1% Building the JDK
2
3## TL;DR (Instructions for the Impatient)
4
5If you are eager to try out building the JDK, these simple steps works most of
6the time. They assume that you have installed Git (and Cygwin if running
7on Windows) and cloned the top-level JDK repository that you want to build.
8
9 1. [Get the complete source code](#getting-the-source-code): \
10    `git clone https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/`
11
12 2. [Run configure](#running-configure): \
13    `bash configure`
14
15    If `configure` fails due to missing dependencies (to either the
16    [toolchain](#native-compiler-toolchain-requirements), [build tools](
17    #build-tools-requirements), [external libraries](
18    #external-library-requirements) or the [boot JDK](#boot-jdk-requirements)),
19    most of the time it prints a suggestion on how to resolve the situation on
20    your platform. Follow the instructions, and try running `bash configure`
21    again.
22
23 3. [Run make](#running-make): \
24    `make images`
25
26 4. Verify your newly built JDK: \
27    `./build/*/images/jdk/bin/java -version`
28
29 5. [Run basic tests](##running-tests): \
30    `make run-test-tier1`
31
32If any of these steps failed, or if you want to know more about build
33requirements or build functionality, please continue reading this document.
34
35## Introduction
36
37The JDK is a complex software project. Building it requires a certain amount of
38technical expertise, a fair number of dependencies on external software, and
39reasonably powerful hardware.
40
41If you just want to use the JDK and not build it yourself, this document is not
42for you. See for instance [OpenJDK installation](
43http://openjdk.java.net/install) for some methods of installing a prebuilt
44JDK.
45
46## Getting the Source Code
47
48Make sure you are getting the correct version. As of JDK 10, the source is no
49longer split into separate repositories so you only need to clone one single
50repository. At the [OpenJDK Git site](https://git.openjdk.java.net/) you
51can see a list of all available repositories. If you want to build an older version,
52e.g. JDK 11, it is recommended that you get the `jdk11u` repo, which contains
53incremental updates, instead of the `jdk11` repo, which was frozen at JDK 11 GA.
54
55If you are new to Git, a good place to start is the book [Pro
56Git](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2). The rest of this document
57assumes a working knowledge of Git.
58
59### Special Considerations
60
61For a smooth building experience, it is recommended that you follow these rules
62on where and how to check out the source code.
63
64  * Do not check out the source code in a path which contains spaces. Chances
65    are the build will not work. This is most likely to be an issue on Windows
66    systems.
67
68  * Do not check out the source code in a path which has a very long name or is
69    nested many levels deep. Chances are you will hit an OS limitation during
70    the build.
71
72  * Put the source code on a local disk, not a network share. If possible, use
73    an SSD. The build process is very disk intensive, and having slow disk
74    access will significantly increase build times. If you need to use a
75    network share for the source code, see below for suggestions on how to keep
76    the build artifacts on a local disk.
77
78  * On Windows, if using [Cygwin](#cygwin), extra care must be taken to make sure
79    the environment is consistent. It is recommended that you follow this
80    procedure:
81
82      * Create the directory that is going to contain the top directory of the
83        JDK clone by using the `mkdir` command in the Cygwin bash shell.
84        That is, do *not* create it using Windows Explorer. This will ensure
85        that it will have proper Cygwin attributes, and that it's children will
86        inherit those attributes.
87
88      * Do not put the JDK clone in a path under your Cygwin home
89        directory. This is especially important if your user name contains
90        spaces and/or mixed upper and lower case letters.
91
92      * You need to install a git client. You have two choices, Cygwin git or
93        Git for Windows. Unfortunately there are pros and cons with each choice.
94
95        * The Cygwin `git` client has no line ending issues and understands
96          Cygwin paths (which are used throughout the JDK build system).
97          However, it does not currently work well with the Skara CLI tooling.
98          Please see the [Skara wiki on Git clients](
99          https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/SKARA/Skara#Skara-Git) for
100          up-to-date information about the Skara git client support.
101
102        * The [Git for Windows](https://gitforwindows.org) client has issues
103          with line endings, and do not understand Cygwin paths. It does work
104          well with the Skara CLI tooling, however. To alleviate the line ending
105          problems, make sure you set `core.autocrlf` to `false` (this is asked
106          during installation).
107
108    Failure to follow this procedure might result in hard-to-debug build
109    problems.
110
111## Build Hardware Requirements
112
113The JDK is a massive project, and require machines ranging from decent to
114powerful to be able to build in a reasonable amount of time, or to be able to
115complete a build at all.
116
117We *strongly* recommend usage of an SSD disk for the build, since disk speed is
118one of the limiting factors for build performance.
119
120### Building on x86
121
122At a minimum, a machine with 2-4 cores is advisable, as well as 2-4 GB of RAM.
