README-builds.html

Tue, 26 Jul 2011 21:54:25 +0200

author
neugens
date
Tue, 26 Jul 2011 21:54:25 +0200
changeset 359
e01201e727da
parent 323
dada8003df87
child 433
2f06b15e2439
permissions
-rw-r--r--

7071275: Fix jdk7 references in README files, remove Forest Extension mentions
Summary: Change documentation to remove reference to forest and reflect update to jdk8.
Reviewed-by: ohair

duke@2 1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
duke@2 2 <html>
ohair@13 3 <head>
ohair@13 4 <title>OpenJDK Build README</title>
ohair@13 5 </head>
ohair@13 6 <body style="background-color:lightcyan">
ohair@13 7 <!-- ====================================================== -->
ohair@41 8 <table width="100%">
ohair@13 9 <tr>
ohair@13 10 <td align="center">
ohair@25 11 <img alt="OpenJDK"
ohair@25 12 src="http://openjdk.java.net/images/openjdk.png"
ohair@25 13 width=256 />
ohair@13 14 </td>
ohair@13 15 </tr>
ohair@13 16 <tr>
ohair@13 17 <td align=center>
ohair@13 18 <h1>OpenJDK Build README</h1>
ohair@13 19 </td>
ohair@13 20 </tr>
ohair@13 21 </table>
ohair@13 22 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 23 <hr>
ohair@13 24 <h2><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></h2>
ohair@13 25 <blockquote>
ohair@13 26 <p>
ohair@276 27 This README file contains build instructions for the
ohair@276 28 <a href="http://openjdk.java.net" target="_blank">OpenJDK</a>.
ohair@276 29 Building the source code for the
ohair@276 30 OpenJDK
ohair@276 31 requires
ohair@276 32 a certain degree of technical expertise.
ohair@13 33 </blockquote>
ohair@13 34 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 35 <hr>
ohair@13 36 <h2><a name="contents">Contents</a></h2>
ohair@13 37 <blockquote>
ohair@13 38 <ul>
ohair@13 39 <li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a></li>
ohair@276 40 <li><a href="#hg">Use of Mercurial</a>
ohair@276 41 <ul>
ohair@276 42 <li><a href="#get_source">Getting the Source</a></li>
ohair@276 43 </ul>
ohair@276 44 </li>
ohair@13 45 <li><a href="#MBE">Minimum Build Environments</a></li>
robilad@132 46 <li><a href="#SDBE">Specific Developer Build Environments</a>
ohair@41 47 <ul>
ohair@41 48 <li><a href="#fedora">Fedora Linux</a> </li>
ohair@41 49 <li><a href="#centos">CentOS Linux</a> </li>
ohair@276 50 <li><a href="#debian">Debian GNU/Linux</a></li>
ohair@276 51 <li><a href="#ubuntu">Ubuntu Linux</a> </li>
ohair@276 52 <li><a href="#opensuse">OpenSUSE</a></li>
ohair@276 53 <li><a href="#mandriva">Mandriva</a></li>
ohair@276 54 <li><a href="#opensolaris">OpenSolaris</a></li>
ohair@41 55 </ul>
ohair@276 56 </li>
ohair@320 57 <li><a href="#directories">Source Directory Structure</a>
ohair@320 58 <ul>
ohair@320 59 <li><a href="#drops">Managing the Source Drops</a></li>
ohair@320 60 </ul>
ohair@320 61 </li>
ohair@13 62 <li><a href="#building">Build Information</a>
ohair@13 63 <ul>
ohair@13 64 <li><a href="#gmake">GNU Make (<tt><i>gmake</i></tt>)</a> </li>
ohair@13 65 <li><a href="#linux">Basic Linux System Setup</a> </li>
ohair@13 66 <li><a href="#solaris">Basic Solaris System Setup</a> </li>
ohair@13 67 <li><a href="#windows">Basic Windows System Setup</a> </li>
ohair@276 68 <li><a href="#dependencies">Build Dependencies</a>
ohair@276 69 <ul>
ohair@276 70 <li><a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a> </li>
ohair@276 71 <li><a href="#importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a> </li>
ohair@320 72 <li><a href="#ant">Ant 1.7.1</a> </li>
ohair@276 73 <li><a href="#cacerts">Certificate Authority File (cacert)</a> </li>
ohair@276 74 <li><a href="#compilers">Compilers</a>
ohair@276 75 <ul>
ohair@276 76 <li><a href="#msvc32">Microsoft Visual Studio Professional/Express for 32 bit</a> </li>
ohair@276 77 <li><a href="#msvc64">Microsoft Visual Studio Professional for 64 bit</a> </li>
ohair@276 78 <li><a href="#mssdk64">Microsoft Windows SDK for 64 bit</a> </li>
ohair@276 79 <li><a href="#gcc">Linux gcc/binutils</a> </li>
ohair@276 80 <li><a href="#studio">Sun Studio</a> </li>
ohair@276 81 </ul>
ohair@276 82 </li>
ohair@276 83 <li><a href="#zip">Zip and Unzip</a> </li>
ohair@276 84 <li><a href="#freetype">FreeType2 Fonts</a> </li>
ohair@276 85 <li>Linux and Solaris:
ohair@276 86 <ul>
ohair@276 87 <li><a href="#cups">CUPS Include files</a> </li>
ohair@276 88 <li><a href="#xrender">XRender Include files</a></li>
ohair@276 89 </ul>
ohair@276 90 </li>
ohair@276 91 <li>Linux only:
ohair@276 92 <ul>
ohair@276 93 <li><a href="#alsa">ALSA files</a> </li>
ohair@276 94 </ul>
ohair@276 95 </li>
ohair@276 96 <li>Windows only:
ohair@276 97 <ul>
ohair@276 98 <li>Unix Command Tools (<a href="#cygwin">CYGWIN</a>)</li>
ohair@276 99 <li><a href="#dxsdk">DirectX 9.0 SDK</a> </li>
ohair@276 100 </ul>
ohair@276 101 </li>
ohair@276 102 </ul>
ohair@276 103 </li>
ohair@13 104 </ul>
ohair@13 105 </li>
ohair@13 106 <li><a href="#creating">Creating the Build</a> </li>
ohair@13 107 <li><a href="#testing">Testing the Build</a> </li>
ohair@13 108 <li><a href="#variables">Environment/Make Variables</a></li>
ohair@13 109 <li><a href="#troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a></li>
ohair@13 110 </ul>
ohair@13 111 </blockquote>
ohair@276 112
ohair@276 113 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@276 114 <hr>
ohair@276 115 <h2><a name="hg">Use of Mercurial</a></h2>
ohair@276 116 <blockquote>
ohair@276 117 The OpenJDK sources are maintained with the revision control system
ohair@276 118 <a href="http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/Mercurial">Mercurial</a>.
ohair@276 119 If you are new to Mercurial, please see the
ohair@276 120 <a href="http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/BeginnersGuides">Beginner Guides</a>
ohair@320 121 or refer to the <a href="http://hgbook.red-bean.com/">Mercurial Book</a>.
ohair@276 122 The first few chapters of the book provide an excellent overview of
ohair@276 123 Mercurial, what it is and how it works.
ohair@276 124 <br>
ohair@276 125 For using Mercurial with the OpenJDK refer to the
ohair@320 126 <a href="http://openjdk.java.net/guide/repositories.html#installConfig">
ohair@320 127 Developer Guide: Installing and Configuring Mercurial</a>
ohair@276 128 section for more information.
ohair@276 129
ohair@276 130 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@276 131 <h3><a name="get_source">Getting the Source</a></h3>
ohair@276 132 <blockquote>
ohair@276 133 To get the entire set of OpenJDK Mercurial repositories
neugens@359 134 use the script <code>get_source.sh</code> located in the root repository:
ohair@276 135 <blockquote>
ohair@276 136 <tt>
neugens@359 137 hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk8/jdk8 <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
ohair@276 138 <br>cd <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
ohair@276 139 <br>sh ./get_source.sh
ohair@276 140 </tt>
ohair@276 141 </blockquote>
ohair@276 142 Once you have all the repositories, the
ohair@276 143 script <tt>make/scripts/hgforest.sh</tt>
ohair@276 144 can be used to repeat the same <tt>hg</tt>
ohair@276 145 command on every repository in the forest, e.g.
ohair@276 146 <blockquote>
ohair@276 147 <tt>
ohair@276 148 cd <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
ohair@276 149 <br>sh ./make/scripts/hgforest.sh pull -u
ohair@276 150 </tt>
ohair@276 151 </blockquote>
ohair@276 152 </blockquote>
ohair@276 153
ohair@276 154 </blockquote>
ohair@276 155
ohair@13 156 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 157 <hr>
ohair@13 158 <h2><a name="MBE">Minimum Build Environments</a></h2>
ohair@13 159 <blockquote>
ohair@13 160 This file often describes specific requirements for what we call the
ohair@49 161 "minimum build environments" (MBE) for this
ohair@49 162 specific release of the JDK,
ohair@13 163 Building with the MBE will generate the most compatible
ohair@13 164 bits that install on, and run correctly on, the most variations
ohair@13 165 of the same base OS and hardware architecture.
ohair@13 166 These usually represent what is often called the
ohair@13 167 least common denominator platforms.
ohair@13 168 It is understood that most developers will NOT be using these
ohair@13 169 specific platforms, and in fact creating these specific platforms
ohair@13 170 may be difficult due to the age of some of this software.
ohair@13 171 <p>
ohair@276 172 The minimum OS and C/C++ compiler versions needed for building the
ohair@276 173 OpenJDK:
ohair@13 174 <p>
ohair@13 175 <table border="1">
ohair@13 176 <thead>
ohair@13 177 <tr>
ohair@13 178 <th>Base OS and Architecture</th>
ohair@13 179 <th>OS</th>
ohair@49 180 <th>C/C++ Compiler</th>
xdono@105 181 <th>BOOT JDK</th>
ohair@13 182 </tr>
ohair@13 183 </thead>
ohair@13 184 <tbody>
ohair@13 185 <tr>
ohair@49 186 <td>Linux X86 (32-bit)</td>
ohair@49 187 <td>Fedora 9</td>
ohair@320 188 <td>gcc 4.3 </td>
ohair@320 189 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 190 </tr>
ohair@13 191 <tr>
ohair@49 192 <td>Linux X64 (64-bit)</td>
ohair@49 193 <td>Fedora 9</td>
ohair@320 194 <td>gcc 4.3 </td>
ohair@320 195 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 196 </tr>
ohair@13 197 <tr>
ohair@49 198 <td>Solaris SPARC (32-bit)</td>
ohair@320 199 <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
ohair@211 200 <td>Sun Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
ohair@320 201 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 202 </tr>
ohair@13 203 <tr>
ohair@49 204 <td>Solaris SPARCV9 (64-bit)</td>
ohair@320 205 <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
ohair@211 206 <td>Sun Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
ohair@320 207 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 208 </tr>
ohair@13 209 <tr>
ohair@49 210 <td>Solaris X86 (32-bit)</td>
ohair@320 211 <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
ohair@211 212 <td>Sun Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
ohair@320 213 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 214 </tr>
ohair@13 215 <tr>
ohair@49 216 <td>Solaris X64 (64-bit)</td>
ohair@320 217 <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
ohair@211 218 <td>Sun Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
ohair@320 219 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 220 </tr>
ohair@13 221 <tr>
ohair@49 222 <td>Windows X86 (32-bit)</td>
ohair@13 223 <td>Windows XP</td>
prr@175 224 <td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 Professional Edition</td>
ohair@320 225 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 226 </tr>
ohair@13 227 <tr>
ohair@49 228 <td>Windows X64 (64-bit)</td>
ohair@13 229 <td>Windows Server 2003 - Enterprise x64 Edition</td>
prr@175 230 <td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 Professional Edition</td>
ohair@320 231 <td>JDK 6u18</td>
ohair@13 232 </tr>
ohair@13 233 </tbody>
ohair@13 234 </table>
ohair@276 235 <p>
ohair@49 236 These same sources do indeed build on many more systems than the
ohair@49 237 above older generation systems, again the above is just a minimum.
ohair@276 238 <p>
ohair@49 239 Compilation problems with newer or different C/C++ compilers is a
ohair@49 240 common problem.
ohair@49 241 Similarly, compilation problems related to changes to the
ohair@276 242 <tt>/usr/include</tt> or system header files is also a
ohair@49 243 common problem with newer or unreleased OS versions.
ohair@49 244 Please report these types of problems as bugs so that they
ohair@49 245 can be dealt with accordingly.
ohair@13 246 </blockquote>
ohair@13 247 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 248 <hr>
ohair@13 249 <h2><a name="SDBE">Specific Developer Build Environments</a></h2>
ohair@13 250 <blockquote>
ohair@13 251 We won't be listing all the possible environments, but
ohair@13 252 we will try to provide what information we have available to us.
