README-builds.html

Fri, 30 Aug 2013 10:13:25 +0200

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erikj
date
Fri, 30 Aug 2013 10:13:25 +0200
changeset 783
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8023957: Lock down version of autoconf
Reviewed-by: chegar, dsamersoff, tbell, dholmes

     1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
     2 <html>
     3     <head>
     4         <title>OpenJDK Build README</title>
     5     </head>
     6     <body style="background-color:aquamarine">
     8         <!-- ====================================================== -->
     9         <table width="100%">
    10             <tr>
    11                 <td align="center">
    12                     <img alt="OpenJDK" 
    13                          src="http://openjdk.java.net/images/openjdk.png" 
    14                          width=256>
    15                 </td>
    16             </tr>
    17             <tr>
    18                 <td align=center>
    19                     <h1>OpenJDK Build README</h1>
    20                 </td>
    21             </tr>
    22         </table>
    24         <!-- ====================================================== -->
    25         <hr>
    26         <h2><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></h2>
    27         <blockquote>
    28             This README file contains build instructions for the
    29             <a href="http://openjdk.java.net"  target="_blank">OpenJDK</a>.
    30             Building the source code for the
    31             OpenJDK
    32             requires
    33             a certain degree of technical expertise.
    35             <!-- ====================================================== -->
    36             <h3>!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THIS IS A MAJOR RE-WRITE of this document. !!!!!!!!!!!!!</h3>
    37             <blockquote>
    38                 Some Headlines:
    39                 <ul>
    40                     <li>
    41                         The build is now a "<code>configure &amp;&amp; make</code>" style build
    42                     </li>
    43                     <li>
    44                         Any GNU make 3.81 or newer should work
    45                     </li>
    46                     <li>
    47                         The build should scale, i.e. more processors should
    48                         cause the build to be done in less wall-clock time
    49                     </li>
    50                     <li>
    51                         Nested or recursive make invocations have been significantly
    52                         reduced, as has the total fork/exec or spawning
    53                         of sub processes during the build
    54                     </li>
    55                     <li>
    56                         Windows MKS usage is no longer supported
    57                     </li>
    58                     <li>
    59                         Windows Visual Studio <code>vsvars*.bat</code> and 
    60                         <code>vcvars*.bat</code> files are run automatically
    61                     </li>
    62                     <li>
    63                         Ant is no longer used when building the OpenJDK
    64                     </li>
    65                     <li>
    66                         Use of ALT_* environment variables for configuring the
    67                         build is no longer supported
    68                     </li>
    69                 </ul>
    70             </blockquote>
    71         </blockquote>
    73         <!-- ====================================================== -->
    74         <hr>
    75         <h2><a name="contents">Contents</a></h2>
    76         <blockquote>
    77             <ul>
    78                 <li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a></li>
    80                 <li><a href="#hg">Use of Mercurial</a>
    81                     <ul>
    82                         <li><a href="#get_source">Getting the Source</a></li>
    83                         <li><a href="#repositories">Repositories</a></li>
    84                     </ul>
    85                 </li>
    87                 <li><a href="#building">Building</a>
    88                     <ul>
    89                         <li><a href="#setup">System Setup</a>
    90                             <ul>
    91                                 <li><a href="#linux">Linux</a></li>
    92                                 <li><a href="#solaris">Solaris</a></li>
    93                                 <li><a href="#macosx">Mac OS X</a></li>
    94                                 <li><a href="#windows">Windows</a></li>
    95                             </ul>
    96                         </li>
    97                         <li><a href="#configure">Configure</a></li>
    98                         <li><a href="#make">Make</a></li>
    99                     </ul>
   100                 </li>
   101                 <li><a href="#testing">Testing</a></li>
   102             </ul>
   103             <hr>
   104             <ul>
   105                 <li><a href="#hints">Appendix A: Hints and Tips</a>
   106                     <ul>
   107                         <li><a href="#faq">FAQ</a></li>
   108                         <li><a href="#performance">Build Performance Tips</a></li>
   109                         <li><a href="#troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a></li>
   110                     </ul>
   111                 </li>
   112                 <li><a href="#gmake">Appendix B: GNU Make Information</a></li>
   113                 <li><a href="#buildenvironments">Appendix C: Build Environments</a></li>
   115                 <!-- Leave out
   116                 <li><a href="#mapping">Appendix D: Mapping Old Builds to the New Builds</a></li>    
   117                 -->
   119             </ul>
   120         </blockquote>
   122         <!-- ====================================================== -->
   123         <hr>
   124         <h2><a name="hg">Use of Mercurial</a></h2>
   125         <blockquote>
   126             The OpenJDK sources are maintained with the revision control system
   127             <a href="http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/Mercurial">Mercurial</a>.
   128             If you are new to Mercurial, please see the
   129             <a href="http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/BeginnersGuides">
   130                 Beginner Guides</a>
   131             or refer to the <a href="http://hgbook.red-bean.com/">
   132                 Mercurial Book</a>.
   133             The first few chapters of the book provide an excellent overview of
   134             Mercurial, what it is and how it works.
   135             <br>
   136             For using Mercurial with the OpenJDK refer to the
   137             <a href="http://openjdk.java.net/guide/repositories.html#installConfig">
   138                 Developer Guide: Installing and Configuring Mercurial</a>
   139             section for more information.
   141             <h3><a name="get_source">Getting the Source</a></h3>
   142             <blockquote>
   143                 To get the entire set of OpenJDK Mercurial repositories
   144                 use the script <code>get_source.sh</code> located in the 
   145                 root repository:
   146                 <blockquote>
   147                     <code>
   148                         hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk8/jdk8 
   149                         <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
   150                         <br>
   151                         cd <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
   152                         <br>
   153                         bash ./get_source.sh
   154                     </code>
   155                 </blockquote>
   156                 Once you have all the repositories, keep in mind that each
   157                 repository is its own independent repository.
   158                 You can also re-run <code>./get_source.sh</code> anytime to
   159                 pull over all the latest changesets in all the repositories.
   160                 This set of nested repositories has been given the term
   161                 "forest" and there are various ways to apply the same
   162                 <code>hg</code> command to each of the repositories.
   163                 For example, the script <code>make/scripts/hgforest.sh</code>
   164                 can be used to repeat the same <code>hg</code>
   165                 command on every repository, e.g.
   166                 <blockquote>
   167                     <code>
   168                         cd <i>YourOpenJDK</i>
   169                         <br>
   170                         bash ./make/scripts/hgforest.sh status
   171                     </code>
   172                 </blockquote>
   173             </blockquote>
   175             <h3><a name="repositories">Repositories</a></h3>
   176             <blockquote>
   177                 <p>The set of repositories and what they contain:</p>
   178                 <table border="1">
   179                     <thead>
   180                         <tr>
   181                             <th>Repository</th>
   182                             <th>Contains</th>
   183                         </tr>
   184                     </thead>                   
   185                     <tbody>
   186                         <tr>
   187                             <td>
   188                                 . (root)
   189                             </td>
   190                             <td>
   191                                 common configure and makefile logic
   192                             </td>
   193                         </tr>
   194                         <tr>
   195                             <td>
   196                                 hotspot
   197                             </td>
   198                             <td>
   199                                 source code and make files for building
   200                                 the OpenJDK Hotspot Virtual Machine                         
   201                             </td>
   202                         </tr>
   203                         <tr>
   204                             <td>
   205                                 langtools
   206                             </td>
   207                             <td>
   208                                 source code for the OpenJDK javac and language tools
   209                             </td>
   210                         </tr>
   211                         <tr>
   212                             <td>
   213                                 jdk
   214                             </td>
   215                             <td>
   216                                 source code and make files for building
   217                                 the OpenJDK runtime libraries and misc files
   218                             </td>
   219                         </tr>
   220                         <tr>
   221                             <td>
   222                                 jaxp
   223                             </td>
   224                             <td>
   225                                 source code for the OpenJDK JAXP functionality
   226                             </td>
   227                         </tr>
   228                         <tr>
   229                             <td>
   230                                 jaxws
   231                             </td>
   232                             <td>
   233                                 source code for the OpenJDK JAX-WS functionality
   234                             </td>
   235                         </tr>
   236                         <tr>
   237                             <td>
   238                                 corba
   239                             </td>
   240                             <td>
   241                                 source code for the OpenJDK Corba functionality
   242                             </td>
   243                         </tr>
   244                         <tr>
   245                             <td>
   246                                 nashorn
   247                             </td>
   248                             <td>
   249                                 source code for the OpenJDK JavaScript implementation
   250                             </td>
   251                         </tr>
   252                     </tbody>
   253                 </table>
   254             </blockquote>
   256             <h3><a name="guidelines">Repository Source Guidelines</a></h3>
   257             <blockquote>
   258                 There are some very basic guidelines:
   259                 <ul>
   260                     <li>
   261                         Use of whitespace in source files
   262                         (.java, .c, .h, .cpp, and .hpp files)
   263                         is restricted.
   264                         No TABs, no trailing whitespace on lines, and files
   265                         should not terminate in more than one blank line.
   266                     </li>
   267                     <li>
   268                         Files with execute permissions should not be added
   269                         to the source repositories.
   270                     </li>
   271                     <li>
   272                         All generated files need to be kept isolated from 
   273                         the files
   274                         maintained or managed by the source control system.
   275                         The standard area for generated files is the top level
   276                         <code>build/</code> directory.
   277                     </li>
   278                     <li>
   279                         The default build process should be to build the product
   280                         and nothing else, in one form, e.g. a product (optimized),
   281                         debug (non-optimized, -g plus assert logic), or
   282                         fastdebug (optimized, -g plus assert logic).
   283                     </li>
   284                     <li>
   285                         The <tt>.hgignore</tt> file in each repository
   286                         must exist and should
   287                         include <tt>^build/</tt>, <tt>^dist/</tt> and 
   288                         optionally any
   289                         <tt>nbproject/private</tt> directories.
   290                         <strong>It should NEVER</strong> include 
   291                         anything in the
   292                         <tt>src/</tt> or <tt>test/</tt>
   293                         or any managed directory area of a repository.
   294                     </li>
   295                     <li>
   296                         Directory names and file names should never contain
   297                         blanks or
   298                         non-printing characters.
   299                     </li>
   300                     <li>
   301                         Generated source or binary files should NEVER be added to
   302                         the repository (that includes <tt>javah</tt> output).
   303                         There are some exceptions to this rule, in particular
   304                         with some of the generated configure scripts.
   305                     </li>
   306                     <li>
   307                         Files not needed for typical building
   308                         or testing of the repository
   309                         should not be added to the repository.
   310                     </li>
   311                 </ul>
   312             </blockquote>
   314         </blockquote>
   316         <!-- ====================================================== -->
   317         <hr>
   318         <h2><a name="building">Building</a></h2>
   319         <blockquote>
   320             The very first step in building the OpenJDK is making sure the
   321             system itself has everything it needs to do OpenJDK builds.
   322             Once a system is setup, it generally doesn't need to be done again.
   323             <br>
   324             Building the OpenJDK is now done with running a 
   325             <a href="#configure"><code>configure</code></a>
   326             script which will try and find and verify you have everything
   327             you need, followed by running
   328             <a href="#gmake"><code>make</code></a>, e.g.
   329             <blockquote>
   330                 <b>
   331                     <code>
   332                         bash ./configure<br>
   333                         make all
   334                     </code>
   335                 </b>
   336             </blockquote>
   337             Where possible the <code>configure</code> script will attempt to located the
   338             various components in the default locations or via component
   339             specific variable settings.
   340             When the normal defaults fail or components cannot be found,
   341             additional <code>configure</code> options may be necessary to help <code>configure</code>
   342             find the necessary tools for the build, or you may need to
   343             re-visit the setup of your system due to missing software
   344             packages.
   345             <br>
   346             <strong>NOTE:</strong> The <code>configure</code> script
   347             file does not have
   348             execute permissions and will need to be explicitly run with
   349             <code>bash</code>,
   350             see the <a href="#guidelines">source guidelines</a>.
   352             <!-- ====================================================== -->
   353             <hr>
   354             <h3><a name="setup">System Setup</a></h3>
   355             <blockquote>
   356                 Before even attempting to use a system to build the OpenJDK
   357                 there are some very basic system setups needed.
   358                 For all systems:
   359                 <ul>
   360                     <li>
   361                         Be sure the GNU make utility is version 3.81 or newer,
   362                         e.g. run "<code>make -version</code>"
   363                     </li>
   364                     <li>
   365                         Install a
   366                         <a name="bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>.
   367                         All OpenJDK builds require access to a previously released
   368                         JDK called the <i>bootstrap JDK</i> or <i>boot JDK.</i>
   369                         The general rule is that the bootstrap JDK
   370                         must be an instance of the previous major
   371                         release of the JDK. In addition, there may be
   372                         a requirement to use a release at or beyond a
   373                         particular update level.
