBS=1` which will disable |
|
878 |
parallelism. |
|
879 |
||
880 |
If you want to have it the other way round, namely having slow builds default |
|
881 |
and override with fast if you're impatient, you should call `configure` with |
|
882 |
`--with-num-cores=2`, making 2 the default. If you want to run with more cores, |
|
883 |
run `make JOBS=8` |
|
884 |
||
885 |
<a name="troubleshooting"></a> |
|
886 |
### Troubleshooting |
|
887 |
||
888 |
#### Solving build problems |
|
889 |
||
890 |
If the build fails (and it's not due to a compilation error in a source file |
|
891 |
you've changed), the first thing you should do is to re-run the build with more |
|
892 |
verbosity. Do this by adding `LOG=debug` to your make command line. |
|
893 |
||
894 |
The build log (with both stdout and stderr intermingled, basically the same as |
|
895 |
you see on your console) can be found as `build.log` in your build directory. |
|
896 |
||
897 |
You can ask for help on build problems with the new build system on either the |
|
898 |
[build-dev](http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/build-dev) or the |
|
899 |
[build-infra-dev](http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/build-infra-dev) |
|
900 |
mailing lists. Please include the relevant parts of the build log. |
|
901 |
||
902 |
A build can fail for any number of reasons. Most failures are a result of |
|
903 |
trying to build in an environment in which all the pre-build requirements have |
|
904 |
not been met. The first step in troubleshooting a build failure is to recheck |
|
905 |
that you have satisfied all the pre-build requirements for your platform. |
|
906 |
Scanning the `configure` log is a good first step, making sure that what it |
|
907 |
found makes sense for your system. Look for strange error messages or any |
|
908 |
difficulties that `configure` had in finding things. |
|
909 |
||
910 |
Some of the more common problems with builds are briefly described below, with |
|
911 |
suggestions for remedies. |
|
912 |
||
913 |
* **Corrupted Bundles on Windows:** |
|
914 |
Some virus scanning software has been known to corrupt the downloading of |
|
915 |
zip bundles. It may be necessary to disable the 'on access' or 'real time' |
|
916 |
virus scanning features to prevent this corruption. This type of 'real time' |
|
917 |
virus scanning can also slow down the build process significantly. |
|
918 |
Temporarily disabling the feature, or excluding the build output directory |
|
919 |
may be necessary to get correct and faster builds. |
|
920 |
||
921 |
* **Slow Builds:** |
|
922 |
If your build machine seems to be overloaded from too many simultaneous C++ |
|
923 |
compiles, try setting the `JOBS=1` on the `make` command line. Then try |
|
924 |
increasing the count slowly to an acceptable level for your system. Also: |
|
925 |
||
926 |
Creating the javadocs can be very slow, if you are running javadoc, consider |
|
927 |
skipping that step. |
|
928 |
||
929 |
Faster CPUs, more RAM, and a faster DISK usually helps. The VM build tends |
|
930 |
to be CPU intensive (many C++ compiles), and the rest of the JDK will often |
|
931 |
be disk intensive. |
|
932 |
||
933 |
Faster compiles are possible using a tool called |
|
934 |
[ccache](http://ccache.samba.org/). |
|
935 |
||
936 |
* **File time issues:** |
|
937 |
If you see warnings that refer to file time stamps, e.g. |
|
938 |
||
939 |
> _Warning message:_ ` File 'xxx' has modification time in the future.` |
|
940 |
> _Warning message:_ ` Clock skew detected. Your build may be incomplete.` |
|
941 |
||
942 |
These warnings can occur when the clock on the build machine is out of sync |
|
943 |
with the timestamps on the source files. Other errors, apparently unrelated |
|
944 |
but in fact caused by the clock skew, can occur along with the clock skew |
|
945 |
warnings. These secondary errors may tend to obscure the fact that the true |