ohair@13 253 </blockquote>
ohair@13 254 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
robilad@132 255 <h3><a name="fedora">Fedora</a></h3>
ohair@13 256 <blockquote>
ohair@276 257 <h4>Fedora 9</h4>
ohair@276 258 <p>
ohair@276 259 <blockquote>
ohair@276 260 After installing <a href="http://fedoraproject.org">Fedora</a> 9
robilad@132 261 you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
robilad@132 262 way to do it is to execute the following commands as user
ohair@276 263 <tt>root</tt>:
ohair@276 264 <p/>
ohair@320 265 <code>yum-builddep java-1.6.0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 266 <p/>
ohair@276 267 <code>yum install gcc gcc-c++</code>
ohair@276 268 <p/>
robilad@132 269 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
robilad@132 270
ohair@276 271 <p/>
ohair@276 272 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-openjdk</code>
ohair@41 273 </blockquote>
ohair@276 274 <h4>Fedora 10</h4>
ohair@276 275 <p>
ohair@276 276 <blockquote>
ohair@276 277 After installing <a href="http://fedoraproject.org">Fedora</a> 10
robilad@132 278 you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
robilad@132 279 way to do it is to execute the following commands as user
ohair@276 280 <tt>root</tt>:
ohair@276 281 <p/>
ohair@276 282 <code>yum-builddep java-1.6.0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 283 <p/>
ohair@276 284 <code>yum install gcc gcc-c++</code>
ohair@276 285 <p/>
robilad@132 286 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
robilad@132 287
ohair@276 288 <p/>
ohair@276 289 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-openjdk</code>
robilad@132 290 </blockquote>
ohair@276 291 <h4>Fedora 11</h4>
ohair@276 292 <p>
ohair@276 293 <blockquote>
ohair@276 294 After installing <a href="http://fedoraproject.org">Fedora</a> 11
robilad@132 295 you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
robilad@132 296 way to do it is to execute the following commands as user
ohair@276 297 <tt>root</tt>:
ohair@276 298 <p/>
ohair@276 299 <code>yum-builddep java-1.6.0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 300 <p/>
ohair@276 301 <code>yum install gcc gcc-c++</code>
ohair@276 302 <p/>
robilad@132 303 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
robilad@132 304
ohair@276 305 <p/>
ohair@276 306 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 307 </blockquote>
ohair@13 308 </blockquote>
ohair@13 309 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@320 310 <h3><a name="centos">CentOS 5.5</a></h3>
ohair@13 311 <blockquote>
ohair@41 312 After installing
ohair@320 313 <a href="http://www.centos.org/">CentOS 5.5</a>
ohair@41 314 you need to make sure you have
ohair@41 315 the following Development bundles installed:
ohair@41 316 <blockquote>
ohair@41 317 <ul>
ohair@41 318 <li>Development Libraries</li>
ohair@41 319 <li>Development Tools</li>
ohair@41 320 <li>Java Development</li>
ohair@320 321 <li>X Software Development (Including XFree86-devel)</li>
ohair@41 322 </ul>
ohair@41 323 </blockquote>
ohair@41 324 <p>
ohair@276 325 Plus the following packages:
ohair@41 326 <blockquote>
ohair@41 327 <ul>
ohair@41 328 <li>cups devel: Cups Development Package</li>
ohair@41 329 <li>alsa devel: Alsa Development Package</li>
ohair@41 330 <li>ant: Ant Package</li>
ohair@41 331 <li>Xi devel: libXi.so Development Package</li>
ohair@41 332 </ul>
ohair@41 333 </blockquote>
ohair@41 334 <p>
ohair@276 335 The freetype 2.3 packages don't seem to be available,
ohair@276 336 but the freetype 2.3 sources can be downloaded, built,
ohair@276 337 and installed easily enough from
ohair@276 338 <a href="http://downloads.sourceforge.net/freetype">
ohair@276 339 the freetype site</a>.
ohair@276 340 Build and install with something like:
ohair@41 341 <blockquote>
ohair@41 342 <tt>./configure && make && sudo -u root make install</tt>
ohair@41 343 </blockquote>
ohair@41 344 <p>
ohair@276 345 Mercurial packages could not be found easily, but a Google
ohair@276 346 search should find ones, and they usually include Python if
ohair@276 347 it's needed.
ohair@13 348 </blockquote>
ohair@13 349 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
robilad@132 350 <h3><a name="debian">Debian</a></h3>
ohair@13 351 <blockquote>
robilad@132 352 <h4>Debian 5.0 (Lenny)</h4>
ohair@13 353 <p>
ohair@276 354 <blockquote>
robilad@132 355 After installing <a href="http://debian.org">Debian</a> 5
robilad@132 356 you need to install several build dependencies.
robilad@132 357 The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to
robilad@132 358 execute the following commands as user <tt>root</tt>:
ohair@276 359 <p/>
ohair@276 360 <code>aptitude build-dep openjdk-6</code>
ohair@276 361 <p/>
ohair@276 362 <code>aptitude install openjdk-6-jdk libmotif-dev</code>
ohair@276 363 <p/>
robilad@132 364 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 365 <p/>
ohair@276 366 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 367 </blockquote>
robilad@132 368 </blockquote>
robilad@132 369 <!-- ====================================================== -->
ohair@276 370 <h3><a name="ubuntu">Ubuntu</a></h3>
robilad@132 371 <blockquote>
robilad@132 372 <h4>Ubuntu 8.04</h4>
ohair@13 373 <p>
ohair@276 374 <blockquote>
robilad@132 375 After installing <a href="http://ubuntu.org">Ubuntu</a> 8.04
robilad@132 376 you need to install several build dependencies.
ohair@276 377 <p/>
robilad@132 378 First, you need to enable the universe repository in the
robilad@132 379 Software Sources application and reload the repository
robilad@132 380 information. The Software Sources application is available
robilad@132 381 under the System/Administration menu.
ohair@276 382 <p/>
robilad@132 383 The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to
robilad@132 384 execute the following commands:
ohair@276 385 <p/>
ohair@276 386 <code>sudo aptitude build-dep openjdk-6</code>
ohair@276 387 <p/>
ohair@276 388 <code>sudo aptitude install openjdk-6-jdk</code>
ohair@276 389 <p/>
robilad@132 390 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 391 <p/>
ohair@276 392 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 393 </blockquote>
ohair@276 394 <h4>Ubuntu 8.10</h4>
ohair@13 395 <p>
ohair@276 396 <blockquote>
robilad@132 397 After installing <a href="http://ubuntu.org">Ubuntu</a> 8.10
robilad@132 398 you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
robilad@132 399 way to do it is to execute the following commands:
ohair@276 400 <p/>
ohair@276 401 <code>sudo aptitude build-dep openjdk-6</code>
ohair@276 402 <p/>
ohair@276 403 <code>sudo aptitude install openjdk-6-jdk</code>
ohair@276 404 <p/>
robilad@132 405 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 406 <p/>
ohair@276 407 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 408 </blockquote>
ohair@276 409 <h4>Ubuntu 9.04</h4>
ohair@13 410 <p>
ohair@276 411 <blockquote>
robilad@132 412 After installing <a href="http://ubuntu.org">Ubuntu</a> 9.04
robilad@132 413 you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
robilad@132 414 way to do it is to execute the following commands:
ohair@276 415 <p/>
ohair@276 416 <code>sudo aptitude build-dep openjdk-6</code>
ohair@276 417 <p/>
ohair@276 418 <code>sudo aptitude install openjdk-6-jdk</code>
ohair@276 419 <p/>
robilad@132 420 In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 421 <p/>
ohair@276 422 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 423 </blockquote>
ohair@13 424 </blockquote>
robilad@132 425 <!-- ====================================================== -->
robilad@132 426 <h3><a name="opensuse">OpenSUSE</a></h3>
robilad@132 427 <blockquote>
robilad@132 428 <h4>OpenSUSE 11.1</h4>
robilad@132 429 <p>
ohair@276 430 <blockquote>
robilad@132 431 After installing <a href="http://opensuse.org">OpenSUSE</a> 11.1
robilad@132 432 you need to install several build dependencies.
robilad@132 433 The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to
robilad@132 434 execute the following commands:
ohair@276 435 <p/>
ohair@276 436 <code>sudo zypper source-install -d java-1_6_0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 437 <p/>
ohair@276 438 <code>sudo zypper install make</code>
ohair@276 439 <p/>
robilad@132 440 In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 441 <p/>
ohair@276 442 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.6.0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 443 <p/>
robilad@132 444 Finally, you need to unset the <code>JAVA_HOME</code> environment variable:
ohair@276 445 <p/>
ohair@276 446 <code>export -n JAVA_HOME</code>
ohair@276 447 </blockquote>
ohair@276 448 </blockquote>
robilad@132 449 <!-- ====================================================== -->
robilad@132 450 <h3><a name="mandriva">Mandriva</a></h3>
robilad@132 451 <blockquote>
robilad@132 452 <h4>Mandriva Linux One 2009 Spring</h4>
robilad@132 453 <p>
ohair@276 454 <blockquote>
robilad@132 455 After installing <a href="http://mandriva.org">Mandriva</a> Linux One 2009 Spring
robilad@132 456 you need to install several build dependencies.
robilad@132 457 The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to
robilad@132 458 execute the following commands as user <tt>root</tt>:
ohair@276 459 <p/>
ohair@276 460 <code>urpmi java-1.6.0-openjdk-devel ant make gcc gcc-c++ freetype-devel zip unzip libcups2-devel libxrender1-devel libalsa2-devel libstc++-static-devel libxtst6-devel libxi-devel</code>
robilad@132 461 <p/>
robilad@132 462 In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 463 <p/>
ohair@276 464 <code>export LANG=C ALT_BOOTDIR=/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.6.0-openjdk</code>
ohair@276 465 </blockquote>
robilad@132 466 </blockquote>
robilad@132 467 <!-- ====================================================== -->
robilad@132 468 <h3><a name="opensolaris">OpenSolaris</a></h3>
robilad@132 469 <blockquote>
robilad@132 470 <h4>OpenSolaris 2009.06</h4>
robilad@132 471 <p>
ohair@276 472 <blockquote>
robilad@132 473 After installing <a href="http://opensolaris.org">OpenSolaris</a> 2009.06
robilad@132 474 you need to install several build dependencies.
robilad@132 475 The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to
robilad@132 476 execute the following commands:
ohair@276 477 <p/>
ohair@276 478 <code>pfexec pkg install SUNWgmake SUNWj6dev SUNWant sunstudioexpress SUNWcups SUNWzip SUNWunzip SUNWxwhl SUNWxorg-headers SUNWaudh SUNWfreetype2</code>
robilad@132 479 <p/>
robilad@132 480 In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment variables for the build:
ohair@276 481 <p/>
ohair@276 482 <code>export LANG=C ALT_COMPILER_PATH=/opt/SunStudioExpress/bin/ ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH=/usr/include/</code>
ohair@276 483 <p/>
robilad@132 484 Finally, you need to make sure that the build process can find the Sun Studio compilers:
ohair@276 485 <p/>
ohair@276 486 <code>export PATH=$PATH:/opt/SunStudioExpress/bin/</code>
ohair@276 487 </blockquote>
robilad@132 488 </blockquote>
robilad@132 489 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 490 <hr>
ohair@13 491 <h2><a name="directories">Source Directory Structure</a></h2>
ohair@13 492 <blockquote>
ohair@13 493 <p>
ohair@276 494 The source code for the OpenJDK is delivered in a set of
ohair@276 495 directories:
ohair@276 496 <tt>hotspot</tt>,
ohair@276 497 <tt>langtools</tt>,
ohair@276 498 <tt>corba</tt>,
ohair@276 499 <tt>jaxws</tt>,
ohair@276 500 <tt>jaxp</tt>,
ohair@276 501 and
ohair@276 502 <tt>jdk</tt>.
ohair@276 503 The <tt>hotspot</tt> directory contains the source code and make
ohair@276 504 files for building the OpenJDK Hotspot Virtual Machine.
ohair@276 505 The <tt>langtools</tt> directory contains the source code and make
ohair@276 506 files for building the OpenJDK javac and language tools.
ohair@276 507 The <tt>corba</tt> directory contains the source code and make
ohair@276 508 files for building the OpenJDK Corba files.
ohair@276 509 The <tt>jaxws</tt> directory contains the source code and make
ohair@276 510 files for building the OpenJDK JAXWS files.
ohair@276 511 The <tt>jaxp</tt> directory contains the source code and make
ohair@276 512 files for building the OpenJDK JAXP files.
ohair@276 513 The <tt>jdk</tt> directory contains the source code and make files for
ohair@276 514 building the OpenJDK runtime libraries and misc files.
ohair@276 515 The top level <tt>Makefile</tt>
ohair@276 516 is used to build the entire OpenJDK.
ohair@320 517
ohair@320 518 <h3><a name="drops">Managing the Source Drops</a></h3>
ohair@320 519 <blockquote>
ohair@320 520 <p>
ohair@320 521 The repositories <tt>jaxp</tt> and <tt>jaxws</tt> actually
ohair@320 522 do not contain the sources for JAXP or JAX-WS.
ohair@320 523 These products have their own open source procedures at their
ohair@320 524 <a href="http://jaxp.java.net/">JAXP</a> and
ohair@320 525 <a href="http://jax-ws.java.net/">JAX-WS</a> home pages.
ohair@320 526 The OpenJDK project does need access to these sources to build
ohair@320 527 a complete JDK image because JAXP and JAX-WS are part of the JDK.
ohair@320 528 The current process for delivery of the JAXP and JAX-WS sources
ohair@320 529 involves so called "source drop bundles" downloaded from a public
ohair@320 530 website.
ohair@320 531 There are many reasons for this current mechanism, and it is
ohair@320 532 understood that this is not ideal for the open source community.
ohair@320 533 It is possible this process could change in the future.
ohair@320 534 <br>
neugens@359 535 <b>NOTE:</b> The <a href="http://download.java.net/openjdk/jdk8/">
ohair@320 536 Complete OpenJDK Source Bundles</a> <u>will</u> contain the JAXP and
ohair@320 537 JAX-WS sources.
ohair@320 538 </p>
ohair@320 539
ohair@320 540 <h4><a name="dropcreation">Creation of New Source Drop Bundles</a></h4>
ohair@320 541 <blockquote>
ohair@320 542 <ol>
ohair@320 543 <li>
ohair@320 544 The JAXP or JAX-WS team prepares a new zip bundle,
ohair@320 545 places a copy in a public download area on java.net,
ohair@320 546 sends us a link and a list of CRs (Change Request Numbers).
ohair@320 547 The older download bundles should not be deleted.
ohair@320 548 It is the responsibility of the JAXP and JAX-WS team to
ohair@320 549 place the proper GPL legal notices on the sources
ohair@320 550 and do any filtering or java re-packaging for the
ohair@320 551 OpenJDK instances of these classes.
ohair@320 552 </li>
ohair@320 553 <li>
ohair@320 554 The OpenJDK team copies this new bundle into shared
neugens@359 555 area (e.g. <tt>/java/devtools/share/jdk8-drops</tt>).
ohair@320 556 Older bundles are never deleted so we retain the history.