123(The more cores to use, the more memory you need.) At least 6 GB of free disk
124space is required.
125
126Even for 32-bit builds, it is recommended to use a 64-bit build machine, and
127instead create a 32-bit target using `--with-target-bits=32`.
128
129### Building on aarch64
130
131At a minimum, a machine with 8 cores is advisable, as well as 8 GB of RAM.
132(The more cores to use, the more memory you need.) At least 6 GB of free disk
133space is required.
134
135If you do not have access to sufficiently powerful hardware, it is also
136possible to use [cross-compiling](#cross-compiling).
137
138### Building on 32-bit arm
139
140This is not recommended. Instead, see the section on [Cross-compiling](
141#cross-compiling).
142
143## Operating System Requirements
144
145The mainline JDK project supports Linux, macOS, AIX and Windows.
146Support for other operating system, e.g. BSD, exists in separate "port"
147projects.
148
149In general, the JDK can be built on a wide range of versions of these operating
150systems, but the further you deviate from what is tested on a daily basis, the
151more likely you are to run into problems.
152
153This table lists the OS versions used by Oracle when building the JDK. Such
154information is always subject to change, but this table is up to date at the
155time of writing.
156
157 Operating system   Vendor/version used
158 -----------------  -------------------------------------------------------
159 Linux              Oracle Enterprise Linux 6.4 / 7.6
160 macOS              Mac OS X 10.13 (High Sierra)
161 Windows            Windows Server 2012 R2
162
163The double version numbers for Linux are due to the hybrid model
164used at Oracle, where header files and external libraries from an older version
165are used when building on a more modern version of the OS.
166
167The Build Group has a wiki page with [Supported Build Platforms](
168https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/Build/Supported+Build+Platforms). From
169time to time, this is updated by contributors to list successes or failures of
170building on different platforms.
171
172### Windows
173
174Windows XP is not a supported platform, but all newer Windows should be able to
175build the JDK.
176
177On Windows, it is important that you pay attention to the instructions in the
178[Special Considerations](#special-considerations).
179
180Windows is the only non-POSIX OS supported by the JDK, and as such, requires
181some extra care. A POSIX support layer is required to build on Windows.
182Currently, the only supported such layers are Cygwin and Windows Subsystem for
183Linux (WSL). (Msys is no longer supported due to a too old bash; msys2 would
184likely be possible to support in a future version but that would require effort
185to implement.)
186
187Internally in the build system, all paths are represented as Unix-style paths,
188e.g. `/cygdrive/c/git/jdk/Makefile` rather than `C:\git\jdk\Makefile`. This
189rule also applies to input to the build system, e.g. in arguments to
190`configure`. So, use `--with-msvcr-dll=/cygdrive/c/msvcr100.dll` rather than
191`--with-msvcr-dll=c:\msvcr100.dll`. For details on this conversion, see the section
192on [Fixpath](#fixpath).
193
194#### Cygwin
195
196A functioning [Cygwin](http://www.cygwin.com/) environment is required for
197building the JDK on Windows. If you have a 64-bit OS, we strongly recommend
198using the 64-bit version of Cygwin.
199
200**Note:** Cygwin has a model of continuously updating all packages without any
201easy way to install or revert to a specific version of a package. This means
202that whenever you add or update a package in Cygwin, you might (inadvertently)
203update tools that are used by the JDK build process, and that can cause
204unexpected build problems.
205
206The JDK requires GNU Make 4.0 or greater in Cygwin. This is usually not a
207problem, since Cygwin currently only distributes GNU Make at a version above
2084.0.
209
210Apart from the basic Cygwin installation, the following packages must also be
211installed:
212
213  * `autoconf`
214  * `make`
215  * `zip`
216  * `unzip`
217
218Often, you can install these packages using the following command line:
219```
220<path to Cygwin setup>/setup-x86_64 -q -P autoconf -P make -P unzip -P zip
221```
222
223Unfortunately, Cygwin can be unreliable in certain circumstances. If you
224experience build tool crashes or strange issues when building on Windows,
225please check the Cygwin FAQ on the ["BLODA" list](
226https://cygwin.com/faq/faq.html#faq.using.bloda) and the section on [fork()
227failures](https://cygwin.com/faq/faq.html#faq.using.fixing-fork-failures).
228
229#### Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)
230
231Windows 10 1809 or newer is supported due to a dependency on the wslpath utility
232and support for environment variable sharing through WSLENV. Version 1803 can
233work but intermittent build failures have been observed.
234
235It's possible to build both Windows and Linux binaries from WSL. To build
236Windows binaries, you must use a Windows boot JDK (located in a
237Windows-accessible directory). To build Linux binaries, you must use a Linux
238boot JDK. The default behavior is to build for Windows. To build for Linux, pass
239`--build=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --host=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to
240`configure`.