   374                         <br>&nbsp;<br>
   376                         <b><i>Building JDK 8 requires use of a version
   377                         of JDK 7 that is at Update 7 or newer. JDK 8
   378                         developers should not use JDK 8 as the boot
   379                         JDK, to ensure that JDK 8 dependencies are
   380                         not introduced into the parts of the system
   381                         that are built with JDK 7.</i></b>
   383                         <br>&nbsp;<br>
   384                         The JDK 7 binaries can be downloaded from Oracle's 
   385                         <a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html"
   386                            target="_blank">JDK 7 download site</a>.
   387                         For build performance reasons
   388                         is very important that this bootstrap JDK be made available 
   389                         on the local disk of the machine doing the build.
   390                         You should add its <code>bin</code> directory
   391                         to the <code>PATH</code> environment variable.
   392                         If <code>configure</code> has any issues finding this JDK, you may
   393                         need to use the <code>configure</code> option
   394                         <code>--with-boot-jdk</code>.
   395                     </li>
   396                     <li>
   397                         Ensure that GNU make, the Bootstrap JDK,
   398                         and the compilers are all
   399                         in your PATH environment variable
   400                     </li>
   401                 </ul>
   402                 And for specific systems:
   403                 <table border="1">
   404                     <thead>
   405                         <tr>
   406                             <th>Linux</th>
   407                             <th>Solaris</th>
   408                             <th>Windows</th>
   409                             <th>Mac OS X</th>
   410                         </tr>
   411                     </thead>                   
   412                     <tbody>
   413                         <tr>
   414                             <td>
   415                                 Install all the software development
   416                                 packages needed including
   417                                 <a href="#alsa">alsa</a>,
   418                                 <a href="#freetype">freetype</a>,
   419                                 <a href="#cups">cups</a>, and
   420                                 <a href="#xrender">xrender</a>.
   421                                 <br>
   422                                 See
   423                                 <a href="#SDBE">specific system packages</a>.
   424                             </td>
   425                             <td>
   426                                 Install all the software development
   427                                 packages needed  including
   428                                 <a href="#studio">Studio Compilers</a>,
   429                                 <a href="#freetype">freetype</a>,
   430                                 <a href="#cups">cups</a>, and
   431                                 <a href="#xrender">xrender</a>.
   432                                 <br>
   433                                 See
   434                                 <a href="#SDBE">specific system packages</a>.
   435                             </td>
   436                             <td>
   437                                 <ul>
   438                                     <li>
   439                                         Install one of
   440                                         <a href="#cygwin">CYGWIN</a> or
   441                                         <a href="#msys">MinGW/MSYS</a>
   442                                     </li>
   443                                     <li>
   444                                         Install
   445                                         <a href="#vs2010">Visual Studio 2010</a>
   446                                     </li>
   447                                     <li>
   448                                         Install the
   449                                         <a href="#dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX SDK</a>
   450                                     </li>
   451                                 </ul>
   452                             </td>
   453                             <td>
   454                                 Install 
   455                                 <a href="https://developer.apple.com/xcode/">XCode 4.5.2</a> 
   456                                 and also install the "Command line tools" found under the
   457                                 preferences pane "Downloads"
   458                             </td>
   459                         </tr>
   460                     </tbody>
   461                 </table>
   463                 <h4><a name="linux">Linux</a></h4>
   464                 <blockquote>
   465                     With Linux, try and favor the system packages over 
   466                     building your own
   467                     or getting packages from other areas.
   468                     Most Linux builds should be possible with the system's
   469                     available packages.
   470                     <br>
   471                     Note that some Linux systems have a habit of pre-populating
   472                     your environment variables for you, for example <code>JAVA_HOME</code>
   473                     might get pre-defined for you to refer to the JDK installed on
   474                     your Linux system.
   475                     You will need to unset <code>JAVA_HOME</code>.
   476                     It's a good idea to run <code>env</code> and verify the
   477                     environment variables you are getting from the default system
   478                     settings make sense for building the OpenJDK.
   480                 </blockquote>
   482                 <h4><a name="solaris">Solaris</a></h4>
   483                 <blockquote>
   484                     <h5><a name="studio">Studio Compilers</a></h5>
   485                     <blockquote>
   486                         At a minimum, the
   487                         <a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/solarisstudio/downloads/index.htm" target="_blank">
   488                             Studio 12 Update 1 Compilers</a>
   489                         (containing version 5.10 of the C and C++ compilers) is required,
   490                         including specific patches.
   491                         <p>
   492                             The Solaris SPARC patch list is:
   493                         <ul>
   494                             <li>
   495                                 118683-05: SunOS 5.10: Patch for profiling libraries and assembler
   496                             </li>
   497                             <li>
   498                                 119963-21: SunOS 5.10: Shared library patch for C++
   499                             </li>
   500                             <li>
   501                                 120753-08: SunOS 5.10: Microtasking libraries (libmtsk) patch
   502                             </li>
   503                             <li>
   504                                 128228-09: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Sun C++ Compiler
   505                             </li>
   506                             <li>
   507                                 141860-03: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Compiler Common patch for Sun C C++ F77 F95
   508                             </li>
   509                             <li>
   510                                 141861-05: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Sun C Compiler
   511                             </li>
   512                             <li>
   513                                 142371-01: Sun Studio 12.1 Update 1: Patch for dbx
   514                             </li>
   515                             <li>
   516                                 143384-02: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for debuginfo handling
   517                             </li>
   518                             <li>
   519                                 143385-02: Sun Studio 12 Update 1: Patch for Compiler Common patch for Sun C C++ F77 F95
   520                             </li>
   521                             <li>
   522                                 142369-01: Sun Studio 12.1: Patch for Performance Analyzer Tools
   523                             </li>
   524                         </ul>
   525                         <p>
   526                             The Solaris X86 patch list is:
   527                         <ul>
   528                             <li>
   529                                 119961-07: SunOS 5.10_x86, x64, Patch for profiling libraries and assembler
   530                             </li>
   531                             <li>
   532                                 119964-21: SunOS 5.10_x86: Shared library patch for C++_x86
   533                             </li>
   534                             <li>
   535                                 120754-08: SunOS 5.10_x86: Microtasking libraries (libmtsk) patch
   536                             </li>
   537                             <li>
   538                                 141858-06: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Sun Compiler Common patch for x86 backend
   539                             </li>
   540                             <li>
   541                                 128229-09: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Patch for C++ Compiler
   542                             </li>
   543                             <li>
   544                                 142363-05: Sun Studio 12 Update 1_x86: Patch for C Compiler
   545                             </li>
   546                             <li>
   547                                 142368-01: Sun Studio 12.1_x86: Patch for Performance Analyzer Tools
   548                             </li>
   549                         </ul>
   550                         <p> 
   551                             Place the <code>bin</code> directory in <code>PATH</code>.
   552                         <p>
   553                             The Oracle Solaris Studio Express compilers at:
   554                             <a href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/solarisstudio/downloads/index-jsp-142582.html" target="_blank">
   555                                 Oracle Solaris Studio Express Download site</a>
   556                             are also an option, although these compilers have not
   557                             been extensively used yet.
   558                     </blockquote>
   560                 </blockquote> <!-- Solaris -->
   562                 <h4><a name="windows">Windows</a></h4>
   563                 <blockquote>
   565                     <h5><a name="toolkit">Windows Unix Toolkit</a></h5>
   566                     <blockquote>
   567                         Building on Windows requires a Unix-like environment, notably a 
   568                         Unix-like shell.
   569                         There are several such environments available of which 
   570                         <a href="http://www.cygwin.com/">Cygwin</a> and 
   571                         <a href="http://www.mingw.org/wiki/MSYS">MinGW/MSYS</a> are 
   572                         currently supported for
   573                         the OpenJDK build. One of the differences of these 
   574                         systems from standard Windows tools is the way
   575                         they handle Windows path names, particularly path names which contain
   576                         spaces, backslashes as path separators and possibly drive letters. 
   577                         Depending
   578                         on the use case and the specifics of each environment these path 
   579                         problems can
   580                         be solved by a combination of quoting whole paths, translating 
   581                         backslashes to
   582                         forward slashes, escaping backslashes with additional backslashes and
   583                         translating the path names to their 
   584                         <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename">
   585                             "8.3" version</a>.
   587                         <h6><a name="cygwin">CYGWIN</a></h6>
   588                         <blockquote>
   589                             CYGWIN is an open source, Linux-like environment which tries to emulate
   590                             a complete POSIX layer on Windows. It tries to be smart about path names
   591                             and can usually handle all kinds of paths if they are correctly quoted
   592                             or escaped although internally it maps drive letters <code>&lt;drive&gt;:</code> 
   593                             to a virtual directory <code>/cygdrive/&lt;drive&gt;</code>.
   594                             <p>
   595                                 You can always use the <code>cygpath</code> utility to map pathnames with spaces
   596                                 or the backslash character into the <code>C:/</code> style of pathname
   597                                 (called 'mixed'), e.g. <code>cygpath -s -m "<i>path</i>"</code>.
   598                             </p>
   599                             <p>
   600                                 Note that the use of CYGWIN creates a unique problem with regards to
   601                                 setting <a href="#path"><code>PATH</code></a>. Normally on Windows
   602                                 the <code>PATH</code> variable contains directories
   603                                 separated with the ";" character (Solaris and Linux use ":").
   604                                 With CYGWIN, it uses ":", but that means that paths like "C:/path"
   605                                 cannot be placed in the CYGWIN version  of <code>PATH</code> and
   606                                 instead CYGWIN uses something like <code>/cygdrive/c/path</code>
   607                                 which CYGWIN understands, but only CYGWIN understands.
   608                             </p>
   609                             <p>
   610                                 The OpenJDK build requires CYGWIN version 1.7.16 or newer.
   611                                 Information about CYGWIN can
   612                                 be obtained from the CYGWIN website at
   613                                 <a href="http://www.cygwin.com" target="_blank">www.cygwin.com</a>.
   614                             </p>
   615                             <p>
   616                                 By default CYGWIN doesn't install all the tools required for building
   617                                 the OpenJDK.
   618                                 Along with the default installation, you need to install
   619                                 the following tools.
   620                             <blockquote>
   621                                 <table border="1">
   622                                     <thead>
   623                                         <tr>
   624                                             <td>Binary Name</td>
   625                                             <td>Category</td>
   626                                             <td>Package</td>
   627                                             <td>Description</td>
   628                                         </tr>
   629                                     </thead>
   630                                     <tbody>
   631                                         <tr>
   632                                             <td>ar.exe</td>
   633                                             <td>Devel</td>
   634                                             <td>binutils</td>
   635                                             <td>
   636                                                 The GNU assembler, linker and binary utilities
   637                                             </td>
   638                                         </tr>
   639                                         <tr>
   640                                             <td>make.exe</td>
   641                                             <td>Devel</td>
   642                                             <td>make</td>
   643                                             <td>
   644                                                 The GNU version of the 'make' utility built for CYGWIN
   645                                             </td>
   646                                         </tr>
   647                                         <tr>
   648                                             <td>m4.exe</td>
   649                                             <td>Interpreters</td>
   650                                             <td>m4</td>
   651                                             <td>
   652                                                 GNU implementation of the traditional Unix macro
   653                                                 processor
   654                                             </td>
   655                                         </tr>
   656                                         <tr>
   657                                             <td>cpio.exe</td>
   658                                             <td>Utils</td>
   659                                             <td>cpio</td>
   660                                             <td>
   661                                                 A program to manage archives of files
   662                                             </td>
   663                                         </tr>
   664                                         <tr>
   665                                             <td>gawk.exe</td>
   666                                             <td>Utils</td>
   667                                             <td>awk</td>
   668                                             <td>
   669                                                 Pattern-directed scanning and processing language
   670                                             </td>
   671                                         </tr>
   672                                         <tr>
   673                                             <td>file.exe</td>
   674                                             <td>Utils</td>
   675                                             <td>file</td>
   676                                             <td>
   677                                                 Determines file type using 'magic' numbers
   678                                             </td>
   679                                         </tr>
   680                                         <tr>
   681                                             <td>zip.exe</td>
   682                                             <td>Archive</td>
   683                                             <td>zip</td>
   684                                             <td>
   685                                                 Package and compress (archive) files
   686                                             </td>
   687                                         </tr>
   688                                         <tr>
   689                                             <td>unzip.exe</td>
   690                                             <td>Archive</td>
   691                                             <td>unzip</td>
   692                                             <td>
   693                                                 Extract compressed files in a ZIP archive
   694                                             </td>
   695                                         </tr>
   696                                         <tr>
   697                                             <td>free.exe</td>
   698                                             <td>System</td>
   699                                             <td>procps</td>
   700                                             <td>
   701                                                 Display amount of free and used memory in the system
   702                                             </td>
   703                                         </tr>
   704                                     </tbody>
   705                                 </table>
   706                             </blockquote>
   707                             Note that the CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN
   708                             software on your Windows system.
