--
+If you plan to modify a .java file, you will need to configure with
+--enable-java-maintainer-mode. In order to make this work properly,
+you will need to have 'ecj1' and 'gjavah' executables in your PATH at
+build time.
+
+One way to do this is to download ecj.jar (see contrib/download_ecj)
+and write a simple wrapper script like:
+
+ #! /bin/sh
+ gij -cp /home/tromey/gnu/Generics/trunk/ecj.jar \
+ org.eclipse.jdt.internal.compiler.batch.GCCMain \
+ ${1+"$@"}
+
+For gjavah, you can make a tools.zip from the classes in
+classpath/lib/tools/ and write a gjavah script like:
+
+ #! /bin/sh
+ dir=/home/tromey/gnu/Generics/Gcjh
+ gij -cp $dir/tools.zip \
+ gnu.classpath.tools.javah.Main \
+ ${1+"$@"}
+
+Another way to get a version of gjavah is to first do a
+non-maintainer-mode build and use the newly installed gjavah.
+
+--
+
+To regenerate libjava/configure, first run aclocal passing the flags
+found near the top of Makefile.am, then autoconf. H. J. Lu writes that
+this can be done using these commands:
+
+ cd libjava &&
+ rm -f aclocal.m4 &&
+ ACFLAGS=$(grep "^ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS" Makefile.in | sed -e "s/ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS[ \t ]*=//") &&
+ aclocal-1.11 $ACFLAGS &&
+ rm -f configure &&
+ autoconf-2.64 &&
+ rm -fr autom4te.cache
+
+See the GCC documentation which auto* versions to use.
+
+--
+
libgcj uses GNU Classpath as an upstream provider. Snapshots of
Classpath are imported into the libgcj source tree. Some classes are
overridden by local versions; these files still appear in the libgcj
To import a new release:
-- Check out a classpath snapshot
+- Check out a classpath snapshot or take a release tar.gz file.
+ I use 'cvs export' for this. Make a tag to ensure future hackers
+ know exactly what revision was checked out; tags are of the form
+ 'libgcj-import-DATE' (when using a tagged checkout do:
+ - ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make dist
+ to get a proper .tar.gz for importing below).
+- Get a svn checkout of
+ svn+ssh://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/branches/CLASSPATH/libjava/classpath
+ this contains "pure" GNU Classpath inside the GCC tree.
+- Clean it up and get the files from a new version:
+ - find classpath -type f | grep -v '/\.svn' | grep -v '/\.cvs' | xargs rm
+ - tar zxf classpath-x.tar.gz
+ - cp -r classpath-x/* classpath
+- Add/Remove files:
+ - svn status classpath | grep ^\! | cut -c8- | xargs svn remove
+ - svn status classpath | grep ^\? | cut -c8- | xargs svn add
+- If there are any empty directories now they can be removed. You can find
+ candidates (dirs with files removed) with:
+ - for i in `svn status classpath | grep ^D | cut -c8-`; \
+ do ls -d `dirname $i`; done | uniq
+- Update vendor branch
+ - svn commit classpath
+- Note the new revision number (Xrev)
+- Get a fresh svn trunk checkout and cd gcc/libjava
+- Merge the changes between classpath versions into the trunk.
+ svn merge -rXrev-1:Xrev \
+ svn+ssh://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/branches/CLASSPATH/libjava/classpath \
+ classpath
+- Resolve any conflicts pointed out by svn status classpath | grep ^C
+ - Makefile.in files will be regenerated in the next step.
+ - Other files should have a "GCJ LOCAL" comment, and/or are mentioned
+ in the classpath/ChangeLog.gcj file.
+ (Don't forget to svn resolved files.)
- Use auto* to create configure, Makefile.in, etc
+ Make sure you have Automake 1.11.1 installed. Exactly that version!
You have to make sure to use the gcc libtool.m4 and gcc lt* scripts
cd .../classpath
cp ../../lt* .
- aclocal -I m4 -I ../..
+ cp ../../config.sub ../../config.guess .
+ aclocal -I m4 -I ../.. -I ../../config
autoconf
autoheader
automake
rm -rf autom4te.cache
-- Test everything first. The simplest way to do this is by overlaying
- the checked out classpath on your gcc tree and then doing a build.