241
242If building Windows binaries, the source code must be located in a Windows-
243accessible directory. This is because Windows executables (such as Visual Studio
244and the boot JDK) must be able to access the source code. Also, the drive where
245the source is stored must be mounted as case-insensitive by changing either
246/etc/fstab or /etc/wsl.conf in WSL. Individual directories may be corrected
247using the fsutil tool in case the source was cloned before changing the mount
248options.
249
250Note that while it's possible to build on WSL, testing is still not fully
251supported.
252
253### macOS
254
255Apple is using a quite aggressive scheme of pushing OS updates, and coupling
256these updates with required updates of Xcode. Unfortunately, this makes it
257difficult for a project such as the JDK to keep pace with a continuously updated
258machine running macOS. See the section on [Apple Xcode](#apple-xcode) on some
259strategies to deal with this.
260
261It is recommended that you use at least Mac OS X 10.13 (High Sierra). At the time
262of writing, the JDK has been successfully compiled on macOS 10.12 (Sierra).
263
264The standard macOS environment contains the basic tooling needed to build, but
265for external libraries a package manager is recommended. The JDK uses
266[homebrew](https://brew.sh/) in the examples, but feel free to use whatever
267manager you want (or none).
268
269### Linux
270
271It is often not much problem to build the JDK on Linux. The only general advice
272is to try to use the compilers, external libraries and header files as provided
273by your distribution.
274
275The basic tooling is provided as part of the core operating system, but you
276will most likely need to install developer packages.
277
278For apt-based distributions (Debian, Ubuntu, etc), try this:
279```
280sudo apt-get install build-essential
281```
282
283For rpm-based distributions (Fedora, Red Hat, etc), try this:
284```
285sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
286```
287
288### AIX
289
290Please consult the AIX section of the [Supported Build Platforms](
291https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/Build/Supported+Build+Platforms) OpenJDK
292Build Wiki page for details about which versions of AIX are supported.
293
294## Native Compiler (Toolchain) Requirements
295
296Large portions of the JDK consists of native code, that needs to be compiled to
297be able to run on the target platform. In theory, toolchain and operating
298system should be independent factors, but in practice there's more or less a
299one-to-one correlation between target operating system and toolchain.
300
301 Operating system   Supported toolchain
302 ------------------ -------------------------
303 Linux              gcc, clang
304 macOS              Apple Xcode (using clang)
305 AIX                IBM XL C/C++
306 Windows            Microsoft Visual Studio
307
308Please see the individual sections on the toolchains for version
309recommendations. As a reference, these versions of the toolchains are used, at
310the time of writing, by Oracle for the daily builds of the JDK. It should be
311possible to compile the JDK with both older and newer versions, but the closer
312you stay to this list, the more likely you are to compile successfully without
313issues.
314
315 Operating system   Toolchain version
316 ------------------ -------------------------------------------------------
317 Linux              gcc 9.2.0
318 macOS              Apple Xcode 10.1 (using clang 10.0.0)
319 Windows            Microsoft Visual Studio 2019 update 16.5.3
320
321All compilers are expected to be able to compile to the C99 language standard,
322as some C99 features are used in the source code. Microsoft Visual Studio
323doesn't fully support C99 so in practice shared code is limited to using C99
324features that it does support.
325
326### gcc
327
328The minimum accepted version of gcc is 5.0. Older versions will generate a warning
329by `configure` and are unlikely to work.
330
331The JDK is currently known to be able to compile with at least version 9.2 of
332gcc.
333
334In general, any version between these two should be usable.
335
336### clang
337
338The minimum accepted version of clang is 3.2. Older versions will not be
339accepted by `configure`.
340
341To use clang instead of gcc on Linux, use `--with-toolchain-type=clang`.
342
343### Apple Xcode
344
345The oldest supported version of Xcode is 8.
346
347You will need the Xcode command lines developers tools to be able to build
348the JDK. (Actually, *only* the command lines tools are needed, not the IDE.)
349The simplest way to install these is to run:
350```
351xcode-select --install
352```
353
354It is advisable to keep an older version of Xcode for building the JDK when
355updating Xcode. This [blog page](
356http://iosdevelopertips.com/xcode/install-multiple-versions-of-xcode.html) has
357good suggestions on managing multiple Xcode versions. To use a specific version
358of Xcode, use `xcode-select -s` before running `configure`, or use
359`--with-toolchain-path` to point to the version of Xcode to use, e.g.