   709                             CYGWIN provides a
   710                             <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html" target="_blank">FAQ</a> for
   711                             known issues and problems, of particular interest is the
   712                             section on
   713                             <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda" target="_blank">
   714                                 BLODA (applications that interfere with CYGWIN)</a>.
   715                         </blockquote>
   717                         <h6><a name="msys">MinGW/MSYS</a></h6> 
   718                         <blockquote>
   719                             MinGW ("Minimalist GNU for Windows") is a collection of free Windows
   720                             specific header files and import libraries combined with GNU toolsets that
   721                             allow one to produce native Windows programs that do not rely on any
   722                             3rd-party C runtime DLLs. MSYS is a supplement to MinGW which allows building
   723                             applications and programs which rely on traditional UNIX tools to
   724                             be present. Among others this includes tools like <code>bash</code>
   725                             and <code>make</code>.
   726                             See <a href="http://www.mingw.org/wiki/MSYS" target="_blank">MinGW/MSYS</a>
   727                             for more information.
   728                             <p>
   729                                 Like Cygwin, MinGW/MSYS can handle different types of path formats. They
   730                                 are internally converted to paths with forward slashes and drive letters
   731                                 <code>&lt;drive&gt;:</code> replaced by a virtual
   732                                 directory <code>/&lt;drive&gt;</code>.  Additionally, MSYS automatically
   733                                 detects binaries compiled for the MSYS environment and feeds them with the
   734                                 internal, Unix-style path names. If native Windows applications are called
   735                                 from within MSYS programs their path arguments are automatically converted
   736                                 back to Windows style path names with drive letters and backslashes as
   737                                 path separators. This may cause problems for Windows applications which
   738                                 use forward slashes as parameter separator (e.g. <code>cl /nologo /I</code>)
   739                                 because MSYS may wrongly <a href="http://mingw.org/wiki/Posix_path_conversion">
   740                                     replace such parameters by drive letters</a>.
   741                             </p>
   742                             <p>
   743                                 In addition to the tools which will be installed
   744                                 by default, you have
   745                                 to manually install the
   746                                 <code>msys-zip</code> and
   747                                 <code>msys-unzip</code> packages.
   748                                 This can be easily done with the MinGW command line installer:
   749                             <blockquote> 
   750                                 <code>mingw-get.exe install msys-zip</code>
   751                                 <br>
   752                                 <code>mingw-get.exe install msys-unzip</code>
   753                             </blockquote> 
   754                         </blockquote>
   756                     </blockquote>
   758                     <h5><a name="vs2010">Visual Studio 2010 Compilers</a></h5>
   759                     <blockquote>
   760                         <p>
   761                             The 32-bit and 64-bit OpenJDK Windows build requires
   762                             Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 (VS2010) Professional
   763                             Edition or Express compiler.
   764                             The compiler and other tools are expected to reside
   765                             in the location defined by the variable
   766                             <code>VS100COMNTOOLS</code> which
   767                             is set by the Microsoft Visual Studio installer.
   768                         </p>
   769                         <p>
   770                             Only the C++ part of VS2010 is needed.
   771                             Try to let the installation go to the default 
   772                             install directory.
   773                             Always reboot your system after installing VS2010.
   774                             The system environment variable VS100COMNTOOLS 
   775                             should be
   776                             set in your environment.
   777                         </p>
   778                         <p>
   779                             Make sure that TMP and TEMP are also set 
   780                             in the environment
   781                             and refer to Windows paths that exist, 
   782                             like <code>C:\temp</code>,
   783                             not <code>/tmp</code>, not <code>/cygdrive/c/temp</code>, 
   784                             and not <code>C:/temp</code>.
   785                             <code>C:\temp</code> is just an example, 
   786                             it is assumed that this area is
   787                             private to the user, so by default 
   788                             after installs you should
   789                             see a unique user path in these variables.
   790                         </p>
   791                     </blockquote>
   794                 </blockquote> <!-- Windows -->
   796                 <h4><a name="macosx">Mac OS X</a></h4>
   797                 <blockquote>
   798                     Make sure you get the right XCode version.
   799                 </blockquote> <!-- Mac OS X -->
   801             </blockquote>
   803             <!-- ====================================================== -->
   804             <hr>
   805             <h3><a name="configure">Configure</a></h3>
   806             <blockquote>
   807                 The basic invocation of the <code>configure</code> script
   808                 looks like:
   809                 <blockquote>
   810                     <b><code>bash ./configure [<i>options</i>]</code></b>
   811                 </blockquote>
   812                 This will create an output directory containing the
   813                 "configuration" and setup an area for the build result.
   814                 This directory typically looks like:
   815                 <blockquote>
   816                     <b><code>build/linux-x64-normal-server-release</code></b>
   817                 </blockquote>
   818                 <code>configure</code> will try to figure out what system you are running on 
   819                 and where all necessary build components are.
   820                 If you have all prerequisites for building installed,
   821                 it should find everything.
   822                 If it fails to detect any component automatically,
   823                 it will exit and inform you about the problem.
   824                 When this happens, read more below in
   825                 <a href="#configureoptions">the <code>configure</code> options</a>.
   826                 <p>
   827                     Some examples:
   828                 </p>
   829                 <table border="1">
   830                     <thead>
   831                         <tr>
   832                             <th>Description</th>
   833                             <th>Configure Command Line</th>
   834                         </tr>
   835                     </thead>                   
   836                     <tbody>
   837                         <tr>
   838                             <td>Windows 32bit build with freetype specified</td>
   839                             <td>
   840                                 <code>bash ./configure --with-freetype=/cygdrive/c/freetype-i586 --with-target-bits=32</code>   
   841                             </td>
   842                         </tr>
   843                         <tr>
   844                             <td>Debug 64bit Build</td>
   845                             <td>
   846                                 <code>bash ./configure --enable-debug --with-target-bits=64</code>   
   847                             </td>
   848                         </tr>
   849                     </tbody>
   850                 </table>
   852                 <!-- ====================================================== -->
   853                 <h4><a name="configureoptions">Configure Options</a></h4>
   854                 <blockquote>
   855                     Complete details on all the OpenJDK <code>configure</code> options can
   856                     be seen with:
   857                     <blockquote>
   858                         <b><code>bash ./configure --help=short</code></b>
   859                     </blockquote>
   860                     Use <code>-help</code> to see all the <code>configure</code> options
   861                     available.
   863                     You can generate any number of different configurations,
   864                     e.g. debug, release, 32, 64, etc.
   866                     Some of the more commonly used <code>configure</code> options are:
   868                     <table border="1">
   869                         <thead>
   870                             <tr>
   871                                 <th width="300">OpenJDK Configure Option</th>
   872                                 <th>Description</th>
   873                             </tr>
   874                         </thead>                   
   875                         <tbody>
   876                             <tr>
   877                                 <td><b><code>--enable-debug</code></b></td>
   878                                 <td>
   879                                     set the debug level to fastdebug (this is a shorthand for
   880                                     <code>--with-debug-level=fastdebug</code>)
   881                                 </td>
   882                             </tr>
   883                             <tr>
   884                                 <td><b><code>--with-alsa=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   885                                 <td>
   886                                     select the location of the
   887                                     <a name="alsa">Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA)</a>
   888                                     <br>                        
   889                                     Version 0.9.1 or newer of the ALSA files are
   890                                     required for building the OpenJDK on Linux.
   891                                     These Linux files are usually available from an "alsa"
   892                                     of "libasound"
   893                                     development package,
   894                                     and it's highly recommended that you try and use
   895                                     the package provided by the particular version of Linux that
   896                                     you are using.
   897                                 </td>
   898                             </tr>   
   899                             <tr>
   900                                 <td><b><code>--with-boot-jdk=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   901                                 <td>
   902                                     select the <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>
   903                                 </td>
   904                             </tr>                      
   905                             <tr>
   906                                 <td><b><code>--with-boot-jdk-jvmargs=</code></b>"<i>args</i>"</td>
   907                                 <td>
   908                                     provide the JVM options to be used to run the 
   909                                     <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>
   910                                 </td>
   911                             </tr>
   912                             <tr>
   913                                 <td><b><code>--with-cacerts=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   914                                 <td>
   915                                     select the path to the cacerts file.
   916                                     <br>
   917                                     See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_Authority" target="_blank">
   918                                         http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_Authority</a>
   919                                     for a better understanding of the Certificate Authority (CA).
   920                                     A certificates file named "cacerts"
   921                                     represents a system-wide keystore with CA certificates. 
   922                                     In JDK and JRE
   923                                     binary bundles, the "cacerts" file contains root CA certificates from
   924                                     several public CAs (e.g., VeriSign, Thawte, and Baltimore).
   925                                     The source contain a cacerts file
   926                                     without CA root certificates. 
   927                                     Formal JDK builders will need to secure
   928                                     permission from each public CA and include the certificates into their
   929                                     own custom cacerts file. 
   930                                     Failure to provide a populated cacerts file
   931                                     will result in verification errors of a certificate chain during runtime.
   932                                     By default an empty cacerts file is provided and that should be
   933                                     fine for most JDK developers.
   934                                 </td>
   935                             </tr>    
   936                             <tr>
   937                                 <td><b><code>--with-cups=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   938                                 <td>
   939                                     select the CUPS install location
   940                                     <br>
   941                                     The
   942                                     <a name="cups">Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS) Headers</a>
   943                                     are required for building the 
   944                                     OpenJDK on Solaris and Linux.
   945                                     The Solaris header files can be obtained by installing 
   946                                     the package <strong>SFWcups</strong> from the Solaris Software
   947                                     Companion CD/DVD, these often will be installed into the
   948                                     directory <code>/opt/sfw/cups</code>.
   949                                     <br>
   950                                     The CUPS header files can always be downloaded from
   951                                     <a href="http://www.cups.org" target="_blank">www.cups.org</a>.
   952                                 </td>
   953                             </tr>    
   954                             <tr>
   955                                 <td><b><code>--with-cups-include=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   956                                 <td>
   957                                     select the CUPS include directory location
   958                                 </td>
   959                             </tr>                           
   960                             <tr>
   961                                 <td><b><code>--with-debug-level=</code></b><i>level</i></td>
   962                                 <td>
   963                                     select the debug information level of release,
   964                                     fastdebug, or slowdebug
   965                                 </td>
   966                             </tr>                          
   967                             <tr>
   968                                 <td><b><code>--with-dev-kit=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   969                                 <td>
   970                                     select location of the compiler install or
   971                                     developer install location
   972                                 </td>
   973                             </tr>       
   974                             <tr>
   975                                 <td><b><code>--with-dxsdk=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   976                                 <td>
   977                                     select location of the Windows Direct X SDK install
   978                                     <br>
   979                                     The <a name="dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX 9.0 SDK</a>
   980                                     header files and libraries
   981                                     from the Summer 2004 edition
   982                                     are required for building OpenJDK.
   983                                     This SDK can be downloaded from 
   984                                     <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=FD044A42-9912-42A3-9A9E-D857199F888E&amp;displaylang=en" target="_blank">
   985                                         Microsoft DirectX 9.0 SDK (Summer 2004)</a>.
   986                                     If the link above becomes obsolete, the SDK can be found from 
   987                                     <a href="http://download.microsoft.com" target="_blank">the Microsoft Download Site</a>
   988                                     (search with "DirectX 9.0 SDK Update Summer 2004"). 
   989                                     Installation usually will set the environment variable
   990                                     <code>DXSDK_DIR</code> to it's install location.
   991                                 </td>
   992                             </tr>       
   993                             <tr>
   994                                 <td><b><code>--with-freetype=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
   995                                 <td>
   996                                     select the freetype files to use.
   997                                     <br>
   998                                     Expecting the
   999                                     <a name="freetype">freetype</a> libraries under
  1000                                     <code>lib/</code> and the
  1001                                     headers under <code>include/</code>.
  1002                                     <br>
  1003                                     Version 2.3 or newer of FreeType is required.
  1004                                     On Unix systems required files can be available as part of your
  1005                                     distribution (while you still may need to upgrade them).
  1006                                     Note that you need development version of package that 
  1007                                     includes both the FreeType library and header files.
  1008                                     <br>
  1009                                     You can always download latest FreeType version from the
  1010                                     <a href="http://www.freetype.org" target="_blank">FreeType website</a>.
