[aarch64-port-dev ] RFR: 8168503 JEP 297: Unified arm32/arm64 Port (original) (raw)

Bob Vandette bob.vandette at oracle.com
Thu Mar 16 18:03:55 UTC 2017


I agree that this is an issue but I’m not sure that it’s a show stopper.

The Oracle build will not have OpenJDK in the version string which will help to differentiate our binaries from OpenJDK builds.

The bug database field that I think you are describing is only an indication of the architecture that a bug can be reproduced on. It is not meant to describe the sources that were used to produce the binaries or where the binaries came from. That should to be specified elsewhere in the bug report.

I don’t like the idea of listing arm64 in the version string since we are only using arm64 internally to trigger the use of the hotspot “arm” directory. We’d also end up with lots of incorrect bug entries since folks will fail to use arm64 to report a bug in the Oracle 64-bit ARM port running on an aarch64 based system.

If we start putting build configuration information in the version string, then where do we stop.

Bob.

On Mar 16, 2017, at 12:50 PM, Andrew Haley <aph at redhat.com> wrote:

I've just noticed a nasty problem. "java -version" on AArch64 gives no clue about which version of HotSpot, Oracle's or the aarch64-port project, is running. I hadn't realized that the version wasn't going to appear anywhere. And all that a crash says is # SIGSEGV (0xb) at pc=0x0000007fb7a0c2e4, pid=44736, tid=44737 # # JRE version: (9.0) (build ) # Java VM: OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (9-internal+0-adhoc.aph.hs, mixed mode, tiered, compressed oops, g1 gc, linux-aarch64) There is a bit more in the log: --------------- S U M M A R Y ------------ Command Line: Host: AArch64 Processor rev 0 (aarch64), 48 cores, 62G, Random Linux Distro I guess the Oracle proprietary release will have the Oracle copyright etc., so that one wil be clear enough, and if it's from a Linux distro we'll know which port they use, unless some distro (Gentoo? Debian?) is crazy enough to package both versions, in which case it's their problem. I had assumed that Oracle's port would call itself "arm64" or somesuch, to distinguish it. Even the bug database only has "aarch32" and "aarch64", so it's going to be crazy hard to distinguish which port has a bug. We should really get that fixed. It's funny how this stuff comes out of the woodwork. Andrew.



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