360`configure --with-toolchain-path=/Applications/Xcode8.app/Contents/Developer/usr/bin`
361
362If you have recently (inadvertently) updated your OS and/or Xcode version, and
363the JDK can no longer be built, please see the section on [Problems with the
364Build Environment](#problems-with-the-build-environment), and [Getting
365Help](#getting-help) to find out if there are any recent, non-merged patches
366available for this update.
367
368### Microsoft Visual Studio
369
370The minimum accepted version of Visual Studio is 2010. Older versions will not
371be accepted by `configure`. The maximum accepted version of Visual Studio is
3722019. Versions older than 2017 are unlikely to continue working for long.
373
374If you have multiple versions of Visual Studio installed, `configure` will by
375default pick the latest. You can request a specific version to be used by
376setting `--with-toolchain-version`, e.g. `--with-toolchain-version=2015`.
377
378If you get `LINK: fatal error LNK1123: failure during conversion to COFF: file
379invalid` when building using Visual Studio 2010, you have encountered
380[KB2757355](http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2757355), a bug triggered by a
381specific installation order. However, the solution suggested by the KB article
382does not always resolve the problem. See [this stackoverflow discussion](
383https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10888391) for other suggestions.
384
385### IBM XL C/C++
386
387Please consult the AIX section of the [Supported Build Platforms](
388https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/Build/Supported+Build+Platforms) OpenJDK
389Build Wiki page for details about which versions of XLC are supported.
390
391
392## Boot JDK Requirements
393
394Paradoxically, building the JDK requires a pre-existing JDK. This is called the
395"boot JDK". The boot JDK does not, however, have to be a JDK built directly from
396the source code available in the OpenJDK Community.  If you are porting the JDK
397to a new platform, chances are that there already exists another JDK for that
398platform that is usable as boot JDK.
399
400The rule of thumb is that the boot JDK for building JDK major version *N*
401should be a JDK of major version *N-1*, so for building JDK 9 a JDK 8 would be
402suitable as boot JDK. However, the JDK should be able to "build itself", so an
403up-to-date build of the current JDK source is an acceptable alternative. If
404you are following the *N-1* rule, make sure you've got the latest update
405version, since JDK 8 GA might not be able to build JDK 9 on all platforms.
406
407Early in the release cycle, version *N-1* may not yet have been released. In
408that case, the preferred boot JDK will be version *N-2* until version *N-1*
409is available.
410
411If the boot JDK is not automatically detected, or the wrong JDK is picked, use
412`--with-boot-jdk` to point to the JDK to use.
413
414### Getting JDK binaries
415
416JDK binaries for Linux, Windows and macOS can be downloaded from
417[jdk.java.net](http://jdk.java.net). An alternative is to download the
418[Oracle JDK](http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads). Another
419is the [Adopt OpenJDK Project](https://adoptopenjdk.net/), which publishes
420experimental prebuilt binaries for various platforms.
421
422On Linux you can also get a JDK from the Linux distribution. On apt-based
423distros (like Debian and Ubuntu), `sudo apt-get install openjdk-<VERSION>-jdk`
424is typically enough to install a JDK \<VERSION\>. On rpm-based distros (like
425Fedora and Red Hat), try `sudo yum install java-<VERSION>-openjdk-devel`.
426
427## External Library Requirements
428
429Different platforms require different external libraries. In general, libraries
430are not optional - that is, they are either required or not used.
431
432If a required library is not detected by `configure`, you need to provide the
433path to it. There are two forms of the `configure` arguments to point to an
434external library: `--with-<LIB>=<path>` or `--with-<LIB>-include=<path to
435include> --with-<LIB>-lib=<path to lib>`. The first variant is more concise,
436but require the include files and library files to reside in a default
437hierarchy under this directory. In most cases, it works fine.
438
439As a fallback, the second version allows you to point to the include directory
440and the lib directory separately.
441
442### FreeType
443
444FreeType2 from [The FreeType Project](http://www.freetype.org/) is not required
445on any platform. The exception is on Unix-based platforms when configuring such
446that the build artifacts will reference a system installed library,
447rather than bundling the JDK's own copy.
448
449  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
450    libfreetype6-dev`.
451  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
452    freetype-devel`.
453
454Use `--with-freetype-include=<path>` and `--with-freetype-lib=<path>`
455if `configure` does not automatically locate the platform FreeType files.
456
457### CUPS
458
459CUPS, [Common UNIX Printing System](http://www.cups.org) header files are
460required on all platforms, except Windows. Often these files are provided by
461your operating system.
462
463  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
464    libcups2-dev`.
465  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
466    cups-devel`.
467
468Use `--with-cups=<path>` if `configure` does not properly locate your CUPS
469files.
470
471### X11
472
473Certain [X11](http://www.x.org/) libraries and include files are required on
474Linux.
