823359: Reorder jpackage help text to focus on package
Reviewed-by: asemenyuk, almatvee, kcr
#!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 2010, 2015, 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.
# This script launches HotSpot.
#
# If the first parameter is either "-gdb" or "-gud", HotSpot will be
# launched inside gdb. "-gud" means "open an Emacs window and run gdb
# inside Emacs".
#
# If the first parameter is "-dbx", HotSpot will be launched inside dbx.
#
# If the first parameter is "-valgrind", HotSpot will be launched
# inside Valgrind (http://valgrind.kde.org) using the Memcheck skin,
# and with memory leak detection enabled. This currently (2005jan19)
# requires at least Valgrind 2.3.0. -Xmx16m will also be passed as
# the first parameter to HotSpot, since lowering HotSpot's memory
# consumption makes execution inside of Valgrind *a lot* faster.
#
#
# User changeable parameters ------------------------------------------------
#
# This is the name of the gdb binary to use
if [ ! "$GDB" ]
then
GDB=gdb
fi
# This is the name of the dbx binary to use
if [ ! "$DBX" ]
then
DBX=dbx
fi
# This is the name of the Valgrind binary to use
if [ ! "$VALGRIND" ]
then
VALGRIND=valgrind
fi
# This is the name of Emacs for running GUD
EMACS=emacs
#
# End of user changeable parameters -----------------------------------------
#
OS=`uname -s`
# Make sure the paths are fully specified, i.e. they must begin with /.
REL_MYDIR=`dirname $0`
MYDIR=`cd $REL_MYDIR && pwd`
case "$OS" in
CYGWIN*)
MYDIR=`cygpath -m "$MYDIR"`
;;
esac
#
# Look whether the user wants to run inside gdb
case "$1" in
-gdb)
MODE=gdb
shift
;;
-gud)
MODE=gud
shift
;;
-dbx)
MODE=dbx
shift
;;
-valgrind)
MODE=valgrind
shift
;;
*)
MODE=run
;;
esac
if [ "${ALT_JAVA_HOME}" != "" ]; then
JDK=${ALT_JAVA_HOME%%/jre}
else
JDK=@@JDK_IMPORT_PATH@@
fi
if [ "${JDK}" != "" ]; then
case "$OS" in
CYGWIN*)
JDK=`cygpath -m "$JDK"`
;;
esac
else
echo "Failed to find JDK." \
"Either ALT_JAVA_HOME is not set or JDK_IMPORT_PATH is empty."
exit 1
fi
# We will set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH as follows:
# o $JVMPATH (directory portion only)
# o $JRE/lib
# followed by the user's previous effective LD_LIBRARY_PATH, if
# any.
JRE=$JDK
JAVA_HOME=$JDK
export JAVA_HOME
SBP=${MYDIR}:${JRE}/lib
# Set up a suitable LD_LIBRARY_PATH or DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
if [ "${OS}" = "Darwin" ]
then
if [ -z "$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH" ]
then
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SBP"
else
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SBP:$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH"
fi
export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
else
# not 'Darwin'
if [ -z "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ]
then
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SBP"
else
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$SBP:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
fi
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
fi
JPARMS="-XXaltjvm=$MYDIR -Dsun.java.launcher.is_altjvm=true";
# Locate the java launcher
LAUNCHER=$JDK/bin/java
if [ ! -x $LAUNCHER ] ; then
echo Error: Cannot find the java launcher \"$LAUNCHER\"
exit 1
fi
GDBSRCDIR=$MYDIR
BASEDIR=`cd $MYDIR/../../.. && pwd`
case "$OS" in
CYGWIN*)
BASEDIR=`cygpath -m "$BASEDIR"`
;;
esac
init_gdb() {
# Create a gdb script in case we should run inside gdb
GDBSCR=/tmp/hsl.$$
rm -f $GDBSCR
cat >>$GDBSCR <<EOF
cd `pwd`
handle SIGUSR1 nostop noprint
handle SIGUSR2 nostop noprint
directory $GDBSRCDIR
# Get us to a point where we can set breakpoints in libjvm.so
set breakpoint pending on
break JNI_CreateJavaVM
run
# Stop in JNI_CreateJavaVM
delete 1
# We can now set breakpoints wherever we like
EOF
}
case "$MODE" in
gdb)
init_gdb
$GDB -x $GDBSCR --args $LAUNCHER $JPARMS "$@" $JAVA_ARGS
rm -f $GDBSCR
;;
gud)
init_gdb
# First find out what emacs version we're using, so that we can
# use the new pretty GDB mode if emacs -version >= 22.1
case `$EMACS -version 2> /dev/null` in
*GNU\ Emacs\ 2[23]*)
emacs_gud_cmd="gdba"
emacs_gud_args="--annotate=3"
;;
*)
emacs_gud_cmd="gdb"
emacs_gud_args=
;;
esac
$EMACS --eval "($emacs_gud_cmd \"$GDB $emacs_gud_args -x $GDBSCR\")";
rm -f $GDBSCR
;;
dbx)
$DBX -s $HOME/.dbxrc -c "loadobject -load libjvm.so; stop in JNI_CreateJavaVM; run $JPARMS $@ $JAVA_ARGS; delete all" $LAUNCHER
;;
valgrind)
echo Warning: Defaulting to 16Mb heap to make Valgrind run faster, use -Xmx for larger heap
echo
$VALGRIND --tool=memcheck --leak-check=yes --num-callers=50 $LAUNCHER -Xmx16m $JPARMS "$@" $JAVA_ARGS
;;
run)
LD_PRELOAD=$PRELOADING exec $LAUNCHER $JPARMS "$@" $JAVA_ARGS
;;
*)
echo Error: Internal error, unknown launch mode \"$MODE\"
exit 1
;;
esac
RETVAL=$?
exit $RETVAL