ohair@320 557 </li>
ohair@320 558 <li>
ohair@320 559 The OpenJDK team edits the ant property file
ohair@320 560 <tt>jaxp/jaxp.properties</tt> or
ohair@320 561 <tt>jaxws/jaxws.properties</tt> to update the
ohair@320 562 base URL, the zip bundle name, and the MD5 checksum
ohair@320 563 of the zip bundle
ohair@320 564 (on Solaris: <tt>sum -c md5 <i>bundlename</i></tt>)
ohair@320 565 </li>
ohair@320 566 <li>
ohair@320 567 OpenJDK team reviews and commits those changes with the
ohair@320 568 given CRs.
ohair@320 569 </li>
ohair@320 570 </ol>
ohair@320 571 </blockquote>
ohair@320 572
ohair@320 573 <h4><a name="dropusage">Using Source Drop Bundles</a></h4>
ohair@320 574 <blockquote>
ohair@320 575 <p>
ohair@320 576 The ant scripts that build <tt>jaxp</tt> and <tt>jaxws</tt>
ohair@320 577 will attempt to locate these zip bundles from the directory
ohair@320 578 in the environment variable
ohair@320 579 <tt><a href="#ALT_DROPS_DIR">ALT_DROPS_DIR</a></tt>.
ohair@320 580 The checksums protect from getting the wrong, corrupted, or
ohair@320 581 improperly modified sources.
ohair@320 582 Once the sources are made available, the population will not
ohair@320 583 happen again unless a <tt>make clobber</tt> is requested
ohair@320 584 or the <tt>jaxp/drop/</tt> or <tt>jaxws/drop/</tt>
ohair@320 585 directory is explicitly deleted.
ohair@320 586 <br>
ohair@320 587 <b>NOTE:</b> The default Makefile and ant script behavior
ohair@320 588 is to NOT download these bundles from the public http site.
ohair@320 589 In general, doing downloads
ohair@320 590 during the build process is not advised, it creates too much
ohair@320 591 unpredictability in the build process.
ohair@320 592 However, you can use <tt>make ALLOW_DOWNLOADS=true</tt> to
ohair@320 593 tell the ant script that the download of the zip bundle is
ohair@320 594 acceptable.
ohair@320 595 </p>
ohair@320 596 <p>
ohair@320 597 The recommended procedure for keeping a cache of these
ohair@320 598 source bundles would be to download them once, place them
ohair@320 599 in a directory outside the repositories, and then set
ohair@320 600 <tt><a href="#ALT_DROPS_DIR">ALT_DROPS_DIR</a></tt> to refer
ohair@320 601 to that directory.
ohair@320 602 These drop bundles do change occasionally, so the newer
ohair@320 603 bundles may need to be added to this area from time to time.
ohair@320 604 </p>
ohair@320 605 </blockquote>
ohair@320 606 </blockquote>
ohair@13 607 </blockquote>
ohair@13 608 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 609 <hr>
ohair@13 610 <h2><a name="building">Build Information</a></h2>
ohair@13 611 <blockquote>
ohair@13 612 Building the OpenJDK
ohair@320 613 is done with a <a href="#gmake">GNU <tt>make</tt></a> command line
ohair@320 614 and various
ohair@320 615 environment or make variable settings that direct the makefile rules
ohair@13 616 to where various components have been installed.
ohair@13 617 Where possible the makefiles will attempt to located the various
ohair@13 618 components in the default locations or any component specific
ohair@13 619 variable settings.
ohair@13 620 When the normal defaults fail or components cannot be found,
ohair@13 621 the various
ohair@13 622 <tt>ALT_*</tt> variables (alternates)
ohair@13 623 can be used to help the makefiles locate components.
ohair@13 624 <p>
ohair@276 625 Refer to the bash/sh/ksh setup file
ohair@276 626 <tt>jdk/make/jdk_generic_profile.sh</tt>
ohair@276 627 if you need help in setting up your environment variables.
ohair@276 628 A build could be as simple as:
ohair@13 629 <blockquote>
ohair@13 630 <pre><tt>
duke@2 631 bash
duke@2 632 . jdk/make/jdk_generic_profile.sh
ohair@320 633 <a href="#gmake"><tt>make</tt></a> sanity &amp;&amp; <a href="#gmake"><tt>make</tt></a>
ohair@13 634 </tt></pre>
ohair@13 635 </blockquote>
ohair@13 636 <p>
ohair@276 637 Of course ksh or sh would work too.
ohair@276 638 But some customization will probably be necessary.
ohair@276 639 The <tt>sanity</tt> rule will make some basic checks on build
ohair@276 640 dependencies and generate appropriate warning messages
ohair@276 641 regarding missing, out of date, or newer than expected components
ohair@276 642 found on your system.
ohair@13 643 </blockquote>
ohair@13 644 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 645 <hr>
ohair@13 646 <h3><a name="gmake">GNU make (<tt><i>gmake</i></tt>)</a></h3>
ohair@13 647 <blockquote>
ohair@13 648 The Makefiles in the OpenJDK are only valid when used with the
ohair@13 649 GNU version of the utility command <tt>make</tt>
ohair@13 650 (<tt><i>gmake</i></tt>).
ohair@13 651 A few notes about using GNU make:
ohair@13 652 <ul>
ohair@13 653 <li>
ohair@320 654 You need GNU make version 3.81 or newer.
ohair@13 655 </li>
ohair@13 656 <li>
ohair@13 657 Place the location of the GNU make binary in the <tt>PATH</tt>.
ohair@13 658 </li>
ohair@13 659 <li>
ohair@13 660 <strong>Linux:</strong>
ohair@320 661 The <tt>/usr/bin/make</tt> should be 3.81 or newer
ohair@320 662 and should work fine for you.
ohair@320 663 If this version is not 3.81 or newer,
ohair@320 664 see the <a href="#buildgmake">"Building GNU make"</a> section.
ohair@13 665 </li>
ohair@13 666 <li>
ohair@13 667 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@13 668 Do NOT use <tt>/usr/bin/make</tt> on Solaris.
ohair@13 669 If your Solaris system has the software
ohair@13 670 from the Solaris Companion CD installed,
ohair@320 671 you should try and use <tt>gmake</tt>
ohair@13 672 which will be located in either the <tt>/opt/sfw/bin</tt> or
ohair@13 673 <tt>/usr/sfw/bin</tt> directory.
ohair@320 674 In more recent versions of Solaris GNU make might be found
ohair@320 675 at <tt>/usr/bin/gmake</tt>.<br>
ohair@320 676 <b>NOTE:</b> It is very likely that this <tt>gmake</tt>
ohair@320 677 could be 3.80, you need 3.81, in which case,
ohair@320 678 see the <a href="#buildgmake">"Building GNU make"</a> section.
ohair@13 679 </li>
ohair@13 680 <li>
ohair@13 681 <strong>Windows:</strong>
ohair@138 682 Make sure you start your build inside a bash/sh/ksh shell
ohair@138 683 and are using a <tt>make.exe</tt> utility built for that
ohair@138 684 environment (a cygwin <tt>make.exe</tt> is not the same
ohair@138 685 as a <tt>make.exe</tt> built for something like
ohair@138 686 <a href="http://www.mkssoftware.com/">MKS</a>).
ohair@13 687 <br>
ohair@320 688 <b>WARNING:</b> Watch out on some make 3.81 versions, it may
ohair@25 689 not work due to a lack of support for MS-DOS drive letter paths
ohair@25 690 like <tt>C:/</tt> or <tt>C:\</tt>.
ohair@25 691 <br>
ohair@320 692 You may be able to use the information at the
ohair@13 693 <a href="http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Windows_build_prerequisites_using_cygwin#make" target="_blank">
ohair@276 694 mozilla developer center</a>
ohair@13 695 on this topic.
ohair@25 696 <br>
ohair@25 697 It's hoped that when make 3.82 starts shipping in a future cygwin
ohair@25 698 release that this MS-DOS path issue will be fixed.
ohair@320 699 <br>
ohair@320 700 It may be possible to download the version at
ohair@25 701 <a href="http://www.cmake.org/files/cygwin/make.exe">
ohair@320 702 www.cmake.org make.exe</a>.
ohair@320 703 <br>
ohair@320 704 It might be necessary for you to build your own GNU make 3.81,
ohair@320 705 see the <a href="#buildgmake">"Building GNU make"</a> section
ohair@320 706 in that case.
ohair@13 707 </li>
ohair@13 708 </ul>
ohair@13 709 <p>
ohair@276 710 Information on GNU make, and access to ftp download sites, are
ohair@276 711 available on the
ohair@276 712 <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/make/make.html" target="_blank">
ohair@276 713 GNU make web site
ohair@276 714 </a>.
ohair@276 715 The latest source to GNU make is available at
ohair@276 716 <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/" target="_blank">
ohair@276 717 ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/</a>.
ohair@320 718 </p>
ohair@320 719 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@320 720 <h4><a name="buildgmake">Building GNU make</a></h4>
ohair@320 721 <blockquote>
ohair@320 722 First step is to get the GNU make 3.81 source from
ohair@320 723 <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/" target="_blank">
ohair@320 724 ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/</a>.
ohair@320 725 Building is a little different depending on the OS and unix toolset
ohair@320 726 on Windows:
ohair@320 727 <ul>
ohair@320 728 <li>
ohair@320 729 <strong>Linux:</strong>
ohair@320 730 <tt>./configure && make</tt>
ohair@320 731 </li>
ohair@320 732 <li>
ohair@320 733 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@320 734 <tt>./configure && gmake CC=gcc</tt>
ohair@320 735 </li>
ohair@320 736 <li>
ohair@320 737 <strong>Windows for CYGWIN:</strong>
ohair@320 738 <tt>./configure && make</tt>
ohair@320 739 </li>
ohair@320 740 <li>
ohair@320 741 <strong>Windows for MKS: (CYGWIN is recommended)</strong>
ohair@320 742 <tt>./configure && make -f Makefile.win32</tt>
ohair@320 743 </li>
ohair@320 744 </ul>
ohair@320 745 </blockquote>
ohair@13 746 </blockquote>
ohair@13 747 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 748 <hr>
ohair@13 749 <h3><a name="linux">Basic Linux System Setup</a></h3>
ohair@13 750 <blockquote>
ohair@13 751 <strong>i586 only:</strong>
ohair@13 752 The minimum recommended hardware for building the Linux version
ohair@13 753 is a Pentium class processor or better, at least 256 MB of RAM, and
ohair@13 754 approximately 1.5 GB of free disk space.
ohair@13 755 <p>
ohair@276 756 <strong>X64 only:</strong>
ohair@276 757 The minimum recommended hardware for building the Linux
ohair@276 758 version is an AMD Opteron class processor, at least 512 MB of RAM, and
ohair@276 759 approximately 4 GB of free disk space.
ohair@13 760 <p>
ohair@276 761 The build will use the tools contained in
ohair@276 762 <tt>/bin</tt> and
ohair@276 763 <tt>/usr/bin</tt>
ohair@276 764 of a standard installation of the Linux operating environment.
ohair@276 765 You should ensure that these directories are in your
ohair@276 766 <tt>PATH</tt>.
ohair@13 767 <p>
ohair@276 768 Note that some Linux systems have a habit of pre-populating
ohair@276 769 your environment variables for you, for example <tt>JAVA_HOME</tt>
ohair@276 770 might get pre-defined for you to refer to the JDK installed on
ohair@276 771 your Linux system.
ohair@276 772 You will need to unset <tt>JAVA_HOME</tt>.
ohair@276 773 It's a good idea to run <tt>env</tt> and verify the
ohair@276 774 environment variables you are getting from the default system
ohair@276 775 settings make sense for building the
ohair@276 776 OpenJDK.
ohair@13 777 </blockquote>
ohair@13 778 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 779 <h4><a name="linux_checklist">Basic Linux Check List</a></h4>
ohair@13 780 <blockquote>
ohair@13 781 <ol>
ohair@13 782 <li>
ohair@13 783 Install the
ohair@13 784 <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 785 <tt><a href="#ALT_BOOTDIR">ALT_BOOTDIR</a></tt>.
ohair@13 786 </li>
ohair@13 787 <li>
ohair@13 788 <a href="#importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 789 <tt><a href="#ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH">ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</a></tt>.
ohair@13 790 </li>
ohair@13 791 <li>
ohair@13 792 Install or upgrade the <a href="#freetype">FreeType development
ohair@276 793 package</a>.
ohair@13 794 </li>
ohair@25 795 <li>
ohair@25 796 Install
ohair@320 797 <a href="#ant">Ant 1.7.1 or newer</a>,
ohair@49 798 make sure it is in your PATH.
ohair@25 799 </li>
ohair@13 800 </ol>
ohair@13 801 </blockquote>
ohair@13 802 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 803 <hr>
ohair@13 804 <h3><a name="solaris">Basic Solaris System Setup</a></h3>
ohair@13 805 <blockquote>
ohair@13 806 The minimum recommended hardware for building the
ohair@13 807 Solaris SPARC version is an UltraSPARC with 512 MB of RAM.
ohair@13 808 For building
ohair@13 809 the Solaris x86 version, a Pentium class processor or better and at
ohair@13 810 least 512 MB of RAM are recommended.
ohair@13 811 Approximately 1.4 GB of free disk
ohair@13 812 space is needed for a 32-bit build.
ohair@13 813 <p>
ohair@276 814 If you are building the 64-bit version, you should
ohair@276 815 run the command "isainfo -v" to verify that you have a
ohair@276 816 64-bit installation, it should say <tt>sparcv9</tt> or
ohair@276 817 <tt>amd64</tt>.
ohair@276 818 An additional 7 GB of free disk space is needed
ohair@276 819 for a 64-bit build.
ohair@13 820 <p>
ohair@276 821 The build uses the tools contained in <tt>/usr/ccs/bin</tt>
ohair@276 822 and <tt>/usr/bin</tt> of a standard developer or full installation of
ohair@276 823 the Solaris operating environment.
ohair@13 824 <p>
ohair@276 825 Solaris patches specific to the JDK can be downloaded from the
ohair@276 826 <a href="http://sunsolve.sun.com/show.do?target=patches/JavaSE" target="_blank">
ohair@276 827 SunSolve JDK Solaris patches download page</a>.