475
476  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
477    libx11-dev libxext-dev libxrender-dev libxrandr-dev libxtst-dev libxt-dev`.
478  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
479    libXtst-devel libXt-devel libXrender-devel libXrandr-devel libXi-devel`.
480
481Use `--with-x=<path>` if `configure` does not properly locate your X11 files.
482
483### ALSA
484
485ALSA, [Advanced Linux Sound Architecture](https://www.alsa-project.org/) is
486required on Linux. At least version 0.9.1 of ALSA is required.
487
488  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
489    libasound2-dev`.
490  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
491    alsa-lib-devel`.
492
493Use `--with-alsa=<path>` if `configure` does not properly locate your ALSA
494files.
495
496### libffi
497
498libffi, the [Portable Foreign Function Interface Library](
499http://sourceware.org/libffi) is required when building the Zero version of
500Hotspot.
501
502  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
503    libffi-dev`.
504  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
505    libffi-devel`.
506
507Use `--with-libffi=<path>` if `configure` does not properly locate your libffi
508files.
509
510## Build Tools Requirements
511
512### Autoconf
513
514The JDK requires [Autoconf](http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf) on all
515platforms. At least version 2.69 is required.
516
517  * To install on an apt-based Linux, try running `sudo apt-get install
518    autoconf`.
519  * To install on an rpm-based Linux, try running `sudo yum install
520    autoconf`.
521  * To install on macOS, try running `brew install autoconf`.
522  * To install on Windows, try running `<path to Cygwin setup>/setup-x86_64 -q
523    -P autoconf`.
524
525If `configure` has problems locating your installation of autoconf, you can
526specify it using the `AUTOCONF` environment variable, like this:
527
528```
529AUTOCONF=<path to autoconf> configure ...
530```
531
532### GNU Make
533
534The JDK requires [GNU Make](http://www.gnu.org/software/make). No other flavors
535of make are supported.
536
537At least version 3.81 of GNU Make must be used. For distributions supporting
538GNU Make 4.0 or above, we strongly recommend it. GNU Make 4.0 contains useful
539functionality to handle parallel building (supported by `--with-output-sync`)
540and speed and stability improvements.
541
542Note that `configure` locates and verifies a properly functioning version of
543`make` and stores the path to this `make` binary in the configuration. If you
544start a build using `make` on the command line, you will be using the version
545of make found first in your `PATH`, and not necessarily the one stored in the
546configuration. This initial make will be used as "bootstrap make", and in a
547second stage, the make located by `configure` will be called. Normally, this
548will present no issues, but if you have a very old `make`, or a non-GNU Make
549`make` in your path, this might cause issues.
550
551If you want to override the default make found by `configure`, use the `MAKE`
552configure variable, e.g. `configure MAKE=/opt/gnu/make`.
553
554### GNU Bash
555
556The JDK requires [GNU Bash](http://www.gnu.org/software/bash). No other shells
557are supported.
558
559At least version 3.2 of GNU Bash must be used.
560
561## Running Configure
562
563To build the JDK, you need a "configuration", which consists of a directory
564where to store the build output, coupled with information about the platform,
565the specific build machine, and choices that affect how the JDK is built.
566
567The configuration is created by the `configure` script. The basic invocation of
568the `configure` script looks like this:
569
570```
571bash configure [options]
572```
573
574This will create an output directory containing the configuration and setup an
575area for the build result. This directory typically looks like
576`build/linux-x64-server-release`, but the actual name depends on your specific
577configuration. (It can also be set directly, see [Using Multiple
578Configurations](#using-multiple-configurations)). This directory is referred to
579as `$BUILD` in this documentation.
580
581`configure` will try to figure out what system you are running on and where all
582necessary build components are. If you have all prerequisites for building
583installed, it should find everything. If it fails to detect any component
584automatically, it will exit and inform you about the problem.
585
586Some command line examples:
587
588  * Create a 32-bit build for Windows with FreeType2 in `C:\freetype-i586`:
589    ```
590    bash configure --with-freetype=/cygdrive/c/freetype-i586 --with-target-bits=32
591    ```
592
593  * Create a debug build with the `server` JVM and DTrace enabled:
594    ```
595    bash configure --enable-debug --with-jvm-variants=server --enable-dtrace
596    ```
597
598### Common Configure Arguments
599
600Here follows some of the most common and important `configure` argument.
601
602To get up-to-date information on *all* available `configure` argument, please
603run:
604```
605bash configure --help
606```
607
608(Note that this help text also include general autoconf options, like
609`--dvidir`, that is not relevant to the JDK. To list only JDK-specific
610features, use `bash configure --help=short` instead.)