|
946 |
root cause of the problem is an out-of-sync clock. |
|
947 |
||
948 |
If you see these warnings, reset the clock on the build machine, run |
|
949 |
"`gmake clobber`" or delete the directory containing the build output, and |
|
950 |
restart the build from the beginning. |
|
951 |
||
952 |
* **Error message: `Trouble writing out table to disk`** |
|
953 |
Increase the amount of swap space on your build machine. This could be |
|
954 |
caused by overloading the system and it may be necessary to use: |
|
955 |
||
956 |
> `make JOBS=1` |
|
957 |
||
958 |
to reduce the load on the system. |
|
959 |
||
960 |
* **Error Message: `libstdc++ not found`:** |
|
961 |
This is caused by a missing libstdc++.a library. This is installed as part |
|
962 |
of a specific package (e.g. libstdc++.so.devel.386). By default some 64-bit |
|
963 |
Linux versions (e.g. Fedora) only install the 64-bit version of the |
|
964 |
libstdc++ package. Various parts of the JDK build require a static link of |
|
965 |
the C++ runtime libraries to allow for maximum portability of the built |
|
966 |
images. |
|
967 |
||
968 |
* **Linux Error Message: `cannot restore segment prot after reloc`** |
|
969 |
This is probably an issue with SELinux (See [SELinux on |
|
970 |
Wikipedia](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SELinux)). Parts of the VM is built |
|
971 |
without the `-fPIC` for performance reasons. |
|
972 |
||
973 |
To completely disable SELinux: |
|
974 |
||
975 |
1. `$ su root` |
|
976 |
2. `# system-config-securitylevel` |
|
977 |
3. `In the window that appears, select the SELinux tab` |
|
978 |
4. `Disable SELinux` |
|
979 |
||
980 |
Alternatively, instead of completely disabling it you could disable just |
|
981 |
this one check. |
|
982 |
||
983 |
1. Select System->Administration->SELinux Management |
|
984 |
2. In the SELinux Management Tool which appears, select "Boolean" from the |
|
985 |
menu on the left |
|
986 |
3. Expand the "Memory Protection" group |
|
987 |
4. Check the first item, labeled "Allow all unconfined executables to use |
|
988 |
libraries requiring text relocation ..." |
|
989 |
||
990 |
* **Windows Error Messages:** |
|
991 |
`*** fatal error - couldn't allocate heap, ... ` |
|
992 |
`rm fails with "Directory not empty"` |
|
993 |
`unzip fails with "cannot create ... Permission denied"` |
|
994 |
`unzip fails with "cannot create ... Error 50"` |
|
995 |
||
996 |
The CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN software. See the |
|
997 |
CYGWIN FAQ section on [BLODA (applications that interfere with |
|
998 |
CYGWIN)](http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda). |
|
999 |
||
1000 |
* **Windows Error Message: `spawn failed`** |
|
1001 |
Try rebooting the system, or there could be some kind of issue with the disk |
|
1002 |
or disk partition being used. Sometimes it comes with a "Permission Denied" |
|
1003 |
message. |
|
1004 |
||
1005 |
***** |
|
1006 |
||
1007 |
<a name="gmake"></a> |
|
1008 |
## Appendix B: GNU make |
|
1009 |
||
1010 |
The Makefiles in the OpenJDK are only valid when used with the GNU version of |
|
1011 |
the utility command `make` (usually called `gmake` on Solaris). A few notes |
|
1012 |
about using GNU make: |
|
1013 |
||
1014 |
* You need GNU make version 3.81 or newer. On Windows 4.0 or newer is |
|
1015 |
recommended. If the GNU make utility on your systems is not of a suitable |
|
1016 |
version, see "[Building GNU make](#buildgmake)". |
|
1017 |
* Place the location of the GNU make binary in the `PATH`. |
|
1018 |
* **Solaris:** Do NOT use `/usr/bin/make` on Solaris. If your Solaris system |
|
1019 |
has the software from the Solaris Developer Companion CD installed, you |
|
1020 |
should try and use `gmake` which will be located in either the `/usr/bin`, |
|
1021 |
`/opt/sfw/bin` or `/usr/sfw/bin` directory. |
|
1022 |