ohair@276 828 You should ensure that the latest patch cluster for
ohair@276 829 your version of the Solaris operating environment has also
ohair@276 830 been installed.
ohair@13 831 </blockquote>
ohair@13 832 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 833 <h4><a name="solaris_checklist">Basic Solaris Check List</a></h4>
ohair@13 834 <blockquote>
ohair@13 835 <ol>
ohair@13 836 <li>
ohair@13 837 Install the
ohair@13 838 <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 839 <tt><a href="#ALT_BOOTDIR">ALT_BOOTDIR</a></tt>.
ohair@13 840 </li>
ohair@13 841 <li>
ohair@13 842 <a href="#importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 843 <tt><a href="#ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH">ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</a></tt>.
ohair@13 844 </li>
ohair@13 845 <li>
ohair@13 846 Install the
ohair@13 847 <a href="#studio">Sun Studio Compilers</a>, set
ohair@13 848 <a href="#ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><tt>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</tt></a>.
ohair@13 849 </li>
ohair@13 850 <li>
ohair@13 851 Install the
ohair@13 852 <a href="#cups">CUPS Include files</a>, set
ohair@13 853 <tt><a href="#ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH">ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH</a></tt>.
ohair@13 854 </li>
ohair@25 855 <li>
andrew@90 856 Install the <a href="#xrender">XRender Include files</a>.
andrew@90 857 </li>
andrew@90 858 <li>
ohair@25 859 Install
ohair@320 860 <a href="#ant">Ant 1.7.1 or newer</a>,
ohair@49 861 make sure it is in your PATH.
ohair@25 862 </li>
ohair@13 863 </ol>
ohair@13 864 </blockquote>
ohair@13 865 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 866 <hr>
ohair@13 867 <h3><a name="windows">Basic Windows System Setup</a></h3>
ohair@13 868 <blockquote>
ohair@13 869 <strong>i586 only:</strong>
ohair@49 870 The minimum recommended hardware for building the 32-bit or X86
ohair@13 871 Windows version is an Pentium class processor or better, at least
ohair@13 872 512 MB of RAM, and approximately 600 MB of free disk space.
ohair@13 873 <strong>
ohair@49 874 NOTE: The Windows build machines need to use the
ohair@13 875 file system NTFS.
ohair@13 876 Build machines formatted to FAT32 will not work
ohair@13 877 because FAT32 doesn't support case-sensitivity in file names.
ohair@13 878 </strong>
ohair@13 879 <p>
ohair@276 880 <strong>X64 only:</strong>
ohair@276 881 The minimum recommended hardware for building
ohair@276 882 the Windows X64 version is an AMD Opteron class processor, at least 1
ohair@276 883 GB of RAM, and approximately 10 GB of free disk space.
ohair@13 884 </blockquote>
ohair@13 885 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 886 <h4><a name="paths">Windows Paths</a></h4>
ohair@13 887 <blockquote>
duke@2 888 <strong>Windows:</strong>
ohair@13 889 Note that GNU make is a historic utility and is based very
ohair@13 890 heavily on shell scripting, so it does not tolerate the Windows habit
ohair@13 891 of having spaces in pathnames or the use of the <tt>\</tt>characters in pathnames.
ohair@13 892 Luckily on most Windows systems, you can use <tt>/</tt>instead of \, and
ohair@13 893 there is always a 'short' pathname without spaces for any path that
ohair@13 894 contains spaces.
ohair@13 895 Unfortunately, this short pathname can be somewhat dynamic and the
ohair@13 896 formula is difficult to explain.
ohair@13 897 You can use <tt>cygpath</tt> utility to map pathnames with spaces
ohair@13 898 or the <tt>\</tt>character into the <tt>C:/</tt> style of pathname
ohair@13 899 (called 'mixed'), e.g.
ohair@13 900 <tt>cygpath -s -m "<i>path</i>"</tt>.
ohair@13 901 <p>
ohair@276 902 The makefiles will try to translate any pathnames supplied
ohair@276 903 to it into the <tt>C:/</tt> style automatically.
ohair@13 904 <p>
ohair@276 905 Note that use of CYGWIN creates a unique problem with regards to
ohair@276 906 setting <a href="#path"><tt>PATH</tt></a>. Normally on Windows
ohair@276 907 the <tt>PATH</tt> variable contains directories
ohair@276 908 separated with the ";" character (Solaris and Linux uses ":").
ohair@276 909 With CYGWIN, it uses ":", but that means that paths like "C:/path"
ohair@276 910 cannot be placed in the CYGWIN version of <tt>PATH</tt> and
ohair@276 911 instead CYGWIN uses something like <tt>/cygdrive/c/path</tt>
ohair@276 912 which CYGWIN understands, but only CYGWIN understands.
ohair@276 913 So be careful with paths on Windows.
ohair@13 914 </blockquote>
ohair@13 915 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 916 <h4><a name="windows_checklist">Basic Windows Check List</a></h4>
duke@2 917 <blockquote>
ohair@13 918 <ol>
ohair@13 919 <li>
ohair@13 920 Install the
ohair@13 921 <a href="#cygwin">CYGWIN product</a>.
ohair@13 922 </li>
ohair@13 923 <li>
ohair@13 924 Install the
ohair@13 925 <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 926 <tt><a href="#ALT_BOOTDIR">ALT_BOOTDIR</a></tt>.
ohair@13 927 </li>
ohair@13 928 <li>
ohair@13 929 <a href="#importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a>, set
ohair@13 930 <tt><a href="#ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH">ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</a></tt>.
ohair@13 931 </li>
ohair@13 932 <li>
ohair@13 933 Install the
prr@187 934 <a href="#msvc32">Microsoft Visual Studio Compilers</a>).
ohair@13 935 </li>
ohair@13 936 <li>
ohair@13 937 Setup all environment variables for compilers
prr@187 938 (see <a href="#msvc32">compilers</a>).
ohair@13 939 </li>
ohair@13 940 <li>
ohair@13 941 Install
ohair@13 942 <a href="#dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX SDK</a>.
ohair@13 943 </li>
ohair@25 944 <li>
ohair@25 945 Install
ohair@320 946 <a href="#ant">Ant 1.7.1 or newer</a>,
ohair@49 947 make sure it is in your PATH and set
ohair@25 948 <tt><a href="#ANT_HOME">ANT_HOME</a></tt>.
ohair@25 949 </li>
ohair@13 950 </ol>
duke@2 951 </blockquote>
ohair@13 952 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 953 <hr>
ohair@13 954 <h3><a name="dependencies">Build Dependencies</a></h3>
duke@2 955 <blockquote>
ohair@13 956 Depending on the platform, the OpenJDK build process has some basic
ohair@13 957 dependencies on components not part of the OpenJDK sources.
ohair@13 958 Some of these are specific to a platform, some even specific to
ohair@13 959 an architecture.
ohair@13 960 Each dependency will have a set of ALT variables that can be set
ohair@13 961 to tell the makefiles where to locate the component.
ohair@13 962 In most cases setting these ALT variables may not be necessary
ohair@13 963 and the makefiles will find defaults on the system in standard
ohair@13 964 install locations or through component specific variables.
ohair@13 965 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 966 <h4><a name="bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a></h4>
ohair@13 967 <blockquote>
ohair@13 968 All OpenJDK builds require access to the previously released
ohair@13 969 JDK 6, this is often called a bootstrap JDK.
ohair@13 970 The JDK 6 binaries can be downloaded from Sun's
ohair@138 971 <a href="http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp"
ohair@276 972 target="_blank">JDK 6 download site</a>.
ohair@13 973 For build performance reasons
ohair@13 974 is very important that this bootstrap JDK be made available on the
ohair@13 975 local disk of the machine doing the build.
ohair@13 976 You should always set
ohair@13 977 <tt><a href="#ALT_BOOTDIR">ALT_BOOTDIR</a></tt>
ohair@13 978 to point to the location of
ohair@13 979 the bootstrap JDK installation, this is the directory pathname
ohair@13 980 that contains a <tt>bin, lib, and include</tt>
ohair@13 981 It's also a good idea to also place its <tt>bin</tt> directory
ohair@13 982 in the <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable, although it's
ohair@13 983 not required.
ohair@13 984 <p>
ohair@276 985 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@276 986 Some pre-installed JDK images may be available to you in the
ohair@276 987 directory <tt>/usr/jdk/instances</tt>.
ohair@276 988 If you don't set
ohair@276 989 <tt><a href="#ALT_BOOTDIR">ALT_BOOTDIR</a></tt>
ohair@276 990 the makefiles will look in that location for a JDK it can use.
ohair@13 991 </blockquote>
ohair@13 992 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 993 <h4><a name="importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a></h4>
ohair@13 994 <blockquote>
ohair@13 995 The <tt><a href="#ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH">ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@13 996 setting is only needed if you are not building the entire
ohair@13 997 JDK. For example, if you have built the entire JDK once, and
ohair@13 998 wanted to avoid repeatedly building the Hotspot VM, you could
ohair@13 999 set this to the location of the previous JDK install image
ohair@13 1000 and the build will copy the needed files from this import area.
ohair@13 1001 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1002 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@25 1003 <h4><a name="ant">Ant</a></h4>
ohair@25 1004 <blockquote>
ohair@298 1005 All OpenJDK builds require access to least Ant 1.7.1.
ohair@25 1006 The Ant tool is available from the
ohair@320 1007 <a href="http://archive.apache.org/dist/ant/binaries/apache-ant-1.7.1-bin.zip" target="_blank">
ohair@320 1008 Ant 1.7.1 archive download site</a>.
ohair@49 1009 You should always make sure <tt>ant</tt> is in your PATH, and
ohair@49 1010 on Windows you may also need to set
ohair@25 1011 <tt><a href="#ANT_HOME">ANT_HOME</a></tt>
ohair@25 1012 to point to the location of
ohair@25 1013 the Ant installation, this is the directory pathname
ohair@25 1014 that contains a <tt>bin and lib</tt>.
ohair@320 1015 <br>
ohair@320 1016 <b>WARNING:</b> Ant versions used from IDE tools like NetBeans
ohair@320 1017 or installed via system packages may not operate the same
ohair@320 1018 as the one obtained from the Ant download bundles.
ohair@320 1019 These system and IDE installers sometimes choose to change
ohair@320 1020 the ant installation enough to cause differences.
ohair@25 1021 </blockquote>
ohair@25 1022 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1023 <h4><a name="cacerts">Certificate Authority File (cacert)</a></h4>
ohair@13 1024 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1025 See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_Authority" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1026 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_Authority</a>
ohair@13 1027 for a better understanding of the Certificate Authority (CA).
ohair@13 1028 A certificates file named "cacerts"
ohair@13 1029 represents a system-wide keystore with CA certificates.
ohair@13 1030 In JDK and JRE
ohair@13 1031 binary bundles, the "cacerts" file contains root CA certificates from
ohair@13 1032 several public CAs (e.g., VeriSign, Thawte, and Baltimore).
ohair@13 1033 The source contain a cacerts file
ohair@13 1034 without CA root certificates.
ohair@13 1035 Formal JDK builders will need to secure
ohair@13 1036 permission from each public CA and include the certificates into their
ohair@13 1037 own custom cacerts file.
ohair@13 1038 Failure to provide a populated cacerts file
ohair@13 1039 will result in verification errors of a certificate chain during runtime.
ohair@13 1040 The variable
ohair@13 1041 <tt><a href="#ALT_CACERTS_FILE">ALT_CACERTS_FILE</a></tt>
ohair@13 1042 can be used to override the default location of the
ohair@13 1043 cacerts file that will get placed in your build.
ohair@13 1044 By default an empty cacerts file is provided and that should be
ohair@13 1045 fine for most JDK developers.
ohair@13 1046 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1047 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1048 <h4><a name="compilers">Compilers</a></h4>
ohair@13 1049 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1050 <strong><a name="gcc">Linux gcc/binutils</a></strong>
ohair@13 1051 <blockquote>
ohair@320 1052 The GNU gcc compiler version should be 4.3 or newer.
ohair@13 1053 The compiler used should be the default compiler installed
ohair@13 1054 in <tt>/usr/bin</tt>.
ohair@13 1055 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1056 <strong><a name="studio">Solaris: Sun Studio</a></strong>
ohair@13 1057 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1058 At a minimum, the
ohair@211 1059 <a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/solarisstudio/downloads/index.htm" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1060 Sun Studio 12 Update 1 Compilers</a>
ohair@211 1061 (containing version 5.10 of the C and C++ compilers) is required,
ohair@211 1062 including specific patches.
