jdk-24 fork (from: https://github.com/openjdk/jdk) with modifications to be used in Wildcard-Usage analysis tools
19d99e3d92
In graphKit INT operations were generated to access PtrQueue::_index which has type size_t. This is 64 bit on 64-bit machines. No problems occur on little endian machines as long as the index fits into 32 bit, but on big endian machines the upper part is read, which is zero. This leads to unnecessary branches to the slow path in the runtime. Reviewed-by: twisti, johnc |
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.jcheck | ||
common | ||
corba | ||
hotspot | ||
jaxp | ||
jaxws | ||
jdk | ||
langtools | ||
make | ||
nashorn | ||
test | ||
.hgignore | ||
.hgtags | ||
.hgtags-top-repo | ||
ASSEMBLY_EXCEPTION | ||
configure | ||
get_source.sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
NewMakefile.gmk | ||
README | ||
README-builds.html | ||
THIRD_PARTY_README |
README: This file should be located at the top of the OpenJDK Mercurial root repository. A full OpenJDK repository set (forest) should also include the following 6 nested repositories: "jdk", "hotspot", "langtools", "corba", "jaxws" and "jaxp". The root repository can be obtained with something like: hg clone http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk8/jdk8 openjdk8 You can run the get_source.sh script located in the root repository to get the other needed repositories: cd openjdk8 && sh ./get_source.sh People unfamiliar with Mercurial should read the first few chapters of the Mercurial book: http://hgbook.red-bean.com/read/ See http://openjdk.java.net/ for more information about OpenJDK. Simple Build Instructions: 0. Get the necessary system software/packages installed on your system, see http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk8/jdk8/raw-file/tip/README-builds.html 1. If you don't have a jdk7u7 or newer jdk, download and install it from http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp Add the /bin directory of this installation to your PATH environment variable. 2. Configure the build: bash ./configure 3. Build the OpenJDK: make all The resulting JDK image should be found in build/*/images/j2sdk-image where make is GNU make 3.81 or newer, /usr/bin/make on Linux usually is 3.81 or newer. Note that on Solaris, GNU make is called "gmake". Complete details are available in the file: http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk8/jdk8/raw-file/tip/README-builds.html