* **Windows:** Make sure you start your build inside a bash shell. |
|
1023 |
* **Mac OS X:** The XCode "command line tools" must be installed on your Mac. |
|
1024 |
||
1025 |
Information on GNU make, and access to ftp download sites, are available on the |
|
1026 |
[GNU make web site ](http://www.gnu.org/software/make/make.html). The latest |
|
1027 |
source to GNU make is available at |
|
1028 |
[ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/](http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/). |
|
1029 |
||
1030 |
<a name="buildgmake"></a> |
|
1031 |
### Building GNU make |
|
1032 |
||
1033 |
First step is to get the GNU make 3.81 or newer source from |
|
1034 |
[ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/](http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/). Building is a |
|
1035 |
little different depending on the OS but is basically done with: |
|
1036 |
||
1037 |
bash ./configure |
|
1038 |
make |
|
1039 |
||
1040 |
***** |
|
1041 |
||
1042 |
<a name="buildenvironments"></a> |
|
1043 |
## Appendix C: Build Environments |
|
1044 |
||
1045 |
### Minimum Build Environments |
|
1046 |
||
1047 |
This file often describes specific requirements for what we call the "minimum |
|
1048 |
build environments" (MBE) for this specific release of the JDK. What is listed |
|
1049 |
below is what the Oracle Release Engineering Team will use to build the Oracle |
|
1050 |
JDK product. Building with the MBE will hopefully generate the most compatible |
|
1051 |
bits that install on, and run correctly on, the most variations of the same |
|
1052 |
base OS and hardware architecture. In some cases, these represent what is often |
|
1053 |
called the least common denominator, but each Operating System has different |
|
1054 |
aspects to it. |
|
1055 |
||
1056 |
In all cases, the Bootstrap JDK version minimum is critical, we cannot |
|
1057 |
guarantee builds will work with older Bootstrap JDK's. Also in all cases, more |
|
1058 |
RAM and more processors is better, the minimums listed below are simply |
|
1059 |
recommendations. |
|
1060 |
||
1061 |
With Solaris and Mac OS X, the version listed below is the oldest release we |
|
1062 |
can guarantee builds and works, and the specific version of the compilers used |
|
1063 |
could be critical. |
|
1064 |
||
1065 |
With Windows the critical aspect is the Visual Studio compiler used, which due |
|
1066 |
to it's runtime, generally dictates what Windows systems can do the builds and |
|
1067 |
where the resulting bits can be used. |
|
1068 |
||
1069 |
**NOTE: We expect a change here off these older Windows OS releases and to a |
|
1070 |
'less older' one, probably Windows 2008R2 X64.** |
|
1071 |
||
1072 |
With Linux, it was just a matter of picking a stable distribution that is a |
|
1073 |
good representative for Linux in general. |
|
1074 |
||
1075 |
It is understood that most developers will NOT be using these specific |
|
1076 |
versions, and in fact creating these specific versions may be difficult due to |
|
1077 |
the age of some of this software. It is expected that developers are more often |
|
1078 |
using the more recent releases and distributions of these operating systems. |
|
1079 |
||
1080 |
Compilation problems with newer or different C/C++ compilers is a common |
|
1081 |
problem. Similarly, compilation problems related to changes to the |
|
1082 |
`/usr/include` or system header files is also a common problem with older, |
|
1083 |
newer, or unreleased OS versions. Please report these types of problems as bugs |
|
1084 |
so that they can be dealt with accordingly. |
|
1085 |
||
1086 |
> <table border="1"> |
|
1087 |
<thead> |
|
1088 |
<tr> |
|
1089 |
<th>Base OS and Architecture</th> |
|
1090 |
<th>OS</th> |
|
1091 |
<th>C/C++ Compiler</th> |
|
1092 |
<th>Bootstrap JDK</th> |
|
1093 |
<th>Processors</th> |
|
1094 |
<th>RAM Minimum</th> |
|
1095 |