ohair@276 1063 <p>
ohair@211 1064 The Solaris SPARC patch list is:
ohair@276 1065 <ul>
ohair@276 1066 <li>
ohair@276 1067 118683-05: SunOS 5.10: Patch for profiling libraries and assembler
ohair@276 1068 </li>
ohair@276 1069 <li>
ohair@276 1070 119963-21: SunOS 5.10: Shared library patch for C++
ohair@276 1071 </li>
ohair@276 1072 <li>
ohair@276 1073 120753-08: SunOS 5.10: Microtasking libraries (libmtsk) patch
ohair@276 1074 </li>
ohair@276 1075 <li>
ohair@276 1076 128228-09: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Sun C++ Compiler
ohair@276 1077 </li>
ohair@276 1078 <li>
ohair@276 1079 141860-03: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Compiler Common patch for Sun C C++ F77 F95
ohair@276 1080 </li>
ohair@276 1081 <li>
ohair@276 1082 141861-05: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Sun C Compiler
ohair@276 1083 </li>
ohair@276 1084 <li>
ohair@276 1085 142371-01: Sun Studio 12.1 Update 1: Patch for dbx
ohair@276 1086 </li>
ohair@276 1087 <li>
ohair@276 1088 143384-02: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for debuginfo handling
ohair@276 1089 </li>
ohair@276 1090 <li>
ohair@276 1091 143385-02: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Compiler Common patch for Sun C C++ F77 F95
ohair@276 1092 </li>
ohair@276 1093 <li>
ohair@276 1094 142369-01: Sun Studio 12.1: Patch for Performance Analyzer Tools
ohair@276 1095 </li>
ohair@211 1096 </ul>
ohair@211 1097 <p>
ohair@276 1098 The Solaris X86 patch list is:
ohair@211 1099 <ul>
ohair@276 1100 <li>
ohair@276 1101 119961-07: SunOS 5.10_x86, x64, Patch for profiling libraries and assembler
ohair@276 1102 </li>
ohair@276 1103 <li>
ohair@276 1104 119964-21: SunOS 5.10_x86: Shared library patch for C++_x86
ohair@276 1105 </li>
ohair@276 1106 <li>
ohair@276 1107 120754-08: SunOS 5.10_x86: Microtasking libraries (libmtsk) patch
ohair@276 1108 </li>
ohair@276 1109 <li>
ohair@276 1110 141858-06: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Sun Compiler Common patch for x86 backend
ohair@276 1111 </li>
ohair@276 1112 <li>
ohair@276 1113 128229-09: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Patch for C++ Compiler
ohair@276 1114 </li>
ohair@276 1115 <li>
ohair@276 1116 142363-05: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Patch for C Compiler
ohair@276 1117 </li>
ohair@276 1118 <li>
ohair@276 1119 142368-01: Sun Studio 12.1_x86: Patch for Performance Analyzer Tools
ohair@276 1120 </li>
ohair@211 1121 </ul>
ohair@13 1122 <p>
ohair@276 1123 Set
ohair@276 1124 <a href="#ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><tt>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</tt></a>
ohair@276 1125 to point to the location of
ohair@276 1126 the compiler binaries, and place this location in the <tt>PATH</tt>.
ohair@13 1127 <p>
ohair@276 1128 The Oracle Solaris Studio Express compilers at:
ohair@276 1129 <a href="http://developers.sun.com/sunstudio/downloads/express.jsp" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1130 Oracle Solaris Studio Express Download site</a>
ohair@276 1131 are also an option, although these compilers have not
ohair@276 1132 been extensively used yet.
ohair@13 1133 </blockquote>
prr@187 1134 <strong><a name="msvc32">Windows i586: Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Compilers</a></strong>
ohair@13 1135 <blockquote>
ohair@276 1136 <p>
ohair@320 1137 <b>BEGIN WARNING</b>: JDK 7 has transitioned to
ohair@320 1138 use the newest VS2010 Microsoft compilers.
ohair@320 1139 No other compilers are known to build the entire JDK,
ohair@276 1140 including non-open portions.
ohair@276 1141 Visual Studio 2010 Express compilers are now able to build all the
ohair@276 1142 open source repositories, but this is 32 bit only. To build 64 bit
ohair@320 1143 Windows binaries use the the 7.1 Windows SDK.
ohair@320 1144 <b>END WARNING.</b>
ohair@276 1145 <p>
ohair@320 1146 The 32-bit OpenJDK Windows build requires
ohair@276 1147 Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 (VS2010) Professional
ohair@276 1148 Edition or Express compiler.
ohair@276 1149 The compiler and other tools are expected to reside
ohair@276 1150 in the location defined by the variable
ohair@276 1151 <tt>VS100COMNTOOLS</tt> which
ohair@276 1152 is set by the Microsoft Visual Studio installer.
ohair@13 1153 <p>
ohair@276 1154 Once the compiler is installed,
ohair@276 1155 it is recommended that you run <tt>VCVARS32.BAT</tt>
ohair@276 1156 to set the compiler environment variables
ohair@276 1157 <tt>INCLUDE</tt>,
ohair@276 1158 <tt>LIB</tt>, and
ohair@276 1159 <tt>PATH</tt>
ohair@276 1160 prior to building the
ohair@276 1161 OpenJDK.
ohair@276 1162 The above environment variables <b>MUST</b> be set.
ohair@276 1163 This compiler also contains the Windows SDK v 7.0a,
ohair@276 1164 which is an update to the Windows 7 SDK.
ohair@13 1165 <p>
ohair@276 1166 <b>WARNING:</b> Make sure you check out the
ohair@276 1167 <a href="#cygwin">CYGWIN link.exe WARNING</a>.
ohair@276 1168 The path <tt>/usr/bin</tt> must be after the path to the
ohair@276 1169 Visual Studio product.
ohair@13 1170 </blockquote>
prr@187 1171 <strong><a name="msvc64">Windows x64: Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Professional Compiler</a></strong>
ohair@13 1172 <blockquote>
ohair@320 1173 For <b>X64</b>, the set up is much the same as 32 bit
prr@175 1174 except that you run <tt>amd64\VCVARS64.BAT</tt>
prr@175 1175 to set the compiler environment variables.
ohair@320 1176 Previously 64 bit builds had to use the 64 bit compiler in
prr@187 1177 an unbundled Windows SDK but this is no longer necessary if
prr@187 1178 you have VS2010 Professional.
ohair@13 1179 </blockquote>
prr@187 1180 <strong><a name="mssdk64">Windows x64: Microsoft Windows 7.1 SDK 64 bit compilers.</a></strong>
ohair@276 1181 For a free alternative for 64 bit builds, use the 7.1 SDK.
ohair@276 1182 Microsoft say that to set up your paths for this run
ohair@276 1183 <pre>
prr@187 1184 c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\bin\setenv.cmd /x64.
ohair@276 1185 </pre>
ohair@276 1186 What was tested is just directly setting up LIB, INCLUDE,
ohair@276 1187 PATH and based on the installation directories using the
ohair@276 1188 DOS short name appropriate for the system, (you will
ohair@276 1189 need to set them for yours, not just blindly copy this) eg :
ohair@276 1190 <pre>
prr@187 1191 set VSINSTALLDIR=c:\PROGRA~2\MICROS~1.0
prr@187 1192 set WindowsSdkDir=c:\PROGRA~1\MICROS~1\Windows\v7.1
prr@187 1193 set PATH=%VSINSTALLDIR%\vc\bin\amd64;%VSINSTALLDIR%\Common7\IDE;%WindowsSdkDir%\bin;%PATH%
prr@187 1194 set INCLUDE=%VSINSTALLDIR%\vc\include;%WindowsSdkDir%\include
prr@187 1195 set LIB=%VSINSTALLDIR%\vc\lib\amd64;%WindowsSdkDir%\lib\x64
ohair@276 1196 </pre>
ohair@13 1197 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1198 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1199 <h4><a name="zip">Zip and Unzip</a></h4>
ohair@13 1200 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1201 Version 2.2 (November 3rd 1997) or newer of the zip utility
ohair@13 1202 and version 5.12 or newer of the unzip utility is needed
ohair@13 1203 to build the JDK.
ohair@13 1204 With Solaris, Linux, and Windows CYGWIN, the zip and unzip
ohair@13 1205 utilities installed on the system should be fine.
ohair@13 1206 Information and the source code for
ohair@13 1207 ZIP.EXE and UNZIP.EXE is available on the
ohair@13 1208 <a href="http://www.info-zip.org"
ohair@13 1209 target="_blank">info-zip web site</a>.
ohair@13 1210 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1211 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1212 <h4><a name="cups">Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS) Headers (Solaris &amp; Linux)</a></h4>
ohair@13 1213 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1214 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@13 1215 CUPS header files are required for building the
ohair@13 1216 OpenJDK on Solaris.
ohair@13 1217 The Solaris header files can be obtained by installing
ohair@13 1218 the package <strong>SFWcups</strong> from the Solaris Software
ohair@13 1219 Companion CD/DVD, these often will be installed into
ohair@13 1220 <tt>/opt/sfw/cups</tt>.
ohair@13 1221 <p>
ohair@276 1222 <strong>Linux:</strong>
ohair@276 1223 CUPS header files are required for building the
ohair@276 1224 OpenJDK on Linux.
ohair@276 1225 The Linux header files are usually available from a "cups"
ohair@276 1226 development package, it's recommended that you try and use
ohair@276 1227 the package provided by the particular version of Linux that
ohair@276 1228 you are using.
ohair@13 1229 <p>
ohair@276 1230 The CUPS header files can always be downloaded from
ohair@276 1231 <a href="http://www.cups.org" target="_blank">www.cups.org</a>.
ohair@276 1232 The variable
ohair@276 1233 <tt><a href="#ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH">ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@276 1234 can be used to override the default location of the
ohair@276 1235 CUPS Header files.
ohair@13 1236 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1237 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
andrew@90 1238 <h4><a name="xrender">XRender Extension Headers (Solaris &amp; Linux)</a></h4>
andrew@90 1239 <blockquote>
andrew@90 1240 <p>
ohair@276 1241 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@276 1242 XRender header files are required for building the
ohair@276 1243 OpenJDK on Solaris.
ohair@276 1244 The XRender header file is included with the other X11 header files
ohair@276 1245 in the package <strong>SFWxwinc</strong> on new enough versions of
ohair@276 1246 Solaris and will be installed in
ohair@276 1247 <tt>/usr/X11/include/X11/extensions/Xrender.h</tt>
andrew@90 1248 </p><p>
ohair@276 1249 <strong>Linux:</strong>
ohair@276 1250 XRender header files are required for building the
ohair@276 1251 OpenJDK on Linux.
ohair@276 1252 The Linux header files are usually available from a "Xrender"
ohair@276 1253 development package, it's recommended that you try and use
ohair@276 1254 the package provided by the particular distribution of Linux that
ohair@276 1255 you are using.
ohair@276 1256 </p>
andrew@90 1257 </blockquote>
andrew@90 1258 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1259 <h4><a name="freetype">FreeType 2</a></h4>
ohair@13 1260 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1261 Version 2.3 or newer of FreeType is required for building the OpenJDK.
ohair@13 1262 On Unix systems required files can be available as part of your
ohair@13 1263 distribution (while you still may need to upgrade them).
ohair@13 1264 Note that you need development version of package that
ohair@13 1265 includes both FreeType library and header files.
ohair@13 1266 <p>
ohair@276 1267 You can always download latest FreeType version from the
ohair@276 1268 <a href="http://www.freetype.org" target="_blank">FreeType website</a>.
ohair@13 1269 <p>
ohair@276 1270 Makefiles will try to pick FreeType from /usr/lib and /usr/include.
ohair@276 1271 In case it is installed elsewhere you will need to set environment
ohair@276 1272 variables
ohair@276 1273 <tt><a href="#ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH">ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@276 1274 and
ohair@276 1275 <tt><a href="#ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH">ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@276 1276 to refer to place where library and header files are installed.
ohair@25 1277 <p>
ohair@276 1278 Building the freetype 2 libraries from scratch is also possible,
ohair@276 1279 however on Windows refer to the
ohair@276 1280 <a href="http://freetype.freedesktop.org/wiki/FreeType_DLL">
ohair@276 1281 Windows FreeType DLL build instructions</a>.
ohair@25 1282 <p>
ohair@276 1283 Note that by default FreeType is built with byte code hinting
ohair@276 1284 support disabled due to licensing restrictions.
ohair@276 1285 In this case, text appearance and metrics are expected to
ohair@276 1286 differ from Sun's official JDK build.
ohair@276 1287 See
ohair@276 1288 <a href="http://freetype.sourceforge.net/freetype2/index.html">
ohair@276 1289 the SourceForge FreeType2 Home Page
ohair@276 1290 </a>
ohair@276 1291 for more information.
ohair@13 1292 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1293 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1294 <h4><a name="alsa">Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) (Linux only)</a></h4>
ohair@13 1295 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1296 <strong>Linux only:</strong>
ohair@13 1297 Version 0.9.1 or newer of the ALSA files are
ohair@13 1298 required for building the OpenJDK on Linux.
ohair@13 1299 These Linux files are usually available from an "alsa"
ohair@13 1300 of "libasound"
ohair@13 1301 development package, it's highly recommended that you try and use
ohair@13 1302 the package provided by the particular version of Linux that
ohair@13 1303 you are using.
ohair@13 1304 The makefiles will check this emit a sanity error if it is
ohair@13 1305 missing or the wrong version.
ohair@13 1306 <p>
ohair@276 1307 In particular, older Linux systems will likely not have the
ohair@276 1308 right version of ALSA installed, for example
ohair@276 1309 Redhat AS 2.1 U2 and SuSE 8.1 do not include a sufficiently
ohair@276 1310 recent ALSA distribution.
ohair@276 1311 On rpm-based systems, you can see if ALSA is installed by
ohair@276 1312 running this command:
ohair@13 1313 <pre>
ohair@13 1314 <tt>rpm -qa | grep alsa</tt>
ohair@13 1315 </pre>
ohair@13 1316 Both <tt>alsa</tt> and <tt>alsa-devel</tt> packages are needed.
ohair@13 1317 <p>
ohair@276 1318 If your distribution does not come with ALSA, and you can't
ohair@276 1319 find ALSA packages built for your particular system,
ohair@276 1320 you can try to install the pre-built ALSA rpm packages from
ohair@276 1321 <a href="http://www.freshrpms.net/" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1322 <tt>www.freshrpms.net</tt></a>.
ohair@276 1323 Note that installing a newer ALSA could
ohair@276 1324 break sound output if an older version of ALSA was previously
ohair@276 1325 installed on the system, but it will enable JDK compilation.
ohair@13 1326 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1327 Installation: execute as root<br>
ohair@13 1328 [i586]: <code>rpm -Uv --force alsa-lib-devel-0.9.1-rh61.i386.rpm</code><br>
ohair@13 1329 [x64]: <code>rpm -Uv --force alsa-lib-devel-0.9.8-amd64.x86_64.rpm</code><br>
ohair@13 1330 Uninstallation:<br>
ohair@13 1331 [i586]: <code>rpm -ev alsa-lib-devel-0.9.1-rh61</code><br>
ohair@13 1332 [x64]:<code>rpm -ev alsa-lib-devel-0.9.8-amd64</code><br>
ohair@13 1333 Make sure that you do not link to the static library
ohair@13 1334 (<tt>libasound.a</tt>),
ohair@13 1335 by verifying that the dynamic library (<tt>libasound.so</tt>) is
ohair@13 1336 correctly installed in <tt>/usr/lib</tt>.