611
612#### Configure Arguments for Tailoring the Build
613
614  * `--enable-debug` - Set the debug level to `fastdebug` (this is a shorthand
615    for `--with-debug-level=fastdebug`)
616  * `--with-debug-level=<level>` - Set the debug level, which can be `release`,
617    `fastdebug`, `slowdebug` or `optimized`. Default is `release`. `optimized`
618    is variant of `release` with additional Hotspot debug code.
619  * `--with-native-debug-symbols=<method>` - Specify if and how native debug
620    symbols should be built. Available methods are `none`, `internal`,
621    `external`, `zipped`. Default behavior depends on platform. See [Native
622    Debug Symbols](#native-debug-symbols) for more details.
623  * `--with-version-string=<string>` - Specify the version string this build
624    will be identified with.
625  * `--with-version-<part>=<value>` - A group of options, where `<part>` can be
626    any of `pre`, `opt`, `build`, `major`, `minor`, `security` or `patch`. Use
627    these options to modify just the corresponding part of the version string
628    from the default, or the value provided by `--with-version-string`.
629  * `--with-jvm-variants=<variant>[,<variant>...]` - Build the specified variant
630    (or variants) of Hotspot. Valid variants are: `server`, `client`,
631    `minimal`, `core`, `zero`, `custom`. Note that not all
632    variants are possible to combine in a single build.
633  * `--enable-jvm-feature-<feature>` or `--disable-jvm-feature-<feature>` -
634    Include (or exclude) `<feature>` as a JVM feature in Hotspot. You can also
635    specify a list of features to be enabled, separated by space or comma, as
636    `--with-jvm-features=<feature>[,<feature>...]`. If you prefix `<feature>`
637    with a `-`, it will be disabled. These options will modify the default list
638    of features for the JVM variant(s) you are building. For the `custom` JVM
639    variant, the default list is empty. A complete list of valid JVM features
640    can be found using `bash configure --help`.
641  * `--with-target-bits=<bits>` - Create a target binary suitable for running
642    on a `<bits>` platform. Use this to create 32-bit output on a 64-bit build
643    platform, instead of doing a full cross-compile. (This is known as a
644    *reduced* build.)
645
646On Linux, BSD and AIX, it is possible to override where Java by default
647searches for runtime/JNI libraries. This can be useful in situations where
648there is a special shared directory for system JNI libraries. This setting
649can in turn be overriden at runtime by setting the `java.library.path` property.
650
651  * `--with-jni-libpath=<path>` - Use the specified path as a default
652  when searching for runtime libraries.
653
654#### Configure Arguments for Native Compilation
655
656  * `--with-devkit=<path>` - Use this devkit for compilers, tools and resources
657  * `--with-sysroot=<path>` - Use this directory as sysroot
658  * `--with-extra-path=<path>[;<path>]` - Prepend these directories to the
659    default path when searching for all kinds of binaries
660  * `--with-toolchain-path=<path>[;<path>]` - Prepend these directories when
661    searching for toolchain binaries (compilers etc)
662  * `--with-extra-cflags=<flags>` - Append these flags when compiling JDK C
663    files
664  * `--with-extra-cxxflags=<flags>` - Append these flags when compiling JDK C++
665    files
666  * `--with-extra-ldflags=<flags>` - Append these flags when linking JDK
667    libraries
668
669#### Configure Arguments for External Dependencies
670
671  * `--with-boot-jdk=<path>` - Set the path to the [Boot JDK](
672    #boot-jdk-requirements)
673  * `--with-freetype=<path>` - Set the path to [FreeType](#freetype)
674  * `--with-cups=<path>` - Set the path to [CUPS](#cups)
675  * `--with-x=<path>` - Set the path to [X11](#x11)
676  * `--with-alsa=<path>` - Set the path to [ALSA](#alsa)
677  * `--with-libffi=<path>` - Set the path to [libffi](#libffi)
678  * `--with-jtreg=<path>` - Set the path to JTReg. See [Running Tests](
679    #running-tests)
680
681Certain third-party libraries used by the JDK (libjpeg, giflib, libpng, lcms
682and zlib) are included in the JDK repository. The default behavior of the
683JDK build is to use the included ("bundled") versions of libjpeg, giflib,
684libpng and lcms.
685For zlib, the system lib (if present) is used except on Windows and AIX.
686However the bundled libraries may be replaced by an external version.
687To do so, specify `system` as the `<source>` option in these arguments.
688(The default is `bundled`).
689
690  * `--with-libjpeg=<source>` - Use the specified source for libjpeg
691  * `--with-giflib=<source>` - Use the specified source for giflib
692  * `--with-libpng=<source>` - Use the specified source for libpng
693  * `--with-lcms=<source>` - Use the specified source for lcms
694  * `--with-zlib=<source>` - Use the specified source for zlib
695
696On Linux, it is possible to select either static or dynamic linking of the C++
697runtime. The default is static linking, with dynamic linking as fallback if the
698static library is not found.