  1011                                     <br>
  1012                                     Building the freetype 2 libraries from scratch is also possible,
  1013                                     however on Windows refer to the
  1014                                     <a href="http://freetype.freedesktop.org/wiki/FreeType_DLL">
  1015                                         Windows FreeType DLL build instructions</a>.
  1016                                     <br>
  1017                                     Note that by default FreeType is built with byte code hinting
  1018                                     support disabled due to licensing restrictions.
  1019                                     In this case, text appearance and metrics are expected to
  1020                                     differ from Sun's official JDK build.
  1021                                     See
  1022                                     <a href="http://freetype.sourceforge.net/freetype2/index.html">
  1023                                         the SourceForge FreeType2 Home Page
  1024                                     </a>
  1025                                     for more information.
  1026                                 </td>
  1027                             </tr>                          
  1028                             <tr>
  1029                                 <td><b><code>--with-import-hotspot=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
  1030                                 <td>
  1031                                     select the location to find hotspot
  1032                                     binaries from a previous build to avoid building
  1033                                     hotspot
  1034                                 </td>
  1035                             </tr>                          
  1036                             <tr>
  1037                                 <td><b><code>--with-target-bits=</code></b><i>arg</i></td>
  1038                                 <td>
  1039                                     select 32 or 64 bit build
  1040                                 </td>
  1041                             </tr>                           
  1042                             <tr>
  1043                                 <td><b><code>--with-jvm-variants=</code></b><i>variants</i></td>
  1044                                 <td>
  1045                                     select the JVM variants to build from, comma
  1046                                     separated list that can include:
  1047                                     server, client, kernel, zero and zeroshark
  1048                                 </td>
  1049                             </tr>                           
  1050                             <tr>
  1051                                 <td><b><code>--with-memory-size=</code></b><i>size</i></td>
  1052                                 <td>
  1053                                     select the RAM size that GNU make will think
  1054                                     this system has
  1055                                 </td>
  1056                             </tr>                            
  1057                             <tr>
  1058                                 <td><a name="msvcrNN"><b><code>--with-msvcr-dll=</code></b><i>path</i></a></td>
  1059                                 <td>
  1060                                     select the <code>msvcr100.dll</code>
  1061                                     file to include in the
  1062                                     Windows builds (C/C++ runtime library for
  1063                                     Visual Studio).
  1064                                     <br>
  1065                                     This is usually picked up automatically
  1066                                     from the redist
  1067                                     directories of Visual Studio 2010.
  1068                                 </td>
  1069                             </tr>                            
  1070                             <tr>
  1071                                 <td><b><code>--with-num-cores=</code></b><i>cores</i></td>
  1072                                 <td>
  1073                                     select the number of cores to use (processor
  1074                                     count or CPU count)
  1075                                 </td>
  1076                             </tr>
  1077                             <tr>
  1078                                 <td><b><code>--with-x=</code></b><i>path</i></td>
  1079                                 <td>
  1080                                     select the location of the X11 and xrender files.
  1081                                     <br>
  1082                                     The
  1083                                     <a name="xrender">XRender Extension Headers</a>
  1084                                     are required for building the
  1085                                     OpenJDK on Solaris and Linux.
  1086                                     <br>
  1087                                     The Linux header files are usually available from a "Xrender"
  1088                                     development package, it's recommended that you try and use
  1089                                     the package provided by the particular distribution of Linux that
  1090                                     you are using.
  1091                                     <br>
  1092                                     The Solaris XRender header files is
  1093                                     included with the other X11 header files
  1094                                     in the package <strong>SFWxwinc</strong>
  1095                                     on new enough versions of
  1096                                     Solaris and will be installed in
  1097                                     <code>/usr/X11/include/X11/extensions/Xrender.h</code> or
  1098                                     <code>/usr/openwin/share/include/X11/extensions/Xrender.h</code>
  1099                                 </td>
  1100                             </tr>
  1101                         </tbody>
  1102                     </table>
  1103                 </blockquote>
  1105             </blockquote>
  1107             <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1108             <hr>
  1109             <h3><a name="make">Make</a></h3>
  1110             <blockquote>
  1111                 The basic invocation of the <code>make</code> utility
  1112                 looks like:
  1113                 <blockquote>
  1114                     <b><code>make all</code></b>
  1115                 </blockquote>
  1116                 This will start the build to the output directory containing the
  1117                 "configuration" that was created by the <code>configure</code>
  1118                 script. Run <code>make help</code> for more information on
  1119                 the available targets.
  1120                 <br>
  1121                 There are some of the make targets that
  1122                 are of general interest:
  1123                 <table border="1">
  1124                     <thead>
  1125                         <tr>
  1126                             <th>Make Target</th>
  1127                             <th>Description</th>
  1128                         </tr>
  1129                     </thead>                   
  1130                     <tbody>
  1131                         <tr>
  1132                             <td><i>empty</i></td>
  1133                             <td>build everything but no images</td>
  1134                         </tr>
  1135                         <tr>
  1136                             <td><b><code>all</code></b></td>
  1137                             <td>build everything including images</td>
  1138                         </tr>
  1139                         <tr>
  1140                             <td><b><code>all-conf</code></b></td>
  1141                             <td>build all configurations</td>
  1142                         </tr>
  1143                         <tr>
  1144                             <td><b><code>images</code></b></td>
  1145                             <td>create complete j2sdk and j2re images</td>
  1146                         </tr>
  1147                         <tr>
  1148                             <td><b><code>install</code></b></td>
  1149                             <td>install the generated images locally, 
  1150                                 typically in <code>/usr/local</code></td>
  1151                         </tr>
  1152                         <tr>
  1153                             <td><b><code>clean</code></b></td>
  1154                             <td>remove all files generated by make, 
  1155                                 but not those generated by <code>configure</code></td>
  1156                         </tr>
  1157                         <tr>
  1158                             <td><b><code>dist-clean</code></b></td>
  1159                             <td>remove all files generated by both 
  1160                                 and <code>configure</code> (basically killing the configuration)</td>
  1161                         </tr>
  1162                         <tr>
  1163                             <td><b><code>help</code></b></td>
  1164                             <td>give some help on using <code>make</code>, 
  1165                                 including some interesting make targets</td>
  1166                         </tr>
  1167                     </tbody>
  1168                 </table>
  1169             </blockquote>
  1170         </blockquote>
  1172         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1173         <hr>
  1174         <h2><a name="testing">Testing</a></h2>
  1175         <blockquote>
  1176             When the build is completed, you should see the generated
  1177             binaries and associated files in the <code>j2sdk-image</code> 
  1178             directory in the output directory. 
  1179             In particular, the 
  1180             <code>build/<i>*</i>/images/j2sdk-image/bin</code>
  1181             directory should contain executables for the 
  1182             OpenJDK tools and utilities for that configuration.
  1183             The testing tool <code>jtreg</code> will be needed
  1184             and can be found at:
  1185             <a href="http://openjdk.java.net/jtreg/" target="_blank">
  1186                 the jtreg site</a>.
  1187             The provided regression tests in the repositories
  1188             can be run with the command:
  1189             <blockquote>
  1190                 <code><b>cd test &amp;&amp; make PRODUCT_HOME=`pwd`/../build/*/images/j2sdk-image all</b></code>
  1191             </blockquote>
  1192         </blockquote>
  1194         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1195         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1196         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1197         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1198         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1199         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1200         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1201         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1202         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1204         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1205         <hr>
  1206         <h2><a name="hints">Appendix A: Hints and Tips</a></h2>
  1207         <blockquote>
  1209             <h3><a name="faq">FAQ</a></h3>
  1210             <blockquote>
  1212                 <p>
  1213                     <b>Q:</b> The <code>generated-configure.sh</code> file looks horrible! 
  1214                     How are you going to edit it?
  1215                     <br>
  1216                     <b>A:</b> The <code>generated-configure.sh</code> file is generated (think
  1217                     "compiled") by the autoconf tools. The source code is
  1218                     in <code>configure.ac</code> and various .m4 files in common/autoconf,
  1219                     which are much more readable.
  1220                 </p>
  1222                 <p>
  1223                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1224                     Why is the <code>generated-configure.sh</code> file checked in, 
  1225                     if it is generated?
  1226                     <br>
  1227                     <b>A:</b> 
  1228                     If it was not generated, every user would need to have the autoconf 
  1229                     tools installed, and re-generate the <code>configure</code> file
  1230                     as the first step. 
  1231                     Our goal is to minimize the work needed to be done by the user 
  1232                     to start building OpenJDK, and to minimize
  1233                     the number of external dependencies required.
  1234                 </p>
  1236                 <p>
  1237                     <b>Q:</b>
  1238                     Do you require a specific version of autoconf for regenerating
  1239                     <code>generated-configure.sh</code>?
  1240                     <br>
  1241                     <b>A:</b>
  1242                     Yes, version 2.69 is required and should be easy
  1243                     enough to aquire on all supported operating
  1244                     systems.  The reason for this is to avoid
  1245                     large spurious changes in <code>generated-configure.sh</code>.
  1246                 </p>
  1248                 <p>
  1249                     <b>Q:</b>
  1250                     How do you regenerate <code>generated-configure.sh</code>
  1251                     after making changes to the input files?
  1252                     <br>
  1253                     <b>A:</b>
  1254                     Regnerating <code>generated-configure.sh</code>
  1255                     should always be done using the
  1256                     script <code>common/autoconf/autogen.sh</code> to
  1257                     ensure that the correct files get updated. This
  1258                     script should also be run after mercurial tries to
  1259                     merge <code>generated-configure.sh</code> as a
  1260                     merge of the generated file is not guaranteed to
  1261                     be correct.
  1262                 </p>
  1264                 <p>
  1265                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1266                     What are the files in <code>common/makefiles/support/*</code> for? 
  1267                     They look like gibberish.
  1268                     <br>
  1269                     <b>A:</b>
  1270                     They are a somewhat ugly hack to compensate for command line length
  1271                     limitations on certain platforms (Windows, Solaris).
  1272                     Due to a combination of limitations in make and the shell, 
  1273                     command lines containing too many files will not work properly. 
  1274                     These
  1275                     helper files are part of an elaborate hack that will compress the
  1276                     command line in the makefile and then uncompress it safely. 
  1277                     We're
  1278                     not proud of it, but it does fix the problem. 
  1279                     If you have any better suggestions, we're all ears! :-)
  1280                 </p>
  1282                 <p>
  1283                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1284                     I want to see the output of the commands that make runs, 
  1285                     like in the old build. How do I do that?
  1286                     <br>
  1287                     <b>A:</b> 
  1288                     You specify the <code>LOG</code> variable to make. There are
  1289                     several log levels:
  1290                 </p>
  1291                 <blockquote>
  1292                     <ul>
  1293                         <li>
  1294                             <b><code>warn</code></b> &mdash; Default and very quiet.
  1295                         </li>
  1296                         <li>
  1297                             <b><code>info</code></b> &mdash; Shows more progress information
  1298                             than warn.
  1299                         </li>
  1300                         <li>
  1301                             <b><code>debug</code></b> &mdash; Echos all command lines and
  1302                             prints all macro calls for compilation definitions.
  1303                         </li>
  1304                         <li>
  1305                             <b><code>trace</code></b> &mdash; Echos all $(shell) command
  1306                             lines as well.
  1307                         </li>
  1308                     </ul>
  1309                 </blockquote>
  1311                 <p>
  1312                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1313                     When do I have to re-run <code>configure</code>?
  1314                     <br>
  1315                     <b>A:</b> 
  1316                     Normally you will run <code>configure</code> only once for creating a 
  1317                     configuration. 
  1318                     You need to re-run configuration only if you want to change any
  1319                     configuration options, 
  1320                     or if you pull down changes to the <code>configure</code> script.
  1321                 </p>
  1323                 <p>
  1324                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1325                     I have added a new source file. Do I need to modify the makefiles?
  1326                     <br>
  1327                     <b>A:</b> 
  1328                     Normally, no. If you want to create e.g. a new native
  1329                     library, 
  1330                     you will need to modify the makefiles. But for normal file
  1331                     additions or removals, no changes are needed. There are certan
  1332                     exceptions for some native libraries where the source files are spread
  1333                     over many directories which also contain sources for other
  1334                     libraries. In these cases it was simply easier to create include lists
  1335                     rather than excludes.
  1336                 </p>
  1338                 <p>
  1339                     <b>Q:</b>
  1340                     When I run <code>configure --help</code>, I see many strange options, 
  1341                     like <code>--dvidir</code>. What is this?
  1342                     <br>
  1343                     <b>A:</b> 
  1344                     Configure provides a slew of options by default, to all projects 
  1345                     that use autoconf. Most of them are not used in OpenJDK,
  1346                     so you can safely ignore them. To list only OpenJDK specific features, 
  1347                     use <code>configure --help=short</code> instead.