ohair@13 1337 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1338 As a last resort you can go to the
ohair@13 1339 <a href="http://www.alsa-project.org" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1340 Advanced Linux Sound Architecture Site</a> and build it from
ohair@13 1341 source.
ohair@13 1342 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1343 Download driver and library
ohair@13 1344 source tarballs from
ohair@13 1345 <a href="http://www.alsa-project.org" target="_blank">ALSA's homepage</a>.
ohair@13 1346 As root, execute the following
ohair@13 1347 commands (you may need to adapt the version number):
ohair@13 1348 <pre>
ohair@13 1349 <tt>
ohair@13 1350 $ tar xjf alsa-driver-0.9.1.tar.bz2
ohair@13 1351 $ cd alsa-driver-0.9.1
ohair@13 1352 $ ./configure
ohair@13 1353 $ make install
ohair@13 1354 $ cd ..
ohair@13 1355 $ tar xjf alsa-lib-0.9.1.tar.bz2
ohair@13 1356 $ cd alsa-lib-0.9.1
ohair@13 1357 $ ./configure
ohair@13 1358 $ make install
ohair@13 1359 </tt>
ohair@13 1360 </pre>
ohair@13 1361 Should one of the above steps fail, refer to the documentation on
ohair@13 1362 ALSA's home page.
ohair@13 1363 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1364 Note that this is a minimum install that enables
ohair@13 1365 building the JDK platform. To actually use ALSA sound drivers, more
ohair@13 1366 steps are necessary as outlined in the documentation on ALSA's homepage.
ohair@13 1367 <p>
ohair@276 1368 ALSA can be uninstalled by executing <tt>make uninstall</tt> first in
ohair@276 1369 the <tt>alsa-lib-0.9.1</tt> directory and then in
ohair@276 1370 <tt>alsa-driver-0.9.1</tt>.
ohair@13 1371 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1372 There are no ALT* variables to change the assumed locations of ALSA,
ohair@13 1373 the makefiles will expect to find the ALSA include files and library at:
ohair@13 1374 <tt>/usr/include/alsa</tt> and <tt>/usr/lib/libasound.so</tt>.
duke@2 1375 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1376 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1377 <h4>Windows Specific Dependencies</h4>
duke@2 1378 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1379 <strong>Unix Command Tools (<a name="cygwin">CYGWIN</a>)</strong>
ohair@13 1380 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1381 The OpenJDK requires access to a set of unix command tools
ohair@13 1382 on Windows which can be supplied by
ohair@13 1383 <a href="http://www.cygwin.com" target="_blank">CYGWIN</a>.
ohair@13 1384 <p>
ohair@276 1385 The OpenJDK build requires CYGWIN version 1.5.12 or newer.
ohair@276 1386 Information about CYGWIN can
ohair@276 1387 be obtained from the CYGWIN website at
ohair@276 1388 <a href="http://www.cygwin.com" target="_blank">www.cygwin.com</a>.
ohair@13 1389 <p>
ohair@276 1390 By default CYGWIN doesn't install all the tools required for building
ohair@276 1391 the OpenJDK.
ohair@276 1392 Along with the default installation, you need to install
ohair@276 1393 the following tools.
ohair@13 1394 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1395 <table border="1">
ohair@13 1396 <thead>
ohair@13 1397 <tr>
ohair@13 1398 <td>Binary Name</td>
ohair@41 1399 <td>Category</td>
ohair@13 1400 <td>Package</td>
ohair@13 1401 <td>Description</td>
ohair@13 1402 </tr>
ohair@13 1403 </thead>
ohair@13 1404 <tbody>
ohair@13 1405 <tr>
ohair@13 1406 <td>ar.exe</td>
ohair@13 1407 <td>Devel</td>
ohair@41 1408 <td>binutils</td>
ohair@41 1409 <td>The GNU assembler, linker and binary
ohair@276 1410 utilities</td>
ohair@13 1411 </tr>
ohair@13 1412 <tr>
ohair@13 1413 <td>make.exe</td>
ohair@13 1414 <td>Devel</td>
ohair@41 1415 <td>make</td>
ohair@41 1416 <td>The GNU version of the 'make' utility built for CYGWIN.<br>
ohair@276 1417 <b>NOTE</b>: See <a href="#gmake">the GNU make section</a></td>
ohair@13 1418 </tr>
ohair@13 1419 <tr>
ohair@13 1420 <td>m4.exe</td>
ohair@13 1421 <td>Interpreters</td>
ohair@41 1422 <td>m4</td>
ohair@41 1423 <td>GNU implementation of the traditional Unix macro
ohair@276 1424 processor</td>
ohair@13 1425 </tr>
ohair@13 1426 <tr>
ohair@13 1427 <td>cpio.exe</td>
ohair@13 1428 <td>Utils</td>
ohair@41 1429 <td>cpio</td>
ohair@41 1430 <td>A program to manage archives of files</td>
ohair@13 1431 </tr>
ohair@13 1432 <tr>
ohair@25 1433 <td>gawk.exe</td>
ohair@13 1434 <td>Utils</td>
ohair@41 1435 <td>awk</td>
ohair@41 1436 <td>Pattern-directed scanning and processing language</td>
ohair@13 1437 </tr>
ohair@13 1438 <tr>
ohair@13 1439 <td>file.exe</td>
ohair@13 1440 <td>Utils</td>
ohair@41 1441 <td>file</td>
ohair@41 1442 <td>Determines file type using 'magic' numbers</td>
ohair@13 1443 </tr>
ohair@13 1444 <tr>
ohair@13 1445 <td>zip.exe</td>
ohair@25 1446 <td>Archive</td>
ohair@41 1447 <td>zip</td>
ohair@41 1448 <td>Package and compress (archive) files</td>
ohair@13 1449 </tr>
ohair@13 1450 <tr>
ohair@13 1451 <td>unzip.exe</td>
ohair@25 1452 <td>Archive</td>
ohair@41 1453 <td>unzip</td>
ohair@41 1454 <td>Extract compressed files in a ZIP archive</td>
ohair@13 1455 </tr>
ohair@13 1456 <tr>
ohair@13 1457 <td>free.exe</td>
ohair@41 1458 <td>System</td>
ohair@41 1459 <td>procps</td>
ohair@41 1460 <td>Display amount of free and used memory in the system</td>
ohair@13 1461 </tr>
ohair@13 1462 </tbody>
ohair@13 1463 </table>
ohair@13 1464 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1465 <p>
ohair@276 1466 Note that the CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN
ohair@276 1467 software on your Windows system.
ohair@276 1468 CYGWIN provides a
ohair@276 1469 <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html" target="_blank">FAQ</a> for
ohair@276 1470 known issues and problems, of particular interest is the
ohair@276 1471 section on
ohair@276 1472 <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1473 BLODA (applications that interfere with CYGWIN)</a>.
ohair@41 1474 <p>
ohair@276 1475 <b>WARNING:</b>
ohair@276 1476 Be very careful with <b><tt>link.exe</tt></b>, it will conflict
ohair@276 1477 with the Visual Studio version. You need the Visual Studio
ohair@276 1478 version of <tt>link.exe</tt>, not the CYGWIN one.
ohair@276 1479 So it's important that the Visual Studio paths in PATH preceed
ohair@276 1480 the CYGWIN path <tt>/usr/bin</tt>.
ohair@13 1481 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1482 <strong><a name="dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX 9.0 SDK header files and libraries</a></strong>
duke@2 1483 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1484 Microsoft DirectX 9.0 SDK (Summer 2004)
ohair@13 1485 headers are required for building
ohair@13 1486 OpenJDK.
ohair@13 1487 This SDK can be downloaded from
ohair@13 1488 <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=FD044A42-9912-42A3-9A9E-D857199F888E&amp;displaylang=en" target="_blank">
ohair@276 1489 Microsoft DirectX 9.0 SDK (Summer 2004)</a>.
ohair@13 1490 If the link above becomes obsolete, the SDK can be found from
ohair@13 1491 <a href="http://download.microsoft.com" target="_blank">the Microsoft Download Site</a>
ohair@13 1492 (search with "DirectX 9.0 SDK Update Summer 2004").
ohair@13 1493 The location of this SDK can be set with
ohair@13 1494 <tt><a href="#ALT_DXSDK_PATH">ALT_DXSDK_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@13 1495 but it's normally found via the DirectX environment variable
ohair@13 1496 <tt>DXSDK_DIR</tt>.
ohair@13 1497 </blockquote>
ohair@291 1498 <strong><a name="msvcrNN"><tt>MSVCR100.DLL</tt></a></strong>
ohair@13 1499 <blockquote>
prr@175 1500 The OpenJDK build requires access to a redistributable
prr@175 1501 <tt>MSVCR100.DLL</tt>.
prr@175 1502 This is usually picked up automatically from the redist
prr@175 1503 directories of Visual Studio 2010.
prr@175 1504 If this cannot be found set the
ohair@291 1505 <a href="#ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH"><tt>ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH</tt></a>
ohair@49 1506 variable to the location of this file.
ohair@13 1507 <p>
duke@2 1508 </blockquote>
duke@2 1509 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1510 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1511 <hr>
ohair@13 1512 <h2><a name="creating">Creating the Build</a></h2>
duke@2 1513 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1514 Once a machine is setup to build the OpenJDK,
ohair@13 1515 the steps to create the build are fairly simple.
ohair@13 1516 The various ALT settings can either be made into variables
ohair@13 1517 or can be supplied on the
ohair@13 1518 <a href="#gmake"><tt><i>gmake</i></tt></a>
ohair@13 1519 command.
ohair@13 1520 <ol>
ohair@13 1521 <li>Use the sanity rule to double check all the ALT settings:
ohair@13 1522 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1523 <tt>
ohair@13 1524 <i>gmake</i>
ohair@13 1525 sanity
ohair@13 1526 [ARCH_DATA_MODEL=<i>32 or 64</i>]
ohair@13 1527 [other "ALT_" overrides]
ohair@13 1528 </tt>
ohair@13 1529 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1530 </li>
ohair@13 1531 <li>Start the build with the command:
ohair@13 1532 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1533 <tt>
ohair@13 1534 <i>gmake</i>
ohair@13 1535 [ARCH_DATA_MODEL=<i>32 or 64</i>]
ohair@13 1536 [ALT_OUTPUTDIR=<i>output_directory</i>]
ohair@13 1537 [other "ALT_" overrides]
ohair@13 1538 </tt>
ohair@13 1539 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1540 </li>
ohair@13 1541 </ol>
duke@2 1542 <p>
ohair@276 1543 <strong>Solaris:</strong>
ohair@276 1544 Note that ARCH_DATA_MODEL is really only needed on Solaris to
ohair@276 1545 indicate you want to built the 64-bit version.
ohair@276 1546 And before the Solaris 64-bit binaries can be used, they
ohair@276 1547 must be merged with the binaries from a separate 32-bit build.
ohair@276 1548 The merged binaries may then be used in either 32-bit or 64-bit mode, with
ohair@276 1549 the selection occurring at runtime
ohair@276 1550 with the <tt>-d32</tt> or <tt>-d64</tt> options.
duke@2 1551 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1552 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1553 <hr>
ohair@13 1554 <h2><a name="testing">Testing the Build</a></h2>
ohair@13 1555 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1556 When the build is completed, you should see the generated
ohair@13 1557 binaries and associated files in the <tt>j2sdk-image</tt>
ohair@13 1558 directory in the output directory.
ohair@13 1559 The default output directory is
ohair@13 1560 <tt>build/<i>platform</i></tt>,
ohair@13 1561 where <tt><i>platform</i></tt> is one of
ohair@276 1562 <blockquote>
ohair@276 1563 <ul>
ohair@276 1564 <li><tt>solaris-sparc</tt></li>
ohair@276 1565 <li><tt>solaris-sparcv9</tt></li>
ohair@276 1566 <li><tt>solaris-i586</tt></li>
ohair@276 1567 <li><tt>solaris-amd64</tt></li>
ohair@276 1568 <li><tt>linux-i586</tt></li>
ohair@276 1569 <li><tt>linux-amd64</tt></li>
ohair@276 1570 <li><tt>windows-i586</tt></li>
ohair@276 1571 <li><tt>windows-amd64</tt></li>
ohair@276 1572 </ul>
ohair@276 1573 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1574 In particular, the
ohair@13 1575 <tt>build/<i>platform</i>/j2sdk-image/bin</tt>
ohair@13 1576 directory should contain executables for the
ohair@13 1577 OpenJDK tools and utilities.
duke@2 1578 <p>
ohair@276 1579 You can test that the build completed properly by using the build
ohair@276 1580 to run the various demos that you will find in the
ohair@276 1581 <tt>build/<i>platform</i>/j2sdk-image/demo</tt>
ohair@276 1582 directory.
ohair@13 1583 <p>
ohair@276 1584 The provided regression tests can be run with the <tt>jtreg</tt>
ohair@276 1585 utility from
ohair@276 1586 <a href="http://openjdk.java.net/jtreg/" target="_blank">the jtreg site</a>.
duke@2 1587 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1588 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1589 <hr>
ohair@13 1590 <h2><a name="variables">Environment/Make Variables</a></h2>
ohair@13 1591 <p>
ohair@276 1592 Some of the
ohair@276 1593 environment or make variables (just called <b>variables</b> in this
ohair@276 1594 document) that can impact the build are:
duke@2 1595 <blockquote>
duke@2 1596 <dl>
ohair@49 1597 <dt><a name="path"><tt>PATH</tt></a> </dt>
ohair@49 1598 <dd>Typically you want to set the <tt>PATH</tt> to include:
ohair@49 1599 <ul>
ohair@49 1600 <li>The location of the GNU make binary</li>
ohair@49 1601 <li>The location of the Bootstrap JDK <tt>java</tt>
ohair@276 1602 (see <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>)</li>
ohair@49 1603 <li>The location of the C/C++ compilers
ohair@276 1604 (see <a href="#compilers"><tt>compilers</tt></a>)</li>
ohair@49 1605 <li>The location or locations for the Unix command utilities
ohair@276 1606 (e.g. <tt>/usr/bin</tt>)</li>
ohair@49 1607 </ul>
ohair@49 1608 </dd>
ohair@49 1609 <dt><tt>MILESTONE</tt> </dt>
ohair@49 1610 <dd>
ohair@49 1611 The milestone name for the build (<i>e.g.</i>"beta").