699
700  * `--with-stdc++lib=<method>` - Use the specified method (`static`, `dynamic`
701    or `default`) for linking the C++ runtime.
702
703### Configure Control Variables
704
705It is possible to control certain aspects of `configure` by overriding the
706value of `configure` variables, either on the command line or in the
707environment.
708
709Normally, this is **not recommended**. If used improperly, it can lead to a
710broken configuration. Unless you're well versed in the build system, this is
711hard to use properly. Therefore, `configure` will print a warning if this is
712detected.
713
714However, there are a few `configure` variables, known as *control variables*
715that are supposed to be overriden on the command line. These are variables that
716describe the location of tools needed by the build, like `MAKE` or `GREP`. If
717any such variable is specified, `configure` will use that value instead of
718trying to autodetect the tool. For instance, `bash configure
719MAKE=/opt/gnumake4.0/bin/make`.
720
721If a configure argument exists, use that instead, e.g. use `--with-jtreg`
722instead of setting `JTREGEXE`.
723
724Also note that, despite what autoconf claims, setting `CFLAGS` will not
725accomplish anything. Instead use `--with-extra-cflags` (and similar for
726`cxxflags` and `ldflags`).
727
728## Running Make
729
730When you have a proper configuration, all you need to do to build the JDK is to
731run `make`. (But see the warning at [GNU Make](#gnu-make) about running the
732correct version of make.)
733
734When running `make` without any arguments, the default target is used, which is
735the same as running `make default` or `make jdk`. This will build a minimal (or
736roughly minimal) set of compiled output (known as an "exploded image") needed
737for a developer to actually execute the newly built JDK. The idea is that in an
738incremental development fashion, when doing a normal make, you should only
739spend time recompiling what's changed (making it purely incremental) and only
740do the work that's needed to actually run and test your code.
741
742The output of the exploded image resides in `$BUILD/jdk`. You can test the
743newly built JDK like this: `$BUILD/jdk/bin/java -version`.
744
745### Common Make Targets
746
747Apart from the default target, here are some common make targets:
748
749  * `hotspot` - Build all of hotspot (but only hotspot)
750  * `hotspot-<variant>` - Build just the specified jvm variant
751  * `images` or `product-images` - Build the JDK image
752  * `docs` or `docs-image` - Build the documentation image
753  * `test-image` - Build the test image
754  * `all` or `all-images` - Build all images (product, docs and test)
755  * `bootcycle-images` - Build images twice, second time with newly built JDK
756    (good for testing)
757  * `clean` - Remove all files generated by make, but not those generated by
758    configure
759  * `dist-clean` - Remove all files, including configuration
760
761Run `make help` to get an up-to-date list of important make targets and make
762control variables.
763
764It is possible to build just a single module, a single phase, or a single phase
765of a single module, by creating make targets according to these followin
766patterns. A phase can be either of `gensrc`, `gendata`, `copy`, `java`,
767`launchers`, or `libs`. See [Using Fine-Grained Make Targets](
768#using-fine-grained-make-targets) for more details about this functionality.
769
770  * `<phase>` - Build the specified phase and everything it depends on
771  * `<module>` - Build the specified module and everything it depends on
772  * `<module>-<phase>` - Compile the specified phase for the specified module
773    and everything it depends on
774
775Similarly, it is possible to clean just a part of the build by creating make
776targets according to these patterns:
777
778  * `clean-<outputdir>` - Remove the subdir in the output dir with the name
779  * `clean-<phase>` - Remove all build results related to a certain build
780    phase
781  * `clean-<module>` - Remove all build results related to a certain module
782  * `clean-<module>-<phase>` - Remove all build results related to a certain
783    module and phase
784
785### Make Control Variables
786
787It is possible to control `make` behavior by overriding the value of `make`
788variables, either on the command line or in the environment.
789
790Normally, this is **not recommended**. If used improperly, it can lead to a
791broken build. Unless you're well versed in the build system, this is hard to
792use properly. Therefore, `make` will print a warning if this is detected.
793
794However, there are a few `make` variables, known as *control variables* that
795are supposed to be overriden on the command line. These make up the "make time"
796configuration, as opposed to the "configure time" configuration.
797
798#### General Make Control Variables
799
800  * `JOBS` - Specify the number of jobs to build with. See [Build
801    Performance](#build-performance).
802  * `LOG` - Specify the logging level and functionality. See [Checking the
803    Build Log File](#checking-the-build-log-file)
804  * `CONF` and `CONF_NAME` - Selecting the configuration(s) to use. See [Using
805    Multiple Configurations](#using-multiple-configurations)
806
807#### Test Make Control Variables
808
809These make control variables only make sense when running tests. Please see
810[Testing the JDK](testing.html) for details.