-- Use 'cvs import' to import. The vendor tag is 'CLASSPATH'. For the
- release tag, if this is a released classpath version, use something
- like 'classpath-import-VERSION'; otherwise something like
- 'classpath-import-DATE'.
- Be sure to use -ko and -I\!
-- Remove any files that were deleted in Classpath
-- Run 'scripts/makemake.tcl > sources.am' in the source tree
-- Run automake for libgcj
+ cd ..
+ scripts/makemake.tcl > sources.am
+ automake
+- Remove the generated class and header files:
+ find classpath -name '*.class' | xargs -r rm -f
+ find gnu java javax org sun -name '*.h' \
+ | xargs -r grep -Fl 'DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE - it is machine generated' \
+ | xargs -r rm -f
+- Build, fix, till everything works.
+ Be sure to build all peers (--enable-java-awt=gtk,xlib,qt
+ --enable-gconf-peer --enable-gstreamer-peer).
+ Be sure to build gjdoc (--enable-gjdoc).
+ Be sure to update gnu/classpath/Configuration.java to reflect
+ the new version
+ Possibly update the gcj/javaprims.h file with scripts/classes.pl
+ (See below, it can only be done after the first source->bytecode
+ pass has finished.)
+ You will need to configure with --enable-java-maintainer-mode and you
+ will need to update the .class files and generated CNI header files in
+ your working tree
+- Add/Remove newly generated files:
+ - svn status classpath | grep '^!.*\.class$' | cut -c8- | xargs svn remove
+ - svn status classpath | grep '^?' | cut -c8- | xargs svn add
+ - svn status gnu java javax org sun | grep '^!.*\.h$' | cut -c8- | xargs svn remove
+ - svn status gnu java javax org sun | grep '^?' | cut -c8- | xargs svn add
Over time we plan to remove as many of the remaining divergences as
possible.
File additions and deletions require running scripts/makemake.tcl
before running automake.
+--
+
+In general you should not make any changes in the classpath/
+directory. Changes here should come via imports from upstream.
+However, there are three (known) exceptions to this rule:
+
+* In an emergency, such as a bootstrap breakage, it is ok to commit a
+ patch provided that the problem is resolved (by fixing a compiler
+ bug or fixing the Classpath bug upstream) somehow and the resolution
+ is later checked in (erasing the local diff).
+
+* On a release branch to fix a bug, where a full-scale import of
+ Classpath is not advisable.
+
+* We maintain a fair number of divergences in the build system.
+ This is a pain but they don't seem suitable for upstream.
--
-If you need to add new java files to libgcj then you have to edit the
-Makefile.am file in the top (libjava) directory. And run automake.
+You can develop in a GCC tree using a CVS checkout of Classpath, most
+of the time. (The exceptions are when an incompatible change has been
+made in Classpath and some core part of libgcj has not yet been
+updated.)
+
+The way to set this up is very similar to importing a new version of
+Classpath into the libgcj tree. In your working tree:
+
+* cd gcc/libjava; rm -rf classpath
+* cvs co classpath
+* cd classpath
+ Now run the auto tools as specified in the import process; then
+ cd ..
+* Run 'scripts/makemake.tcl > sources.am' in the source tree
+* Run automake for libgcj
+
+Now you should be ready to go.
+
+If you are working in a tree like this, you must remember to run
+makemake.tcl and automake whenever you update your embedded classpath
+tree.
+
+--
If you add a class to java.lang, java.io, or java.util
(including sub-packages, like java.lang.ref).
entire contents of the namespace)
* Then insert the output of `perl scripts/classes.pl' into the file
- at that point. This must be run from the build tree, in
- <build>/classpath/lib; it uses the .class file name to determine
+ at that point. This must be run from the source tree, in
+ libjava/classpath/lib; it uses the .class file name to determine
what to print.
-
-If you're generating a patch there is a program you can get to do an
-offline `cvs add' (it will fake an `add' if you don't have write
-permission yet). Then you can use `cvs diff -N' to generate the
-patch. See http://www.red-bean.com/cvsutils/
-