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* HACKING: Various updates.
From-SVN: r120653
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@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
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2007-01-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
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* HACKING: Various updates.
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2007-01-10 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
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* java/lang/natDouble.cc (toString): Added parens.
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@ -7,6 +7,33 @@ explained in this HACKING file. Please add them if you discover them :)
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--
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If you plan to modify a .java file, you will need to configure with
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--enable-java-maintainer-mode. In order to make this work properly,
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you will need to have 'ecj1' and 'gjavah' executables in your PATH at
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build time.
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One way to do this is to download ecj.jar (see contrib/download_ecj)
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and write a simple wrapper script like:
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#! /bin/sh
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gij -cp /home/tromey/gnu/Generics/trunk/ecj.jar \
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org.eclipse.jdt.internal.compiler.batch.GCCMain \
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${1+"$@"}
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For gjavah, you can make a tools.zip from the classes in
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classpath/lib/tools/ and write a gjavah script like:
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#! /bin/sh
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dir=/home/tromey/gnu/Generics/Gcjh
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gij -cp $dir/tools.zip \
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gnu.classpath.tools.javah.Main \
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${1+"$@"}
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Another way to get a version of gjavah is to first do a
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non-maintainer-mode build and use the newly installed gjavah.
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--
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libgcj uses GNU Classpath as an upstream provider. Snapshots of
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Classpath are imported into the libgcj source tree. Some classes are
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overridden by local versions; these files still appear in the libgcj
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@ -81,7 +108,7 @@ before running automake.
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In general you should not make any changes in the classpath/
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directory. Changes here should come via imports from upstream.
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However, there are two (known) exceptions to this rule:
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However, there are three (known) exceptions to this rule:
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* In an emergency, such as a bootstrap breakage, it is ok to commit a
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patch provided that the problem is resolved (by fixing a compiler
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@ -91,6 +118,9 @@ However, there are two (known) exceptions to this rule:
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* On a release branch to fix a bug, where a full-scale import of
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Classpath is not advisable.
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* We maintain a fair number of divergences in the build system.
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This is a pain but they don't seem suitable for upstream.
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--
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You can develop in a GCC tree using a CVS checkout of Classpath, most
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@ -129,8 +159,3 @@ If you add a class to java.lang, java.io, or java.util
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at that point. This must be run from the build tree, in
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<build>/classpath/lib; it uses the .class file name to determine
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what to print.
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If you're generating a patch there is a program you can get to do an
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offline `cvs add' (it will fake an `add' if you don't have write
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permission yet). Then you can use `cvs diff -N' to generate the
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patch. See http://www.red-bean.com/cvsutils/
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