<th>DISK Needs</th> |
|
1096 |
</tr> |
|
1097 |
</thead> |
|
1098 |
<tbody> |
|
1099 |
<tr> |
|
1100 |
<td>Linux X86 (32-bit) and X64 (64-bit)</td> |
|
1101 |
<td>Oracle Enterprise Linux 6.4</td> |
|
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|
1102 |
<td>gcc 4.9.2 </td> |
33030 | 1103 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
1104 |
<td>2 or more</td> |
|
1105 |
<td>1 GB</td> |
|
1106 |
<td>6 GB</td> |
|
1107 |
</tr> |
|
1108 |
<tr> |
|
1109 |
<td>Solaris SPARCV9 (64-bit)</td> |
|
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|
1110 |
<td>Solaris 11 Update 1</td> |
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|
1111 |
<td>Studio 12 Update 4 + patches</td> |
33030 | 1112 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
1113 |
<td>4 or more</td> |
|
1114 |
<td>4 GB</td> |
|
1115 |
<td>8 GB</td> |
|
1116 |
</tr> |
|
1117 |
<tr> |
|
1118 |
<td>Solaris X64 (64-bit)</td> |
|
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changeset
|
1119 |
<td>Solaris 11 Update 1</td> |
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changeset
|
1120 |
<td>Studio 12 Update 4 + patches</td> |
33030 | 1121 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
1122 |
<td>4 or more</td> |
|
1123 |
<td>4 GB</td> |
|
1124 |
<td>8 GB</td> |
|
1125 |
</tr> |
|
1126 |
<tr> |
|
1127 |
<td>Windows X86 (32-bit)</td> |
|
1128 |
<td>Windows Server 2012 R2 x64</td> |
|
1129 |
<td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2013 Professional Edition</td> |
|
1130 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
|
1131 |
<td>2 or more</td> |
|
1132 |
<td>2 GB</td> |
|
1133 |
<td>6 GB</td> |
|
1134 |
</tr> |
|
1135 |
<tr> |
|
1136 |
<td>Windows X64 (64-bit)</td> |
|
1137 |
<td>Windows Server 2012 R2 x64</td> |
|
1138 |
<td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2013 Professional Edition</td> |
|
1139 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
|
1140 |
<td>2 or more</td> |
|
1141 |
<td>2 GB</td> |
|
1142 |
<td>6 GB</td> |
|
1143 |
</tr> |
|
1144 |
<tr> |
|
1145 |
<td>Mac OS X X64 (64-bit)</td> |
|
1146 |
<td>Mac OS X 10.9 "Mavericks"</td> |
|
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|
1147 |
<td>Xcode 6.3 or newer</td> |
33030 | 1148 |
<td>JDK 8</td> |
1149 |
<td>2 or more</td> |
|
1150 |
<td>4 GB</td> |
|
1151 |
<td>6 GB</td> |
|
1152 |
</tr> |
|
1153 |
</tbody> |
|
1154 |
</table> |
|
1155 |
||
1156 |
***** |
|
1157 |
||
1158 |
<a name="SDBE"></a> |
|
1159 |
### Specific Developer Build Environments |
|
1160 |
||
1161 |
We won't be listing all the possible environments, but we will try to provide |
|
1162 |
what information we have available to us. |
|
1163 |
||
1164 |
**NOTE: The community can help out by updating this part of the document.** |
|
1165 |
||
1166 |
#### Fedora |
|
1167 |
||
1168 |
After installing the latest [Fedora](http://fedoraproject.org) you need to |
|
1169 |
install several build dependencies. The simplest way to do it is to execute the |
|
1170 |
following commands as user `root`: |
|
1171 |
||
1172 |
yum-builddep java-1.7.0-openjdk |
|
1173 |
yum install gcc gcc-c++ |
|
1174 |
||
1175 |
In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1176 |
||
1177 |
export LANG=C |
|
1178 |
export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-openjdk/bin:${PATH}" |
|
1179 |
||
1180 |
#### CentOS 5.5 |
|
1181 |
||
1182 |
After installing [CentOS 5.5](http://www.centos.org/) you need to make sure you |
|
1183 |
have the following Development bundles installed: |
|
1184 |
||
1185 |
* Development Libraries |
|
1186 |
* Development Tools |
|
1187 |
* Java Development |
|
1188 |
* X Software Development (Including XFree86-devel) |
|
1189 |
||
1190 |
Plus the following packages: |
|
1191 |
||
1192 |
* cups devel: Cups Development Package |
|
1193 |
* alsa devel: Alsa Development Package |
|
1194 |
* Xi devel: libXi.so Development Package |
|
1195 |
||
1196 |