  1348                 </p>
  1350                 <p>
  1351                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1352                     <code>configure</code> provides OpenJDK-specific features such as
  1353                     <code>--with-builddeps-server</code> that are not
  1354                     described in this document. What about those? 
  1355                     <br>
  1356                     <b>A:</b>
  1357                     Try them out if you like! But be aware that most of these are 
  1358                     experimental features. 
  1359                     Many of them don't do anything at all at the moment; the option 
  1360                     is just a placeholder. Others depend on
  1361                     pieces of code or infrastructure that is currently 
  1362                     not ready for prime time.
  1363                 </p>
  1365                 <p>
  1366                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1367                     How will you make sure you don't break anything?
  1368                     <br>
  1369                     <b>A:</b> 
  1370                     We have a script that compares the result of the new build system
  1371                     with the result of the old. For most part, we aim for (and achieve)
  1372                     byte-by-byte identical output. There are however technical issues 
  1373                     with e.g. native binaries, which might differ in a byte-by-byte 
  1374                     comparison, even
  1375                     when building twice with the old build system. 
  1376                     For these, we compare relevant aspects 
  1377                     (e.g. the symbol table and file size). 
  1378                     Note that we still don't have 100%
  1379                     equivalence, but we're close.
  1380                 </p>
  1382                 <p>
  1383                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1384                     I noticed this thing X in the build that looks very broken by design. 
  1385                     Why don't you fix it?
  1386                     <br>
  1387                     <b>A:</b>
  1388                     Our goal is to produce a build output that is as close as 
  1389                     technically possible to the old build output. 
  1390                     If things were weird in the old build,
  1391                     they will be weird in the new build. 
  1392                     Often, things were weird before due to obscurity, 
  1393                     but in the new build system the weird stuff comes up to the surface.
  1394                     The plan is to attack these things at a later stage, 
  1395                     after the new build system is established.
  1396                 </p>
  1398                 <p>
  1399                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1400                     The code in the new build system is not that well-structured.
  1401                     Will you fix this?
  1402                     <br>
  1403                     <b>A:</b>
  1404                     Yes! The new build system has grown bit by bit as we converted 
  1405                     the old system. When all of the old build system is converted,
  1406                     we can take a step back and clean up the structure of the new build
  1407                     system. Some of this we plan to do before replacing the old build
  1408                     system and some will need to wait until after.
  1409                 </p>
  1411                 <p>
  1412                     <b>Q:</b> 
  1413                     Is anything able to use the results of the new build's default make target?
  1414                     <br>
  1415                     <b>A:</b> 
  1416                     Yes, this is the minimal (or roughly minimal) 
  1417                     set of compiled output needed for a developer to actually 
  1418                     execute the newly built JDK. The idea is that in an incremental 
  1419                     development fashion, when doing a normal make, 
  1420                     you should only spend time recompiling what's changed 
  1421                     (making it purely incremental) and only do the work that's 
  1422                     needed to actually run and test your code.
  1423                     The packaging stuff that is part of the <code>images</code>
  1424                     target is not needed for a normal developer who wants to
  1425                     test his new code. Even if it's quite fast, it's still unnecessary. 
  1426                     We're targeting sub-second incremental rebuilds! ;-) 
  1427                     (Or, well, at least single-digit seconds...)
  1428                 </p>
  1430                 <p>
  1431                     <b>Q:</b>
  1432                     I usually set a specific environment variable when building, 
  1433                     but I can't find the equivalent in the new build. 
  1434                     What should I do?
  1435                     <br>
  1436                     <b>A:</b>
  1437                     It might very well be that we have neglected to add support for
  1438                     an option that was actually used from outside the build system.
  1439                     Email us and we will add support for it!
  1440                 </p>
  1442             </blockquote>
  1444             <h3><a name="performance">Build Performance Tips</a></h3>
  1445             <blockquote>
  1447                 <p>Building OpenJDK requires a lot of horsepower. 
  1448                     Some of the build tools can be adjusted to utilize more or less
  1449                     of resources such as
  1450                     parallel threads and memory. 
  1451                     The <code>configure</code> script analyzes your system and selects reasonable 
  1452                     values for such options based on your hardware.
  1453                     If you encounter resource problems, such as out of memory conditions, 
  1454                     you can modify the detected values with:</p>
  1456                 <ul>
  1457                     <li>
  1458                         <b><code>--with-num-cores</code></b> 
  1459                         &mdash; 
  1460                         number of cores in the build system,
  1461                         e.g. <code>--with-num-cores=8</code>
  1462                     </li>
  1463                     <li>
  1464                         <b><code>--with-memory-size</code></b> 
  1465                         &mdash; memory (in MB) available in the build system,
  1466                         e.g. <code>--with-memory-size=1024</code>
  1467                     </li>
  1468                 </ul>
  1470                 <p>It might also be necessary to specify the JVM arguments passed 
  1471                     to the Bootstrap JDK, using e.g.
  1472                     <code>--with-boot-jdk-jvmargs="-Xmx8G -enableassertions"</code>. 
  1473                     Doing this will override the default JVM arguments 
  1474                     passed to the Bootstrap JDK.</p>
  1477                 <p>One of the top goals of the new build system is to improve the
  1478                     build performance and decrease the time needed to build. This will
  1479                     soon also apply to the java compilation when the Smart Javac wrapper
  1480                     is making its way into jdk8. It can be tried in the build-infra
  1481                     repository already. You are likely to find that the new build system
  1482                     is faster than the old one even without this feature.</p>
  1484                 <p>At the end of a successful execution of <code>configure</code>, 
  1485                     you will get a performance summary, 
  1486                     indicating how well the build will perform. Here you will
  1487                     also get performance hints. 
  1488                     If you want to build fast, pay attention to those!</p>
  1490                 <h4>Building with ccache</h4>
  1492                 <p>A simple way to radically speed up compilation of native code
  1493                     (typically hotspot and native libraries in JDK) is to install
  1494                     ccache. This will cache and reuse prior compilation results, if the
  1495                     source code is unchanged. However, ccache versions prior to 3.1.4
  1496                     does not work correctly with the precompiled headers used in
  1497                     OpenJDK. So if your platform supports ccache at 3.1.4 or later, we
  1498                     highly recommend installing it. This is currently only supported on
  1499                     linux.</p> 
  1501                 <h4>Building on local disk</h4>
  1503                 <p>If you are using network shares, e.g. via NFS, for your source code, 
  1504                     make sure the build directory is situated on local disk. 
  1505                     The performance
  1506                     penalty is extremely high for building on a network share, 
  1507                     close to unusable.</p>
  1509                 <h4>Building only one JVM</h4>
  1511                 <p>The old build builds multiple JVMs on 32-bit systems (client and
  1512                     server; and on Windows kernel as well). In the new build we have
  1513                     changed this default to only build server when it's available. This
  1514                     improves build times for those not interested in multiple JVMs. To
  1515                     mimic the old behavior on platforms that support it, 
  1516                     use <code>--with-jvm-variants=client,server</code>.</p>
  1518                 <h4>Selecting the number of cores to build on</h4>
  1520                 <p>By default, <code>configure</code> will analyze your machine and run the make
  1521                     process in parallel with as many threads as you have cores. This
  1522                     behavior can be overridden, either "permanently" (on a <code>configure</code>
  1523                     basis) using <code>--with-num-cores=N</code> or for a single build
  1524                     only (on a make basis), using <code>make JOBS=N</code>.</p>
  1526                 <p>If you want to make a slower build just this time, to save some CPU
  1527                     power for other processes, you can run
  1528                     e.g. <code>make JOBS=2</code>. This will force the makefiles
  1529                     to only run 2 parallel processes, or even <code>make JOBS=1</code>
  1530                     which will disable parallelism.</p>
  1532                 <p>If you want to have it the other way round, namely having slow 
  1533                     builds default and override with fast if you're
  1534                     impatient, you should call <code>configure</code> with 
  1535                     <code>--with-num-cores=2</code>, making 2 the default. 
  1536                     If you want to run with more
  1537                     cores, run <code>make JOBS=8</code></p>
  1539             </blockquote>
  1541             <h3><a name="troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a></h3>
  1542             <blockquote>
  1544                 <h4>Solving build problems</h4>
  1546                 <blockquote>
  1547                     If the build fails (and it's not due to a compilation error in 
  1548                     a source file you've changed), the first thing you should do
  1549                     is to re-run the build with more verbosity. 
  1550                     Do this by adding <code>LOG=debug</code> to your make command line.
  1551                     <br>
  1552                     The build log (with both stdout and stderr intermingled,
  1553                     basically the same as you see on your console) can be found as
  1554                     <code>build.log</code> in your build directory.
  1555                     <br>
  1556                     You can ask for help on build problems with the new build system 
  1557                     on either the
  1558                     <a href="http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/build-dev">
  1559                         build-dev</a>
  1560                     or the
  1561                     <a href="http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/build-infra-dev">
  1562                         build-infra-dev</a>
  1563                     mailing lists. Please include the relevant parts
  1564                     of the build log.
  1565                     <br>
  1566                     A build can fail for any number of reasons. 
  1567                     Most failures
  1568                     are a result of trying to build in an environment in which all the
  1569                     pre-build requirements have not been met. 
  1570                     The first step in
  1571                     troubleshooting a build failure is to recheck that you have satisfied
  1572                     all the pre-build requirements for your platform.
  1573                     Scanning the <code>configure</code> log is a good first step, making
  1574                     sure that what it found makes sense for your system.
  1575                     Look for strange error messages or any difficulties that
  1576                     <code>configure</code> had in finding things.
  1577                     <br>
  1578                     Some of the more common problems with builds are briefly
  1579                     described
  1580                     below, with suggestions for remedies.
  1581                     <ul>
  1582                         <li>
  1583                             <b>Corrupted Bundles on Windows:</b>
  1584                             <blockquote>
  1585                                 Some virus scanning software has been known to 
  1586                                 corrupt the
  1587                                 downloading of zip bundles.
  1588                                 It may be necessary to disable the 'on access' or 
  1589                                 'real time'
  1590                                 virus scanning features to prevent this corruption.
  1591                                 This type of "real time" virus scanning can also 
  1592                                 slow down the
  1593                                 build process significantly.
  1594                                 Temporarily disabling the feature, or excluding the build
  1595                                 output directory may be necessary to get correct and
  1596                                 faster builds.
  1597                             </blockquote>
  1598                         </li>
  1599                         <li>
  1600                             <b>Slow Builds:</b>
  1601                             <blockquote>
  1602                                 If your build machine seems to be overloaded from too many
  1603                                 simultaneous C++ compiles, try setting the 
  1604                                 <code>JOBS=1</code> on the <code>make</code> command line.
  1605                                 Then try increasing the count slowly to an acceptable
  1606                                 level for your system. Also:
  1607                                 <blockquote>
  1608                                     Creating the javadocs can be very slow, 
  1609                                     if you are running
  1610                                     javadoc, consider skipping that step.
  1611                                     <br>
  1612                                     Faster CPUs, more RAM, and a faster DISK usually helps.
  1613                                     The VM build tends to be CPU intensive 
  1614                                     (many C++ compiles),
  1615                                     and the rest of the JDK will often be disk intensive.
  1616                                     <br>
  1617                                     Faster compiles are possible using a tool called
  1618                                     <a href="http://ccache.samba.org/" target="_blank">ccache</a>.
  1619                                 </blockquote>
  1620                             </blockquote>
  1621                         </li>
  1622                         <li>
  1623                             <b>File time issues:</b>
  1624                             <blockquote>
  1625                                 If you see warnings that refer to file time stamps, e.g.
  1626                                 <blockquote>
  1627                                     <i>Warning message:</i><code> 
  1628                                         File `xxx' has modification time in
  1629                                         the future.</code>
  1630                                     <br>
  1631                                     <i>Warning message:</i> <code> Clock skew detected. 
  1632                                         Your build may
  1633                                         be incomplete.</code>
  1634                                 </blockquote>
  1635                                 These warnings can occur when the clock on the build 
  1636                                 machine is out of
  1637                                 sync with the timestamps on the source files. 
  1638                                 Other errors, apparently
  1639                                 unrelated but in fact caused by the clock skew, 
  1640                                 can occur along with
  1641                                 the clock skew warnings. 
  1642                                 These secondary errors may tend to obscure the
  1643                                 fact that the true root cause of the problem 
  1644                                 is an out-of-sync clock.
  1645                                 <p>
  1646                                     If you see these warnings, reset the clock on the
  1647                                     build
  1648                                     machine, run "<code><i>gmake</i> clobber</code>" 
  1649                                     or delete the directory
  1650                                     containing the build output, and restart the 
  1651                                     build from the beginning.