ohair@49 1612 The default value is "internal".
ohair@49 1613 </dd>
ohair@49 1614 <dt><tt>BUILD_NUMBER</tt> </dt>
ohair@49 1615 <dd>
ohair@49 1616 The build number for the build (<i>e.g.</i> "b27").
ohair@49 1617 The default value is "b00".
ohair@49 1618 </dd>
ohair@49 1619 <dt><a name="arch_data_model"><tt>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1620 <dd>The <tt>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</tt> variable
ohair@49 1621 is used to specify whether the build is to generate 32-bit or 64-bit
ohair@49 1622 binaries.
ohair@49 1623 The Solaris build supports either 32-bit or 64-bit builds, but
ohair@49 1624 Windows and Linux will support only one, depending on the specific
ohair@49 1625 OS being used.
ohair@49 1626 Normally, setting this variable is only necessary on Solaris.
ohair@49 1627 Set <tt>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</tt> to <tt>32</tt> for generating 32-bit binaries,
ohair@49 1628 or to <tt>64</tt> for generating 64-bit binaries.
ohair@49 1629 </dd>
ohair@49 1630 <dt><a name="ALT_BOOTDIR"><tt>ALT_BOOTDIR</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1631 <dd>
ohair@49 1632 The location of the bootstrap JDK installation.
ohair@49 1633 See <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a> for more information.
ohair@49 1634 You should always install your own local Bootstrap JDK and
ohair@49 1635 always set <tt>ALT_BOOTDIR</tt> explicitly.
ohair@49 1636 </dd>
ohair@49 1637 <dt><a name="ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH"><tt>ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</tt></a></dt>
duke@2 1638 <dd>
ohair@49 1639 The location of a previously built JDK installation.
ohair@49 1640 See <a href="#importjdk">Optional Import JDK</a> for more information.
ohair@49 1641 </dd>
ohair@49 1642 <dt><a name="ALT_OUTPUTDIR"><tt>ALT_OUTPUTDIR</tt></a> </dt>
ohair@49 1643 <dd>
ohair@49 1644 An override for specifying the (absolute) path of where the
ohair@49 1645 build output is to go.
ohair@49 1646 The default output directory will be build/<i>platform</i>.
ohair@49 1647 </dd>
ohair@49 1648 <dt><a name="ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><tt>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</tt></a> </dt>
ohair@49 1649 <dd>
ohair@49 1650 The location of the C/C++ compiler.
ohair@49 1651 The default varies depending on the platform.
ohair@49 1652 </dd>
ohair@49 1653 <dt><tt><a name="ALT_CACERTS_FILE">ALT_CACERTS_FILE</a></tt></dt>
ohair@49 1654 <dd>
ohair@49 1655 The location of the <a href="#cacerts">cacerts</a> file.
ohair@49 1656 The default will refer to
ohair@49 1657 <tt>jdk/src/share/lib/security/cacerts</tt>.
ohair@49 1658 </dd>
ohair@49 1659 <dt><a name="ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH"><tt>ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH</tt></a> </dt>
ohair@49 1660 <dd>
ohair@49 1661 The location of the CUPS header files.
ohair@49 1662 See <a href="#cups">CUPS information</a> for more information.
ohair@49 1663 If this path does not exist the fallback path is
ohair@49 1664 <tt>/usr/include</tt>.
ohair@49 1665 </dd>
ohair@49 1666 <dt><a name="ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH"><tt>ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1667 <dd>
ohair@49 1668 The location of the FreeType shared library.
ohair@49 1669 See <a href="#freetype">FreeType information</a> for details.
ohair@49 1670 </dd>
ohair@49 1671 <dt><a name="ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH"><tt>ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1672 <dd>
ohair@49 1673 The location of the FreeType header files.
ohair@49 1674 See <a href="#freetype">FreeType information</a> for details.
ohair@49 1675 </dd>
ohair@49 1676 <dt><a name="ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH"><tt>ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1677 <dd>
ohair@49 1678 The default root location of the devtools.
ohair@49 1679 The default value is
ohair@49 1680 <tt>$(ALT_SLASH_JAVA)/devtools</tt>.
ohair@49 1681 </dd>
ohair@49 1682 <dt><tt><a name="ALT_DEVTOOLS_PATH">ALT_DEVTOOLS_PATH</a></tt> </dt>
ohair@49 1683 <dd>
ohair@49 1684 The location of tools like the
ohair@49 1685 <a href="#zip"><tt>zip</tt> and <tt>unzip</tt></a>
ohair@49 1686 binaries, but might also contain the GNU make utility
ohair@49 1687 (<tt><i>gmake</i></tt>).
ohair@49 1688 So this area is a bit of a grab bag, especially on Windows.
ohair@49 1689 The default value depends on the platform and
ohair@49 1690 Unix Commands being used.
ohair@49 1691 On Linux the default will be
ohair@49 1692 <tt>$(ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH)/linux/bin</tt>,
ohair@49 1693 on Solaris
ohair@49 1694 <tt>$(ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH)/<i>{sparc,i386}</i>/bin</tt>,
ohair@49 1695 and on Windows with CYGWIN
ohair@49 1696 <tt>/usr/bin</tt>.
ohair@49 1697 </dd>
ohair@320 1698 <dt><tt><a name="ALT_DROPS_DIR">ALT_DROPS_DIR</a></tt> </dt>
ohair@320 1699 <dd>
ohair@320 1700 The location of any source drop bundles
ohair@320 1701 (see <a href="#drops">Managing the Source Drops</a>).
ohair@320 1702 The default will be
neugens@359 1703 <tt>$(ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH)/share/jdk8-drops</tt>.
ohair@320 1704 </dd>
ohair@49 1705 <dt><a name="ALT_UNIXCCS_PATH"><tt>ALT_UNIXCCS_PATH</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1706 <dd>
ohair@49 1707 <strong>Solaris only:</strong>
ohair@49 1708 An override for specifying where the Unix CCS
ohair@49 1709 command set are located.
ohair@49 1710 The default location is <tt>/usr/ccs/bin</tt>
ohair@49 1711 </dd>
ohair@49 1712 <dt><a name="ALT_SLASH_JAVA"><tt>ALT_SLASH_JAVA</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1713 <dd>
ohair@49 1714 The default root location for many of the ALT path locations
ohair@49 1715 of the following ALT variables.
ohair@49 1716 The default value is
ohair@49 1717 <tt>"/java"</tt> on Solaris and Linux,
ohair@49 1718 <tt>"J:"</tt> on Windows.
ohair@49 1719 </dd>
ohair@49 1720 <dt><a name="ALT_BUILD_JDK_IMPORT_PATH"><tt>ALT_BUILD_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</tt></a></dt>
ohair@49 1721 <dd>
ohair@49 1722 These are useful in managing builds on multiple platforms.
ohair@49 1723 The default network location for all of the import JDK images
ohair@49 1724 for all platforms.
ohair@49 1725 If <tt><a href="#ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH">ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH</a></tt>
ohair@49 1726 is not set, this directory will be used and should contain
ohair@49 1727 the following directories:
ohair@49 1728 <tt>solaris-sparc</tt>,
ohair@49 1729 <tt>solaris-i586</tt>,
ohair@49 1730 <tt>solaris-sparcv9</tt>,
ohair@49 1731 <tt>solaris-amd64</tt>,
ohair@49 1732 <tt>linux-i586</tt>,
ohair@49 1733 <tt>linux-amd64</tt>,
ohair@49 1734 <tt>windows-i586</tt>,
ohair@49 1735 and
ohair@49 1736 <tt>windows-amd64</tt>.
ohair@49 1737 Where each of these directories contain the import JDK image
ohair@49 1738 for that platform.
duke@2 1739 </dd>
dholmes@323 1740 <dt><a name="ALT_OPENWIN_HOME"><tt>ALT_OPENWIN_HOME</tt></a></dt>
dholmes@323 1741 <dd>
dholmes@323 1742 The top-level directory of the libraries and include files for the platform's
dholmes@323 1743 graphical programming environment. The default location is platform specific.
dholmes@323 1744 For example, on Linux it defaults to <tt>/usr/X11R6/</tt>.
dholmes@323 1745 </dd>
ohair@49 1746 <dt><strong>Windows specific:</strong></dt>
ohair@13 1747 <dd>
ohair@49 1748 <dl>
ohair@275 1749 <dt><a name="ALT_WINDOWSSDKDIR"><tt>ALT_WINDOWSSDKDIR</tt></a> </dt>
ohair@49 1750 <dd>
ohair@49 1751 The location of the
ohair@275 1752 Microsoft Windows SDK where some tools will be
ohair@275 1753 located.
ohair@275 1754 The default is whatever WINDOWSSDKDIR is set to
ohair@275 1755 (or WindowsSdkDir) or the path
ohair@320 1756 <br>
ohair@320 1757 <tt>c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0a</tt>
ohair@49 1758 </dd>
ohair@49 1759 <dt><tt><a name="ALT_DXSDK_PATH">ALT_DXSDK_PATH</a></tt> </dt>
ohair@49 1760 <dd>
ohair@49 1761 The location of the
ohair@49 1762 <a href="#dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX 9 SDK</a>.
ohair@49 1763 The default will be to try and use the DirectX environment
ohair@49 1764 variable <tt>DXSDK_DIR</tt>,
ohair@49 1765 failing that, look in <tt>C:/DXSDK</tt>.
ohair@49 1766 </dd>
prr@175 1767 <dt><tt><a name="ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH">ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH</a></tt> </dt>
ohair@49 1768 <dd>
ohair@49 1769 The location of the
ohair@291 1770 <a href="#msvcrNN"><tt>MSVCR100.DLL</tt></a>.
ohair@49 1771 </dd>
ohair@49 1772 </dl>
duke@2 1773 </dd>
dholmes@323 1774 <dt><strong>Cross-Compilation Support:</strong></dt>
dholmes@323 1775 <dd>
dholmes@323 1776 <dl>
dholmes@323 1777 <dt><a name="CROSS_COMPILE_ARCH"><tt>CROSS_COMPILE_ARCH</tt></a> </dt>
dholmes@323 1778 <dd>
dholmes@323 1779 Set to the target architecture of a cross-compilation build. If set, this
dholmes@323 1780 variable is used to signify that we are cross-compiling. The expectation
dholmes@323 1781 is that <a href="#ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><tt>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</tt></a> is set
dholmes@323 1782 to point to the cross-compiler and that any cross-compilation specific flags
dholmes@323 1783 are passed using <a href="#EXTRA_CFLAGS"><tt>EXTRA_CFLAGS</tt></a>.
dholmes@323 1784 The <a href="#ALT_OPENWIN_HOME"><tt>ALT_OPENWIN_HOME</tt></a> variable should
dholmes@323 1785 also be set to point to the graphical header files (e.g. X11) provided with
dholmes@323 1786 the cross-compiler.
dholmes@323 1787 When cross-compiling we skip execution of any demos etc that may be built, and
dholmes@323 1788 also skip binary-file verification.
dholmes@323 1789 </dd>
dholmes@323 1790 <dt><tt><a name="EXTRA_CFLAGS">EXTRA_CFLAGS</a></tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1791 <dd>
dholmes@323 1792 Used to pass cross-compilation options to the cross-compiler.
dholmes@323 1793 These are added to the <tt>CFLAGS</tt> and <tt>CXXFLAGS</tt> variables.
dholmes@323 1794 </dd>
dholmes@323 1795 <dt><tt><a name="USE_ONLY_BOOTDIR_TOOLS">USE_ONLY_BOOTDIR_TOOLS</a></tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1796 <dd>
dholmes@323 1797 Used primarily for cross-compilation builds (and always set in that case)
dholmes@323 1798 this variable indicates that tools from the boot JDK should be used during
dholmes@323 1799 the build process, not the tools (<tt>javac</tt>, <tt>javah</tt>, <tt>jar</tt>)
dholmes@323 1800 just built (which can't execute on the build host).
dholmes@323 1801 </dd>
dholmes@323 1802 <dt><tt><a name="HOST_CC">HOST_CC</a></tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1803 <dd>
dholmes@323 1804 The location of the C compiler to generate programs to run on the build host.
dholmes@323 1805 Some parts of the build generate programs that are then compiled and executed
dholmes@323 1806 to produce other parts of the build. Normally the primary C compiler is used
dholmes@323 1807 to do this, but when cross-compiling that would be the cross-compiler and the
dholmes@323 1808 resulting program could not be executed.
dholmes@323 1809 On Linux this defaults to <tt>/usr/bin/gcc</tt>; on other platforms it must be
dholmes@323 1810 set explicitly.
dholmes@323 1811 </dd>
dholmes@323 1812 </dl>
dholmes@323 1813 <dt><strong>Specialized Build Options:</strong></dt>
dholmes@323 1814 <dd>
dholmes@323 1815 Some build variables exist to support specialized build environments and/or specialized
dholmes@323 1816 build products. Their use is only supported in those contexts:
dholmes@323 1817 <dl>
dholmes@323 1818 <dt><tt><a name="BUILD_CLIENT_ONLY">BUILD_CLIENT_ONLY</a></tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1819 <dd>
dholmes@323 1820 Indicates this build will only contain the Hotspot client VM. In addition to
dholmes@323 1821 controlling the Hotspot build target, it ensures that we don't try to copy
dholmes@323 1822 any server VM files/directories, and defines a default <tt>jvm.cfg</tt> file
dholmes@323 1823 suitable for a client-only environment. Using this in a 64-bit build will
dholmes@323 1824 generate a sanity warning as 64-bit client builds are not directly supported.
dholmes@323 1825 </dd>
dholmes@323 1826 <dt><tt><a name="BUILD_HEADLESS_ONLY"></a>BUILD_HEADLESS_ONLY</tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1827 <dd>
dholmes@323 1828 Used when the build environment has no graphical capabilities at all. This
dholmes@323 1829 excludes building anything that requires graphical libraries to be available.