The freetype 2.3 packages don't seem to be available, but the freetype 2.3 |
|
1197 |
sources can be downloaded, built, and installed easily enough from [the |
|
1198 |
freetype site](http://downloads.sourceforge.net/freetype). Build and install |
|
1199 |
with something like: |
|
1200 |
||
1201 |
bash ./configure |
|
1202 |
make |
|
1203 |
sudo -u root make install |
|
1204 |
||
1205 |
Mercurial packages could not be found easily, but a Google search should find |
|
1206 |
ones, and they usually include Python if it's needed. |
|
1207 |
||
1208 |
#### Debian 5.0 (Lenny) |
|
1209 |
||
1210 |
After installing [Debian](http://debian.org) 5 you need to install several |
|
1211 |
build dependencies. The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to |
|
1212 |
execute the following commands as user `root`: |
|
1213 |
||
1214 |
aptitude build-dep openjdk-7 |
|
1215 |
aptitude install openjdk-7-jdk libmotif-dev |
|
1216 |
||
1217 |
In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1218 |
||
1219 |
export LANG=C |
|
1220 |
export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk/bin:${PATH}" |
|
1221 |
||
1222 |
#### Ubuntu 12.04 |
|
1223 |
||
1224 |
After installing [Ubuntu](http://ubuntu.org) 12.04 you need to install several |
|
1225 |
build dependencies. The simplest way to do it is to execute the following |
|
1226 |
commands: |
|
1227 |
||
1228 |
sudo aptitude build-dep openjdk-7 |
|
1229 |
sudo aptitude install openjdk-7-jdk |
|
1230 |
||
1231 |
In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1232 |
||
1233 |
export LANG=C |
|
1234 |
export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk/bin:${PATH}" |
|
1235 |
||
1236 |
#### OpenSUSE 11.1 |
|
1237 |
||
1238 |
After installing [OpenSUSE](http://opensuse.org) 11.1 you need to install |
|
1239 |
several build dependencies. The simplest way to install the build dependencies |
|
1240 |
is to execute the following commands: |
|
1241 |
||
1242 |
sudo zypper source-install -d java-1_7_0-openjdk |
|
1243 |
sudo zypper install make |
|
1244 |
||
1245 |
In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1246 |
||
1247 |
export LANG=C |
|
1248 |
export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.7.0-openjdk/bin:$[PATH}" |
|
1249 |
||
1250 |
Finally, you need to unset the `JAVA_HOME` environment variable: |
|
1251 |
||
1252 |
export -n JAVA_HOME` |
|
1253 |
||
1254 |
#### Mandriva Linux One 2009 Spring |
|
1255 |
||
1256 |
After installing [Mandriva](http://mandriva.org) Linux One 2009 Spring you need |
|
1257 |
to install several build dependencies. The simplest way to install the build |
|
1258 |
dependencies is to execute the following commands as user `root`: |
|
1259 |
||
1260 |
urpmi java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel make gcc gcc-c++ freetype-devel zip unzip |
|
1261 |
libcups2-devel libxrender1-devel libalsa2-devel libstc++-static-devel |
|
1262 |
libxtst6-devel libxi-devel |
|
1263 |
||
1264 |
In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1265 |
||
1266 |
export LANG=C |
|
1267 |
export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.7.0-openjdk/bin:${PATH}" |
|
1268 |
||
1269 |
#### OpenSolaris 2009.06 |
|
1270 |
||
1271 |
After installing [OpenSolaris](http://opensolaris.org) 2009.06 you need to |
|
1272 |
install several build dependencies. The simplest way to install the build |
|
1273 |
dependencies is to execute the following commands: |
|
1274 |
||
1275 |
pfexec pkg install SUNWgmake SUNWj7dev sunstudioexpress SUNWcups SUNWzip |
|
1276 |
SUNWunzip SUNWxwhl SUNWxorg-headers SUNWaudh SUNWfreetype2 |
|
1277 |
||
1278 |
In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build: |
|
1279 |
||
1280 |
export LANG=C |
|
1281 |
export PATH="/opt/SunStudioExpress/bin:${PATH}" |
|
1282 |
||
1283 |
***** |
|
1284 |
||
1285 |
End of the OpenJDK build README document. |
|
1286 |
||
1287 |
Please come again! |