  1652                             </blockquote>
  1653                         </li>
  1654                         <li>
  1655                             <b>Error message: 
  1656                                 <code>Trouble writing out table to disk</code></b>
  1657                             <blockquote>
  1658                                 Increase the amount of swap space on your build machine.
  1659                                 This  could be caused by overloading the system and
  1660                                 it may be necessary to use:
  1661                                 <blockquote>
  1662                                     <code>make JOBS=1</code>
  1663                                 </blockquote>
  1664                                 to reduce the load on the system.
  1665                             </blockquote>
  1666                         </li>
  1667                         <li>
  1668                             <b>Error Message: 
  1669                                 <code>libstdc++ not found:</code></b>
  1670                             <blockquote>
  1671                                 This is caused by a missing libstdc++.a library.
  1672                                 This is installed as part of a specific package
  1673                                 (e.g. libstdc++.so.devel.386).
  1674                                 By default some 64-bit Linux versions (e.g. Fedora)
  1675                                 only install the 64-bit version of the libstdc++ package.
  1676                                 Various parts of the JDK build require a static
  1677                                 link of the C++ runtime libraries to allow for maximum
  1678                                 portability of the built images.
  1679                             </blockquote>
  1680                         </li>
  1681                         <li>
  1682                             <b>Linux Error Message:
  1683                                 <code>cannot restore segment prot after reloc</code></b>
  1684                             <blockquote>
  1685                                 This is probably an issue with SELinux (See
  1686                                 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SELinux" target="_blank">
  1687                                     http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SELinux</a>).
  1688                                 Parts of the VM is built without the <code>-fPIC</code> for
  1689                                 performance reasons.
  1690                                 <p>
  1691                                     To completely disable SELinux:
  1692                                 <ol>
  1693                                     <li><code>$ su root</code></li>
  1694                                     <li><code># system-config-securitylevel</code></li>
  1695                                     <li><code>In the window that appears, select the SELinux tab</code></li>
  1696                                     <li><code>Disable SELinux</code></li>
  1697                                 </ol>
  1698                                 <p>
  1699                                     Alternatively, instead of completely disabling it you could
  1700                                     disable just this one check.
  1701                                 <ol>
  1702                                     <li>Select System->Administration->SELinux Management</li>
  1703                                     <li>In the SELinux Management Tool which appears,
  1704                                         select "Boolean" from the menu on the left</li>
  1705                                     <li>Expand the "Memory Protection" group</li>
  1706                                     <li>Check the first item, labeled
  1707                                         "Allow all unconfined executables to use 
  1708                                         libraries requiring text relocation ..."</li>
  1709                                 </ol>
  1710                             </blockquote>
  1711                         </li>
  1712                         <li>
  1713                             <b>Windows Error Messages:</b>
  1714                             <br>
  1715                             <code>*** fatal error - couldn't allocate heap, ... </code>
  1716                             <br>
  1717                             <code>rm fails with "Directory not empty"</code>
  1718                             <br>
  1719                             <code>unzip fails with "cannot create ... Permission denied"</code>
  1720                             <br>
  1721                             <code>unzip fails with "cannot create ... Error 50"</code>
  1722                             <br>
  1723                             <blockquote>
  1724                                 The CYGWIN software can conflict with other non-CYGWIN
  1725                                 software. See the CYGWIN FAQ section on
  1726                                 <a href="http://cygwin.com/faq/faq.using.html#faq.using.bloda" target="_blank">
  1727                                     BLODA (applications that interfere with CYGWIN)</a>.
  1728                             </blockquote>
  1729                         </li>
  1730                         <li>
  1731                             <b>Windows Error Message: <code>spawn failed</code></b>
  1732                             <blockquote>
  1733                                 Try rebooting the system, or there could be some kind of
  1734                                 issue with the disk or disk partition being used.
  1735                                 Sometimes it comes with a "Permission Denied" message.
  1736                             </blockquote>
  1737                         </li>
  1738                     </ul>
  1739                 </blockquote>
  1741             </blockquote> <!-- Troubleshooting -->
  1743         </blockquote> <!-- Appendix A -->
  1745         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1746         <hr>
  1747         <h2><a name="gmake">Appendix B: GNU make</a></h2>
  1748         <blockquote>
  1750             The Makefiles in the OpenJDK are only valid when used with the 
  1751             GNU version of the utility command <code>make</code>
  1752             (usually called <code>gmake</code> on Solaris).
  1753             A few notes about using GNU make:
  1754             <ul>
  1755                 <li>
  1756                     You need GNU make version 3.81 or newer.
  1757                     If the GNU make utility on your systems is not
  1758                     3.81 or newer,
  1759                     see <a href="#buildgmake">"Building GNU make"</a>.
  1760                 </li>
  1761                 <li>
  1762                     Place the location of the GNU make binary in the
  1763                     <code>PATH</code>. 
  1764                 </li>
  1765                 <li>
  1766                     <strong>Solaris:</strong>
  1767                     Do NOT use <code>/usr/bin/make</code> on Solaris.
  1768                     If your Solaris system has the software
  1769                     from the Solaris Developer Companion CD installed, 
  1770                     you should try and use <code>gmake</code>
  1771                     which will be located in either the
  1772                     <code>/usr/bin</code>, <code>/opt/sfw/bin</code> or 
  1773                     <code>/usr/sfw/bin</code> directory.
  1774                 </li>
  1775                 <li>
  1776                     <strong>Windows:</strong>
  1777                     Make sure you start your build inside a bash shell.
  1778                 </li>
  1779                 <li>
  1780                     <strong>Mac OS X:</strong>
  1781                     The XCode "command line tools" must be installed on your Mac.
  1782                 </li>
  1783             </ul>
  1784             <p>
  1785                 Information on GNU make, and access to ftp download sites, are
  1786                 available on the
  1787                 <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/make/make.html" target="_blank">
  1788                     GNU make web site
  1789                 </a>.
  1790                 The latest source to GNU make is available at
  1791                 <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/" target="_blank">
  1792                     ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/</a>.
  1793             </p>
  1795             <h3><a name="buildgmake">Building GNU make</a></h3>
  1796             <blockquote>
  1797                 First step is to get the GNU make 3.81 or newer source from
  1798                 <a href="http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/" target="_blank">
  1799                     ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/</a>.
  1800                 Building is a little different depending on the OS but is
  1801                 basically done with:
  1802                 <blockquote>
  1803                     <code>bash ./configure</code>
  1804                     <br>
  1805                     <code>make</code>
  1806                 </blockquote>
  1807             </blockquote>
  1809         </blockquote> <!-- Appendix B -->
  1811         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1812         <hr>
  1813         <h2><a name="buildenvironments">Appendix C: Build Environments</a></h2>
  1814         <blockquote>
  1816             <h3><a name="MBE">Minimum Build Environments</a></h3>
  1817             <blockquote>
  1818                 This file often describes specific requirements for what we 
  1819                 call the
  1820                 "minimum build environments" (MBE) for this 
  1821                 specific release of the JDK.
  1822                 What is listed below is what the Oracle Release
  1823                 Engineering Team will use to build the Oracle JDK product.
  1824                 Building with the MBE will hopefully generate the most compatible
  1825                 bits that install on, and run correctly on, the most variations
  1826                 of the same base OS and hardware architecture.
  1827                 In some cases, these represent what is often called the
  1828                 least common denominator, but each Operating System has different
  1829                 aspects to it.
  1830                 <p>
  1831                     In all cases, the Bootstrap JDK version minimum is critical,
  1832                     we cannot guarantee builds will work with older Bootstrap JDK's.
  1833                     Also in all cases, more RAM and more processors is better,
  1834                     the minimums listed below are simply recommendations.
  1835                 <p>
  1836                     With Solaris and Mac OS X, the version listed below is the
  1837                     oldest release we can guarantee builds and works, and the
  1838                     specific version of the compilers used could be critical.
  1839                 <p>
  1840                     With Windows the critical aspect is the Visual Studio compiler
  1841                     used, which due to it's runtime, generally dictates what Windows
  1842                     systems can do the builds and where the resulting bits can
  1843                     be used.<br>
  1844                     <b>NOTE: We expect a change here off these older Windows OS releases
  1845                         and to a 'less older' one, probably Windows 2008R2 X64.</b>
  1846                 <p>
  1847                     With Linux, it was just a matter of picking a
  1848                     stable distribution that is a good representative for Linux
  1849                     in general.<br>
  1850                     <b>NOTE: We expect a change here from Fedora 9 to something else,
  1851                         but it has not been completely determined yet, possibly
  1852                         Ubuntu 12.04 X64, unbiased community feedback would be welcome on
  1853                         what a good choice would be here.</b>
  1854                 <p>
  1855                     It is understood that most developers will NOT be using these 
  1856                     specific versions, and in fact creating these specific versions
  1857                     may be difficult due to the age of some of this software.
  1858                     It is expected that developers are more often using the more
  1859                     recent releases and distributions of these operating systems.
  1860                 <p>
  1861                     Compilation problems with newer or different C/C++ compilers is a
  1862                     common problem.
  1863                     Similarly, compilation problems related to changes to the
  1864                     <code>/usr/include</code> or system header files is also a
  1865                     common problem with older, newer, or unreleased OS versions.
  1866                     Please report these types of problems as bugs so that they
  1867                     can be dealt with accordingly.
  1868                 </p>
  1869                 <table border="1">
  1870                     <thead>
  1871                         <tr>
  1872                             <th>Base OS and Architecture</th>
  1873                             <th>OS</th>
  1874                             <th>C/C++ Compiler</th>
  1875                             <th>Bootstrap JDK</th>
  1876                             <th>Processors</th>
  1877                             <th>RAM Minimum</th>
  1878                             <th>DISK Needs</th>
  1879                         </tr>
  1880                     </thead>
  1881                     <tbody>
  1882                         <tr>
  1883                             <td>Linux X86 (32-bit) and X64 (64-bit)</td>
  1884                             <td>Fedora 9</td>
  1885                             <td>gcc 4.3 </td>
  1886                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1887                             <td>2 or more</td>
  1888                             <td>1 GB</td>
  1889                             <td>6 GB</td>
  1890                         </tr>
  1891                         <tr>
  1892                             <td>Solaris SPARC (32-bit) and SPARCV9 (64-bit)</td>
  1893                             <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
  1894                             <td>Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
  1895                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1896                             <td>4 or more</td>
  1897                             <td>4 GB</td>
  1898                             <td>8 GB</td>
  1899                         </tr>
  1900                         <tr>
  1901                             <td>Solaris X86 (32-bit) and X64 (64-bit)</td>
  1902                             <td>Solaris 10 Update 6</td>
  1903                             <td>Studio 12 Update 1 + patches</td>
  1904                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1905                             <td>4 or more</td>
  1906                             <td>4 GB</td>
  1907                             <td>8 GB</td>
  1908                         </tr>
  1909                         <tr>
  1910                             <td>Windows X86 (32-bit)</td>
  1911                             <td>Windows XP</td>
  1912                             <td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 Professional Edition</td>
  1913                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1914                             <td>2 or more</td>
  1915                             <td>2 GB</td>
  1916                             <td>6 GB</td>
  1917                         </tr>
  1918                         <tr>
  1919                             <td>Windows X64 (64-bit)</td>
  1920                             <td>Windows Server 2003 - Enterprise x64 Edition</td>
  1921                             <td>Microsoft Visual Studio C++ 2010 Professional Edition</td>
  1922                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1923                             <td>2 or more</td>
  1924                             <td>2 GB</td>
  1925                             <td>6 GB</td>
  1926                         </tr>
  1927                         <tr>
  1928                             <td>Mac OS X X64 (64-bit)</td>
  1929                             <td>Mac OS X 10.7 "Lion"</td>
  1930                             <td>XCode 4.5.2 or newer</td>
  1931                             <td>JDK 7u7</td>
  1932                             <td>2 or more</td>
  1933                             <td>4 GB</td>
  1934                             <td>6 GB</td>
  1935                         </tr>
  1936                     </tbody>
  1937                 </table>
  1938             </blockquote>
  1940             <!-- ====================================================== -->
  1941             <hr>
  1942             <h3><a name="SDBE">Specific Developer Build Environments</a></h3>
  1943             <blockquote>
  1944                 We won't be listing all the possible environments, but
  1945                 we will try to provide what information we have available to us.
  1946                 <p>
  1947                     <strong>NOTE: The community can help out by updating
  1948                         this part of the document.
  1949                     </strong>
  1951                 <h4><a name="fedora">Fedora</a></h4>
  1952                 <blockquote>
  1953                     After installing the latest
  1954                     <a href="http://fedoraproject.org">Fedora</a>
  1955                     you need to install several build dependencies.