dholmes@323 1830 </dd>
dholmes@323 1831 <dt><tt><a name="JAVASE_EMBEDDED"></a>JAVASE_EMBEDDED</tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1832 <dd>
dholmes@323 1833 Used to indicate this is a build of the Oracle Java SE Embedded product.
dholmes@323 1834 This will enable the directives included in the SE-Embedded specific build
dholmes@323 1835 files.
dholmes@323 1836 </dd>
dholmes@323 1837 <dt><tt><a name="LIBZIP_CAN_USE_MMAP">LIBZIP_CAN_USE_MMAP</a></tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1838 <dd>
dholmes@323 1839 If set to false, disables the use of mmap by the zip utility. Otherwise,
dholmes@323 1840 mmap will be used.
dholmes@323 1841 </dd>
dholmes@323 1842 <dt><tt><a name="COMPRESS_JARS"></a>COMPRESS_JARS</tt> </dt>
dholmes@323 1843 <dd>
dholmes@323 1844 If set to true, causes certain jar files that would otherwise be built without
dholmes@323 1845 compression, to use compression.
dholmes@323 1846 </dd>
dholmes@323 1847 </dl>
dholmes@323 1848 </dd>
duke@2 1849 </dl>
ohair@13 1850 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1851 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@13 1852 <hr>
ohair@320 1853 <h2><a name="hints">Hints and Tips</a></h2>
ohair@320 1854 <blockquote>
ohair@320 1855 You don't have to use all these hints and tips, and in fact people do actually
ohair@320 1856 build with systems that contradict these, but they might prove to be
ohair@320 1857 helpful to some.
ohair@320 1858 <ul>
ohair@320 1859 <li>
ohair@320 1860 If <tt>make sanity</tt> does not work, find out why, fix that
ohair@320 1861 before going any further. Or at least understand what the
ohair@320 1862 complaints are from it.
ohair@320 1863 </li>
ohair@320 1864 <li>
ohair@320 1865 JDK: Keep in mind that you are building a JDK, but you need
ohair@320 1866 a JDK (BOOTDIR JDK) to build this JDK.
ohair@320 1867 </li>
ohair@320 1868 <li>
ohair@320 1869 Ant: The ant utility is a java application and besides having
ohair@320 1870 ant available to you, it's important that ant finds the right
ohair@320 1871 java to run with. Make sure you can type <tt>ant -version</tt>
ohair@320 1872 and get clean results with no error messages.
ohair@320 1873 </li>
ohair@320 1874 <li>
ohair@320 1875 Linux: Try and favor the system packages over building your own
ohair@320 1876 or getting packages from other areas.
ohair@320 1877 Most Linux builds should be possible with the system's
ohair@320 1878 available packages.
ohair@320 1879 </li>
ohair@320 1880 <li>
ohair@320 1881 Solaris: Typically you will need to get compilers on your systems
ohair@320 1882 and occasionally GNU make 3.81 if a gmake binary is not available.
ohair@320 1883 The gmake binary might not be 3.81, be careful.
ohair@320 1884 </li>
ohair@320 1885 <li>
ohair@320 1886 Windows VS2010:
ohair@320 1887 <ul>
ohair@320 1888 <li>
ohair@320 1889 Only the C++ part of VS2010 is needed.
ohair@320 1890 Try to let the installation go to the default install directory.
ohair@320 1891 Always reboot your system after installing VS2010.
ohair@320 1892 The system environment variable VS100COMNTOOLS should be
ohair@320 1893 set in your environment.
ohair@320 1894 </li>
ohair@320 1895 <li>
ohair@320 1896 Make sure that TMP and TEMP are also set in the environment
ohair@320 1897 and refer to Windows paths that exist, like <tt>C:\temp</tt>,
ohair@320 1898 not <tt>/tmp</tt>, not <tt>/cygdrive/c/temp</tt>, and not <tt>C:/temp</tt>.
ohair@320 1899 <tt>C:\temp</tt> is just an example, it is assumed that this area is
ohair@320 1900 private to the user, so by default after installs you should
ohair@320 1901 see a unique user path in these variables.
ohair@320 1902 </li>
ohair@320 1903 <li>
ohair@320 1904 You need to use vsvars32.bat or vsvars64.bat to get the
ohair@320 1905 PATH, INCLUDE, LIB, LIBPATH, and WINDOWSSDKDIR
ohair@320 1906 variables set in your shell environment.
ohair@320 1907 These bat files are not easy to use from a shell environment.
neugens@359 1908 However, there is a script placed in the root jdk8 repository called
ohair@320 1909 vsvars.sh that can help, it should only be done once in a shell
ohair@320 1910 that will be doing the build, e.g.<br>
ohair@320 1911 <tt>sh ./make/scripts/vsvars.sh -v10 > settings<br>
ohair@320 1912 eval `cat settings`</tt><br>
ohair@320 1913 Or just <tt>eval `sh ./make/scripts/vsvars.sh -v10`</tt>.
ohair@320 1914 </li>
ohair@320 1915 </ul>
ohair@320 1916 </li>
ohair@320 1917 <li>
ohair@320 1918 Windows: PATH order is critical, see the
ohair@320 1919 <a href="#paths">paths</a> section for more information.
ohair@320 1920 </li>
ohair@320 1921 <li>
ohair@320 1922 Windows 64bit builds: Use ARCH_DATA_MODEL=64.
ohair@320 1923 </li>
ohair@320 1924 </ul>
ohair@320 1925 </blockquote>
ohair@320 1926 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------ -->
ohair@320 1927 <hr>
ohair@13 1928 <h2><a name="troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a></h2>
ohair@13 1929 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1930 A build can fail for any number of reasons.
ohair@13 1931 Most failures
ohair@13 1932 are a result of trying to build in an environment in which all the
ohair@13 1933 pre-build requirements have not been met.
ohair@13 1934 The first step in
ohair@13 1935 troubleshooting a build failure is to recheck that you have satisfied
ohair@13 1936 all the pre-build requirements for your platform.
ohair@13 1937 Look for the check list of the platform you are building on in the
ohair@13 1938 <a href="#contents">Table of Contents</a>.
ohair@13 1939 <p>
ohair@276 1940 You can validate your build environment by using the <tt>sanity</tt>
ohair@276 1941 target.
ohair@276 1942 Any errors listed
ohair@276 1943 will stop the build from starting, and any warnings may result in
ohair@276 1944 a flawed product build.
ohair@276 1945 We strongly encourage you to evaluate every
ohair@276 1946 sanity check warning and fix it if required, before you proceed
ohair@276 1947 further with your build.
ohair@13 1948 <p>
ohair@276 1949 Some of the more common problems with builds are briefly described
ohair@276 1950 below, with suggestions for remedies.
ohair@13 1951 <ul>
ohair@13 1952 <li>
ohair@320 1953 <b>Corrupted Bundles on Windows:</b>
ohair@320 1954 <blockquote>
ohair@320 1955 Some virus scanning software has been known to corrupt the
ohair@320 1956 downloading of zip bundles.
ohair@320 1957 It may be necessary to disable the 'on access' or 'real time'
ohair@320 1958 virus scanning features to prevent this corruption.
ohair@320 1959 This type of "real time" virus scanning can also slow down the
ohair@320 1960 build process significantly.
ohair@320 1961 Temporarily disabling the feature, or excluding the build
ohair@320 1962 output directory may be necessary to get correct and faster builds.
ohair@320 1963 </blockquote>
ohair@320 1964 </li>
ohair@320 1965 <li>
ohair@13 1966 <b>Slow Builds:</b>
ohair@13 1967 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1968 If your build machine seems to be overloaded from too many
ohair@13 1969 simultaneous C++ compiles, try setting the <tt>HOTSPOT_BUILD_JOBS</tt>
ohair@13 1970 variable to <tt>1</tt> (if you're using a multiple CPU
ohair@13 1971 machine, setting it to more than the the number of CPUs is probably
ohair@13 1972 not a good idea).
ohair@13 1973 <p>
ohair@276 1974 Creating the javadocs can be very slow, if you are running
ohair@276 1975 javadoc, consider skipping that step.
ohair@13 1976 <p>
ohair@276 1977 Faster hardware and more RAM always helps too.
ohair@276 1978 The VM build tends to be CPU intensive (many C++ compiles),
ohair@276 1979 and the rest of the JDK will often be disk intensive.
ohair@13 1980 <p>
ohair@276 1981 Faster compiles are possible using a tool called
ohair@276 1982 <a href="http://ccache.samba.org/" target="_blank">ccache</a>.
ohair@13 1983 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1984 </li>
ohair@13 1985 <li>
ohair@13 1986 <b>File time issues:</b>
ohair@13 1987 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1988 If you see warnings that refer to file time stamps, e.g.
ohair@13 1989 <blockquote>
ohair@13 1990 <i>Warning message:</i><tt> File `xxx' has modification time in
ohair@276 1991 the future.</tt>
ohair@13 1992 <br>
ohair@13 1993 <i>Warning message:</i> <tt> Clock skew detected. Your build may
ohair@276 1994 be incomplete.</tt>
ohair@13 1995 </blockquote>
ohair@13 1996 These warnings can occur when the clock on the build machine is out of
ohair@13 1997 sync with the timestamps on the source files. Other errors, apparently
ohair@13 1998 unrelated but in fact caused by the clock skew, can occur along with
ohair@13 1999 the clock skew warnings. These secondary errors may tend to obscure the
ohair@13 2000 fact that the true root cause of the problem is an out-of-sync clock.
ohair@13 2001 For example, an out-of-sync clock has been known to cause an old
ohair@13 2002 version of javac to be used to compile some files, resulting in errors
ohair@13 2003 when the pre-1.4 compiler ran across the new <tt>assert</tt> keyword
ohair@13 2004 in the 1.4 source code.
ohair@13 2005 <p>
ohair@276 2006 If you see these warnings, reset the clock on the build
ohair@276 2007 machine, run "<tt><i>gmake</i> clobber</tt>" or delete the directory
ohair@276 2008 containing the build output, and restart the build from the beginning.
ohair@13 2009 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2010 </li>
ohair@13 2011 <li>
ohair@13 2012 <b>Error message: <tt>Trouble writing out table to disk</tt></b>
ohair@13 2013 <blockquote>
ohair@13 2014 Increase the amount of swap space on your build machine.
ohair@13 2015 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2016 </li>
ohair@13 2017 <li>
ohair@13 2018 <b>Error Message: <tt>libstdc++ not found:</tt></b>
ohair@13 2019 <blockquote>
ohair@13 2020 This is caused by a missing libstdc++.a library.
ohair@13 2021 This is installed as part of a specific package
ohair@13 2022 (e.g. libstdc++.so.devel.386).
ohair@49 2023 By default some 64-bit Linux versions (e.g. Fedora)
ohair@49 2024 only install the 64-bit version of the libstdc++ package.
ohair@13 2025 Various parts of the JDK build require a static
ohair@13 2026 link of the C++ runtime libraries to allow for maximum
ohair@13 2027 portability of the built images.
ohair@13 2028 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2029 </li>
ohair@13 2030 <li>
ohair@13 2031 <b>Error Message: <tt>cannot restore segment prot after reloc</tt></b>
ohair@13 2032 <blockquote>
ohair@13 2033 This is probably an issue with SELinux (See
ohair@13 2034 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SELinux" target="_blank">
ohair@276 2035 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SELinux</a>).
ohair@13 2036 Parts of the VM is built without the <tt>-fPIC</tt> for
ohair@13 2037 performance reasons.
ohair@13 2038 <p>
ohair@276 2039 To completely disable SELinux:
ohair@276 2040 <ol>
ohair@276 2041 <li><tt>$ su root</tt></li>
ohair@276 2042 <li><tt># system-config-securitylevel</tt></li>
ohair@276 2043 <li><tt>In the window that appears, select the SELinux tab</tt></li>
ohair@276 2044 <li><tt>Disable SELinux</tt></li>
ohair@276 2045 </ol>
ohair@13 2046 <p>
ohair@276 2047 Alternatively, instead of completely disabling it you could
ohair@276 2048 disable just this one check.
ohair@276 2049 <ol>
ohair@276 2050 <li>Select System->Administration->SELinux Management</li>
ohair@276 2051 <li>In the SELinux Management Tool which appears,
ohair@13 2052 select "Boolean" from the menu on the left</li>
ohair@276 2053 <li>Expand the "Memory Protection" group</li>
ohair@276 2054 <li>Check the first item, labeled
ohair@13 2055 "Allow all unconfined executables to use libraries requiring text relocation ..."</li>
ohair@276 2056 </ol>
ohair@13 2057 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2058 </li>
ohair@13 2059 <li>
ohair@320 2060 <b>Windows Error Messages:</b><br>
ohair@320 2061 <tt>*** fatal error - couldn't allocate heap, ... </tt><br>
ohair@320 2062 <tt>rm fails with "Directory not empty"</tt><br>
ohair@320 2063 <tt>unzip fails with "cannot create ... Permission denied"</tt><br>
ohair@320 2064 <tt>unzip fails with "cannot create ... Error 50"</tt><br>
ohair@13 2065 <blockquote>
ohair@13 2066 The CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN
ohair@13 2067 software. See the CYGWIN FAQ section on
ohair@13 2068 <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda" target="_blank">
ohair@276 2069 BLODA (applications that interfere with CYGWIN)</a>.
ohair@13 2070 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2071 </li>
ohair@13 2072 <li>
ohair@320 2073 <b>Windows Error Message: <tt>spawn failed</tt></b>
ohair@13 2074 <blockquote>
ohair@320 2075 Try rebooting the system, or there could be some kind of
ohair@320 2076 issue with the disk or disk partition being used.
ohair@320 2077 Sometimes it comes with a "Permission Denied" message.
ohair@13 2078 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2079 </li>
ohair@13 2080 </ul>
ohair@13 2081 </blockquote>
ohair@13 2082 <hr>
ohair@13 2083 </body>
ohair@13 2084 </html>

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