  1956                     The simplest way to do it is to execute the 
  1957                     following commands as user <code>root</code>:
  1958                     <blockquote>
  1959                         <code>yum-builddep java-1.7.0-openjdk</code>
  1960                         <br>
  1961                         <code>yum install gcc gcc-c++</code>
  1962                     </blockquote>
  1963                     <p>
  1964                         In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment 
  1965                         variables for the build:
  1966                     <blockquote>
  1967                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  1968                         <br>
  1969                         <code>export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-openjdk/bin:${PATH}"</code>
  1970                     </blockquote>
  1971                 </blockquote>
  1974                 <h4><a name="centos">CentOS 5.5</a></h4>
  1975                 <blockquote>
  1976                     After installing
  1977                     <a href="http://www.centos.org/">CentOS 5.5</a>
  1978                     you need to make sure you have
  1979                     the following Development bundles installed:
  1980                     <blockquote>
  1981                         <ul>
  1982                             <li>Development Libraries</li>
  1983                             <li>Development Tools</li>
  1984                             <li>Java Development</li>
  1985                             <li>X Software Development (Including XFree86-devel)</li>
  1986                         </ul>
  1987                     </blockquote>
  1988                     <p>
  1989                         Plus the following packages:
  1990                     <blockquote>
  1991                         <ul>
  1992                             <li>cups devel: Cups Development Package</li>
  1993                             <li>alsa devel: Alsa Development Package</li>
  1994                             <li>Xi devel: libXi.so Development Package</li>
  1995                         </ul>
  1996                     </blockquote>
  1997                     <p>
  1998                         The freetype 2.3 packages don't seem to be available,
  1999                         but the freetype 2.3 sources can be downloaded, built,
  2000                         and installed easily enough from
  2001                         <a href="http://downloads.sourceforge.net/freetype">
  2002                             the freetype site</a>.
  2003                         Build and install with something like:
  2004                     <blockquote>
  2005                         <code>bash ./configure</code>
  2006                         <br>
  2007                         <code>make</code>
  2008                         <br>
  2009                         <code>sudo -u root make install</code>
  2010                     </blockquote>
  2011                     <p>
  2012                         Mercurial packages could not be found easily, but a Google
  2013                         search should find ones, and they usually include Python if
  2014                         it's needed.
  2015                 </blockquote>
  2017                 <h4><a name="debian">Debian 5.0 (Lenny)</a></h4>
  2018                 <blockquote>
  2019                     After installing <a href="http://debian.org">Debian</a> 5 
  2020                     you need to install several build dependencies. 
  2021                     The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to 
  2022                     execute the following commands as user <code>root</code>:
  2023                     <blockquote>
  2024                         <code>aptitude build-dep openjdk-7</code>
  2025                         <br>
  2026                         <code>aptitude install openjdk-7-jdk libmotif-dev</code>
  2027                     </blockquote>
  2028                     <p>
  2029                         In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment 
  2030                         variables for the build:
  2031                     <blockquote>
  2032                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  2033                         <br>
  2034                         <code>export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk/bin:${PATH}"</code>
  2035                     </blockquote>
  2036                 </blockquote>
  2038                 <h4><a name="ubuntu">Ubuntu 12.04</a></h4>
  2039                 <blockquote>                       
  2040                     After installing <a href="http://ubuntu.org">Ubuntu</a> 12.04 
  2041                     you need to install several build dependencies. The simplest
  2042                     way to do it is to execute the following commands:
  2043                     <blockquote>
  2044                         <code>sudo aptitude build-dep openjdk-7</code>
  2045                         <br>
  2046                         <code>sudo aptitude install openjdk-7-jdk</code>
  2047                     </blockquote>
  2048                     <p>
  2049                         In addition, it's necessary to set a few environment 
  2050                         variables for the build:
  2051                     <blockquote>
  2052                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  2053                         <br>
  2054                         <code>export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk/bin:${PATH}"</code>
  2055                     </blockquote>
  2056                 </blockquote>
  2058                 <h4><a name="opensuse">OpenSUSE 11.1</a></h4>
  2059                 <blockquote>
  2060                     After installing <a href="http://opensuse.org">OpenSUSE</a> 11.1 
  2061                     you need to install several build dependencies. 
  2062                     The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to 
  2063                     execute the following commands:
  2064                     <blockquote>
  2065                         <code>sudo zypper source-install -d java-1_7_0-openjdk</code>
  2066                         <br>
  2067                         <code>sudo zypper install make</code>
  2068                     </blockquote>
  2069                     <p>
  2070                         In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment 
  2071                         variables for the build:
  2072                     <blockquote>
  2073                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  2074                         <br>
  2075                         <code>export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.7.0-openjdk/bin:$[PATH}"</code>
  2076                     </blockquote>
  2077                     <p>
  2078                         Finally, you need to unset the <code>JAVA_HOME</code> 
  2079                         environment variable:
  2080                     <blockquote>
  2081                         <code>export -n JAVA_HOME</code>
  2082                     </blockquote>
  2083                 </blockquote>
  2085                 <h4><a name="mandriva">Mandriva Linux One 2009 Spring</a></h4>
  2086                 <blockquote>
  2087                     After installing <a href="http://mandriva.org">Mandriva</a>
  2088                     Linux One 2009 Spring 
  2089                     you need to install several build dependencies. 
  2090                     The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to 
  2091                     execute the following commands as user <code>root</code>:
  2092                     <blockquote>
  2093                         <code>urpmi java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel make gcc gcc-c++ 
  2094                             freetype-devel zip unzip libcups2-devel libxrender1-devel
  2095                             libalsa2-devel libstc++-static-devel libxtst6-devel 
  2096                             libxi-devel</code>
  2097                     </blockquote>
  2098                     <p>
  2099                         In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment 
  2100                         variables for the build:
  2101                     <blockquote>
  2102                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  2103                         <br>
  2104                         <code>export PATH="/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.7.0-openjdk/bin:${PATH}"</code>
  2105                     </blockquote>
  2106                 </blockquote>
  2108                 <h4><a name="opensolaris">OpenSolaris 2009.06</a></h4>
  2109                 <blockquote>
  2110                     After installing <a href="http://opensolaris.org">OpenSolaris</a> 2009.06 
  2111                     you need to install several build dependencies. 
  2112                     The simplest way to install the build dependencies is to 
  2113                     execute the following commands:
  2114                     <blockquote>
  2115                         <code>pfexec pkg install SUNWgmake SUNWj7dev 
  2116                             sunstudioexpress SUNWcups SUNWzip SUNWunzip SUNWxwhl 
  2117                             SUNWxorg-headers SUNWaudh SUNWfreetype2</code>
  2118                     </blockquote>
  2119                     <p>
  2120                         In addition, it is necessary to set a few environment 
  2121                         variables for the build:
  2122                     <blockquote>
  2123                         <code>export LANG=C</code>
  2124                         <br>
  2125                         <code>export PATH="/opt/SunStudioExpress/bin:${PATH}"</code>
  2126                     </blockquote>
  2127                 </blockquote>
  2129             </blockquote>
  2131         </blockquote> <!-- Appendix C -->
  2133         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  2135         <!-- Leave out Appendix D --
  2137 <hr>
  2138 <h2><a name="mapping">Appendix D: Mapping Old to New</a></h2>
  2139 <blockquote>
  2140     <p>This table will help you convert some idioms of the old build
  2141         system to the new build system.</p>
  2142     <table summary="Cheat sheet for converting from old to new build system">
  2143         <tr valign="top">
  2144             <th>In the old build system, you used to...</th>
  2145             <th>In the new build system, you should ...</th>
  2146         </tr>
  2147         <tr valign="top">
  2148             <td>run <code>make sanity</code></td>
  2149             <td>run <code>bash ./configure</code></td>
  2150         </tr>
  2151         <tr valign="top">
  2152             <td>set <code>ALT_OUTPUTDIR=build/my-special-output</code></td>
  2153             <td>before building the first time:
  2154                 <br>
  2155                 <code>cd build/my-special-output</code>
  2156                 <br>
  2157                 <code>bash ../../configure</code>
  2158                 <br>
  2159                 to build:
  2160                 <br>
  2161                 <code>cd build/my-special-output</code>
  2162                 <br>
  2163                 <code>make</code>
  2164             </td>
  2165         </tr>
  2166         <tr valign="top">
  2167             <td>set <code>ALT_BOOTDIR=/opt/java/jdk7</code></td>
  2168             <td>run <code>configure --with-boot-jdk=/opt/java/jdk7</code></td>
  2169         </tr>
  2170         <tr valign="top">
  2171             <td>run <code>make ARCH_DATA_MODEL=32</code></td>
  2172             <td>run <code>configure --with-target-bits=32</code></td>
  2173         </tr>
  2174         <tr valign="top">
  2175             <td>set <code>BUILD_CLIENT_ONLY=true</code></td>
  2176             <td>run <code>configure --with-jvm-variants=client</code></td>
  2177         </tr>
  2178         <tr valign="top">
  2179             <td>set <code>ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH=/opt/freetype/lib</code> 
  2180                 and <code>ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH=/opt/freetype/include</code></td>
  2181             <td>run <code>configure --with-freetype=/opt/freetype</code></td>
  2182         </tr>
  2183         <tr valign="top">
  2184             <td>set <code>ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH=/opt/cups/include</code></td>
  2185             <td>run <code>configure --with-cups=/opt/cups</code></td>
  2186         </tr>
  2187         <tr valign="top">
  2188             <td>set <code>ALT_OPENWIN_HOME=/opt/X11R6</code></td>
  2189             <td>run <code>configure --with-x=/opt/X11R6</code></td>
  2190         </tr>
  2191         <tr valign="top">
  2192             <td>set <code>ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH=c:/vc_redist</code></td>
  2193             <td>run <code>configure --with-msvcr100dll=/cygdrive/c/vc_redist</code></td>
  2194         </tr>
  2195         <tr valign="top">
  2196             <td>set <code>ALT_COMPILER_PATH=/opt/my-gcc/bin/gcc</code></td>
  2197             <td>run <code>CC=/opt/my-gcc/bin/gcc configure</code> 
  2198                 or <code>CXX=/opt/my-gcc/bin/g++ configure</code>
  2199             </td>
  2200         </tr>
  2201         <tr valign="top">
  2202             <td>set <code>BUILD_HEADLESS_ONLY=true</code></td>
  2203             <td>run <code>configure --disable-headful</code></td>
  2204         </tr>
  2205         <tr valign="top">
  2206             <td>set <code>ALT_DEVTOOLS_PATH=/opt/mytools</code></td>
  2207             <td>just run <code>configure</code>, 
  2208                 your tools should be detected automatically. 
  2209                 If you have an unusual configuration, 
  2210                 add the tools directory to your <code>PATH</code>.
  2211             </td>
  2212         </tr>
  2213         <tr valign="top">
  2214             <td>set <code>ALT_DROPS_DIR=/home/user/dropdir</code></td>
  2215             <td>source drops are not used anymore</td>
  2216         </tr>
  2217         <tr valign="top">
  2218             <td>set <code>USE_ONLY_BOOTDIR_TOOLS=true</code></td>
  2219             <td>not needed, <code>configure</code> should always do the Right Thing automatically</td>
  2220         </tr>
  2221         <tr valign="top">
  2222             <td>set <code>ALT_JDK_IMPORT_PATH=/opt/java/import-jdk</code>
  2223                 or <code>ALT_BUILD_JDK_IMPORT_PATH=/opt/java/import-jdk</code>
  2224             </td>
  2225             <td>Importing JDKs is no longer possible, 
  2226                 but hotspot can be imported using 
  2227                 <code>--with-import-hotspot</code>. 
  2228                 Documentation on how to achieve a 
  2229                 similar solution will come soon!
  2230             </td>
  2231         </tr>
  2232         <tr valign="top">
  2233             <td>set <code>EXTRA_CFLAGS=-Xfoo</code></td>
  2234             <td>run <code>CFLAGS=-Xfoo configure</code></td>
  2235         </tr>
  2236         <tr valign="top">
  2237             <td>set <code>CROSS_COMPILE_ARCH=i586</code></td>
  2238             <td>see <a href="#sec7.3"> section 7.3, Cross-compilation</a></td>
  2239         </tr>
  2240         <tr valign="top">
  2241             <td>set <code>SKIP_BOOT_CYCLE=false</code></td>
  2242             <td>Run <code>make bootcycle-images</code>.</td>
  2243         </tr>
  2244     </table>
  2246     <h3><a name="variables">Environment/Make Variables</a></h3>
  2247     <p>
  2248         Some of the
  2249         environment or make variables (just called <b>variables</b> in this
  2250         document) that can impact the build are:
  2251     <blockquote>
  2252         <dl>
  2253             <dt><a name="path"><code>PATH</code></a> </dt>
  2254             <dd>Typically you want to set the <code>PATH</code> to include:
  2255                 <ul>
  2256                     <li>The location of the GNU make binary</li>
  2257                     <li>The location of the Bootstrap JDK <code>java</code> 
  2258                         (see <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a>)</li>
  2259                     <li>The location of the C/C++ compilers 
  2260                         (see <a href="#compilers"><code>compilers</code></a>)</li>
  2261                     <li>The location or locations for the Unix command utilities
  2262                         (e.g. <code>/usr/bin</code>)</li>
  2263                 </ul>
  2264             </dd>
  2265             <dt><code>MILESTONE</code> </dt>
  2266             <dd>
  2267                 The milestone name for the build (<i>e.g.</i>"beta"). 
  2268                 The default value is "internal".
  2269             </dd>
  2270             <dt><code>BUILD_NUMBER</code> </dt>
  2271             <dd>
  2272                 The build number for the build (<i>e.g.</i> "b27"). 
  2273                 The default value is "b00".
  2274             </dd>
  2275             <dt><a name="arch_data_model"><code>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</code></a></dt>
  2276             <dd>The <code>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</code> variable
  2277                 is used to specify whether the build is to generate 32-bit or 64-bit
  2278                 binaries. 
  2279                 The Solaris build supports either 32-bit or 64-bit builds, but
  2280                 Windows and Linux will support only one, depending on the specific
  2281                 OS being used.
  2282                 Normally, setting this variable is only necessary on Solaris.
  2283                 Set <code>ARCH_DATA_MODEL</code> to <code>32</code> for generating 32-bit binaries, 
  2284                 or to <code>64</code> for generating 64-bit binaries.
  2285             </dd>
  2286             <dt><a name="ALT_BOOTDIR"><code>ALT_BOOTDIR</code></a></dt>
  2287             <dd>
  2288                 The location of the bootstrap JDK installation. 
  2289                 See <a href="#bootjdk">Bootstrap JDK</a> for more information.
  2290                 You should always install your own local Bootstrap JDK and
  2291                 always set <code>ALT_BOOTDIR</code> explicitly.
  2292             </dd>
  2293             <dt><a name="ALT_OUTPUTDIR"><code>ALT_OUTPUTDIR</code></a> </dt>
  2294             <dd>
  2295                 An override for specifying the (absolute) path of where the
  2296                 build output is to go.
  2297                 The default output directory will be build/<i>platform</i>.
  2298             </dd>
  2299             <dt><a name="ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><code>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</code></a> </dt>
  2300             <dd>
  2301                 The location of the C/C++ compiler.
  2302                 The default varies depending on the platform. 
  2303             </dd>
  2304             <dt><code><a name="ALT_CACERTS_FILE">ALT_CACERTS_FILE</a></code></dt>
  2305             <dd>
  2306                 The location of the <a href="#cacerts">cacerts</a> file.
  2307                 The default will refer to 
  2308                 <code>jdk/src/share/lib/security/cacerts</code>.
  2309             </dd>
  2310             <dt><a name="ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH"><code>ALT_CUPS_HEADERS_PATH</code></a> </dt>
  2311             <dd>
  2312                 The location of the CUPS header files.
  2313                 See <a href="#cups">CUPS information</a> for more information.
  2314                 If this path does not exist the fallback path is 
  2315                 <code>/usr/include</code>.
  2316             </dd>
  2317             <dt><a name="ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH"><code>ALT_FREETYPE_LIB_PATH</code></a></dt>
  2318             <dd>
  2319                 The location of the FreeType shared library. 
  2320                 See <a href="#freetype">FreeType information</a> for details. 
  2321             </dd>
  2322             <dt><a name="ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH"><code>ALT_FREETYPE_HEADERS_PATH</code></a></dt>
  2323             <dd>
  2324                 The location of the FreeType header files.
  2325                 See <a href="#freetype">FreeType information</a> for details. 
  2326             </dd>
  2327             <dt><a name="ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH"><code>ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH</code></a></dt>
  2328             <dd>
  2329                 The default root location of the devtools.
  2330                 The default value is 
  2331                 <code>$(ALT_SLASH_JAVA)/devtools</code>.
  2332             </dd>
  2333             <dt><code><a name="ALT_DEVTOOLS_PATH">ALT_DEVTOOLS_PATH</a></code> </dt>
  2334             <dd>
  2335                 The location of tools like the 
  2336                 <a href="#zip"><code>zip</code> and <code>unzip</code></a>
  2337                 binaries, but might also contain the GNU make utility
  2338                 (<code><i>gmake</i></code>).
  2339                 So this area is a bit of a grab bag, especially on Windows.
  2340                 The default value depends on the platform and
  2341                 Unix Commands being used.
  2342                 On Linux the default will be 
  2343                 <code>$(ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH)/linux/bin</code>, 
  2344                 on Solaris
  2345                 <code>$(ALT_JDK_DEVTOOLS_PATH)/<i>{sparc,i386}</i>/bin</code>, 
  2346                 and on Windows with CYGWIN
  2347                 <code>/usr/bin</code>.
  2348             </dd>
  2349             <dt><a name="ALT_UNIXCCS_PATH"><code>ALT_UNIXCCS_PATH</code></a></dt>
  2350             <dd>
  2351                 <strong>Solaris only:</strong>
  2352                 An override for specifying where the Unix CCS
  2353                 command set are located.
  2354                 The default location is <code>/usr/ccs/bin</code> 
  2355             </dd>
  2356             <dt><a name="ALT_SLASH_JAVA"><code>ALT_SLASH_JAVA</code></a></dt>
  2357             <dd>
  2358                 The default root location for many of the ALT path locations
  2359                 of the following ALT variables.
  2360                 The default value is 
  2361                 <code>"/java"</code> on Solaris and Linux, 
  2362                 <code>"J:"</code> on Windows.
  2363             </dd>
  2365             <dt><a name="ALT_OPENWIN_HOME"><code>ALT_OPENWIN_HOME</code></a></dt>
  2366             <dd>
  2367                 The top-level directory of the libraries and include files 
  2368                 for the platform's 
  2369                 graphical programming environment. 
  2370                 The default location is platform specific. 
  2371                 For example, on Linux it defaults to <code>/usr/X11R6/</code>.
  2372             </dd>
  2373             <dt><strong>Windows specific:</strong></dt>
  2374             <dd>
  2375                 <dl>
  2376                     <dt><a name="ALT_WINDOWSSDKDIR"><code>ALT_WINDOWSSDKDIR</code></a> </dt>
  2377                     <dd>
  2378                         The location of the 
  2379                         Microsoft Windows SDK where some tools will be
  2380                         located.
  2381                         The default is whatever WINDOWSSDKDIR is set to
  2382                         (or WindowsSdkDir) or the path
  2383                         <br>
  2384                         <code>c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0a</code>
  2385                     </dd>
  2386                     <dt><code><a name="ALT_DXSDK_PATH">ALT_DXSDK_PATH</a></code> </dt>
  2387                     <dd>
  2388                         The location of the 
  2389                         <a href="#dxsdk">Microsoft DirectX 9 SDK</a>.
  2390                         The default will be to try and use the DirectX environment
  2391                         variable <code>DXSDK_DIR</code>,
  2392                         failing that, look in <code>C:/DXSDK</code>.
  2393                     </dd>
  2394                     <dt><code><a name="ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH">ALT_MSVCRNN_DLL_PATH</a></code> </dt>
  2395                     <dd>
  2396                         The location of the 
  2397                         <a href="#msvcrNN"><code>MSVCR100.DLL</code></a>. 
  2398                     </dd>
  2399                 </dl>
  2400             </dd>
  2401             <dt><strong>Cross-Compilation Support:</strong></dt>
  2402             <dd>
  2403                 <dl>
  2404                     <dt><a name="CROSS_COMPILE_ARCH"><code>CROSS_COMPILE_ARCH</code></a> </dt>
  2405                     <dd>
  2406                         Set to the target architecture of a 
  2407                         cross-compilation build. If set, this
  2408                         variable is used to signify that we are 
  2409                         cross-compiling. The expectation
  2410                         is that
  2411                         <a href="#ALT_COMPILER_PATH"><code>ALT_COMPILER_PATH</code></a> 
  2412                         is set
  2413                         to point to the cross-compiler and that any
  2414                         cross-compilation specific flags
  2415                         are passed using 
  2416                         <a href="#EXTRA_CFLAGS"><code>EXTRA_CFLAGS</code></a>.
  2417                         The <a href="#ALT_OPENWIN_HOME"><code>ALT_OPENWIN_HOME</code></a>
  2418                         variable should 
  2419                         also be set to point to the graphical header files
  2420                         (e.g. X11) provided with 
  2421                         the cross-compiler.
  2422                         When cross-compiling we skip execution of any demos 
  2423                         etc that may be built, and
  2424                         also skip binary-file verification.
  2425                     </dd>
  2426                     <dt><code><a name="EXTRA_CFLAGS">EXTRA_CFLAGS</a></code> </dt>
  2427                     <dd>
  2428                         Used to pass cross-compilation options to the 
  2429                         cross-compiler.
  2430                         These are added to the <code>CFLAGS</code> 
  2431                         and <code>CXXFLAGS</code> variables. 
  2432                     </dd>
  2433                     <dt><code><a name="USE_ONLY_BOOTDIR_TOOLS">USE_ONLY_BOOTDIR_TOOLS</a></code> </dt>
  2434                     <dd>
  2435                         Used primarily for cross-compilation builds
  2436                         (and always set in that case)
  2437                         this variable indicates that tools from the
  2438                         boot JDK should be used during
  2439                         the build process, not the tools
  2440                         (<code>javac</code>, <code>javah</code>, <code>jar</code>)
  2441                         just built (which can't execute on the build host).
  2442                     </dd>
  2443                     <dt><code><a name="HOST_CC">HOST_CC</a></code> </dt>
  2444                     <dd>
  2445                         The location of the C compiler to generate programs 
  2446                         to run on the build host.
  2447                         Some parts of the build generate programs that are
  2448                         then compiled and executed
  2449                         to produce other parts of the build. Normally the 
  2450                         primary C compiler is used
  2451                         to do this, but when cross-compiling that would be
  2452                         the cross-compiler and the
  2453                         resulting program could not be executed. 
  2454                         On Linux this defaults to <code>/usr/bin/gcc</code>; 
  2455                         on other platforms it must be
  2456                         set explicitly.
  2457                     </dd>
  2458                 </dl>
  2459             <dt><strong>Specialized Build Options:</strong></dt>
  2460             <dd>
  2461                 Some build variables exist to support specialized build 
  2462                 environments and/or specialized
  2463                 build products. Their use is only supported in those contexts:
  2464                 <dl>
  2465                     <dt><code><a name="BUILD_CLIENT_ONLY">BUILD_CLIENT_ONLY</a></code> </dt>
  2466                     <dd>
  2467                         Indicates this build will only contain the 
  2468                         Hotspot client VM. In addition to
  2469                         controlling the Hotspot build target, 
  2470                         it ensures that we don't try to copy
  2471                         any server VM files/directories, 
  2472                         and defines a default <code>jvm.cfg</code> file
  2473                         suitable for a client-only environment. 
  2474                         Using this in a 64-bit build will
  2475                         generate a sanity warning as 64-bit client 
  2476                         builds are not directly supported.
  2477                     </dd>
  2478                     <dt><code><a name="BUILD_HEADLESS_ONLY"></a>BUILD_HEADLESS_ONLY</code> </dt>
  2479                     <dd>
  2480                         Used when the build environment has no graphical 
  2481                         capabilities at all. This
  2482                         excludes building anything that requires graphical 
  2483                         libraries to be available.
  2484                     </dd>
  2485                     <dt><code><a name="JAVASE_EMBEDDED"></a>JAVASE_EMBEDDED</code> </dt>
  2486                     <dd>
  2487                         Used to indicate this is a build of the Oracle 
  2488                         Java SE Embedded product. 
  2489                         This will enable the directives included in the 
  2490                         SE-Embedded specific build 
  2491                         files.
  2492                     </dd>
  2493                     <dt><code><a name="LIBZIP_CAN_USE_MMAP">LIBZIP_CAN_USE_MMAP</a></code> </dt>
  2494                     <dd>
  2495                         If set to false, disables the use of mmap by the
  2496                         zip utility. Otherwise,
  2497                         mmap will be used.
  2498                     </dd>
  2499                     <dt><code><a name="COMPRESS_JARS"></a>COMPRESS_JARS</code> </dt>
  2500                     <dd>
  2501                         If set to true, causes certain jar files that 
  2502                         would otherwise be built without
  2503                         compression, to use compression.
  2504                     </dd>
  2505                 </dl>
  2506             </dd>
  2507         </dl>
  2508     </blockquote>
  2510 </blockquote> <!-- Appendix D -->
  2512         <!-- ====================================================== -->
  2513         <hr>
  2514         <p>End of OpenJDK README-builds.html document.<br>Please come again!
  2515         <hr>
  2517     </body>
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