811
812  * `TEST`
813  * `TEST_JOBS`
814  * `JTREG`
815  * `GTEST`
816
817#### Advanced Make Control Variables
818
819These advanced make control variables can be potentially unsafe. See [Hints and
820Suggestions for Advanced Users](#hints-and-suggestions-for-advanced-users) and
821[Understanding the Build System](#understanding-the-build-system) for details.
822
823  * `SPEC`
824  * `CONF_CHECK`
825  * `COMPARE_BUILD`
826  * `JDK_FILTER`
827  * `SPEC_FILTER`
828
829## Running Tests
830
831Most of the JDK tests are using the [JTReg](http://openjdk.java.net/jtreg)
832test framework. Make sure that your configuration knows where to find your
833installation of JTReg. If this is not picked up automatically, use the
834`--with-jtreg=<path to jtreg home>` option to point to the JTReg framework.
835Note that this option should point to the JTReg home, i.e. the top directory,
836containing `lib/jtreg.jar` etc.
837
838The [Adoption Group](https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/Adoption) provides
839recent builds of jtreg [here](
840https://ci.adoptopenjdk.net/view/Dependencies/job/jtreg/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact).
841Download the latest `.tar.gz` file, unpack it, and point `--with-jtreg` to the
842`jtreg` directory that you just unpacked.
843
844Building of Hotspot Gtest suite requires the source code of Google Test framework.
845The top directory, which contains both `googletest` and `googlemock`
846directories, should be specified via `--with-gtest`.
847The supported version of Google Test is 1.8.1, whose source code can be obtained:
848
849 * by downloading and unpacking the source bundle from [here](https://github.com/google/googletest/releases/tag/release-1.8.1)
850 * or by checking out `release-1.8.1` tag of `googletest` project: `git clone -b release-1.8.1 https://github.com/google/googletest`
851
852To execute the most basic tests (tier 1), use:
853```
854make run-test-tier1
855```
856
857For more details on how to run tests, please see the [Testing
858the JDK](testing.html) document.
859
860## Cross-compiling
861
862Cross-compiling means using one platform (the *build* platform) to generate
863output that can ran on another platform (the *target* platform).
864
865The typical reason for cross-compiling is that the build is performed on a more
866powerful desktop computer, but the resulting binaries will be able to run on a
867different, typically low-performing system. Most of the complications that
868arise when building for embedded is due to this separation of *build* and
869*target* systems.
870
871This requires a more complex setup and build procedure. This section assumes
872you are familiar with cross-compiling in general, and will only deal with the
873particularities of cross-compiling the JDK. If you are new to cross-compiling,
874please see the [external links at Wikipedia](
875https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler#External_links) for a good start
876on reading materials.
877
878Cross-compiling the JDK requires you to be able to build both for the build
879platform and for the target platform. The reason for the former is that we need
880to build and execute tools during the build process, both native tools and Java
881tools.
882
883If all you want to do is to compile a 32-bit version, for the same OS, on a
88464-bit machine, consider using `--with-target-bits=32` instead of doing a
885full-blown cross-compilation. (While this surely is possible, it's a lot more
886work and will take much longer to build.)
887
888### Cross compiling the easy way with OpenJDK devkits
889
890The OpenJDK build system provides out-of-the box support for creating and using
891so called devkits. A `devkit` is basically a collection of a cross-compiling
892toolchain and a sysroot environment which can easily be used together with the
893`--with-devkit` configure option to cross compile the OpenJDK. On Linux/x86_64,
894the following command:
895```
896bash configure --with-devkit=<devkit-path> --openjdk-target=ppc64-linux-gnu && make
897```
898
899will configure and build OpenJDK for Linux/ppc64 assuming that `<devkit-path>`
900points to a Linux/x86_64 to Linux/ppc64 devkit.
901
902Devkits can be created from the `make/devkit` directory by executing:
903```
904make [ TARGETS="<TARGET_TRIPLET>+" ] [ BASE_OS=<OS> ] [ BASE_OS_VERSION=<VER> ]
905```
906
907where `TARGETS` contains one or more `TARGET_TRIPLET`s of the form
908described in [section 3.4 of the GNU Autobook](
909https://sourceware.org/autobook/autobook/autobook_17.html). If no
910targets are given, a native toolchain for the current platform will be
911created. Currently, at least the following targets are known to work:
912
913 Supported devkit targets
914 -------------------------
915 x86_64-linux-gnu
916 aarch64-linux-gnu
917 arm-linux-gnueabihf
918 ppc64-linux-gnu
919 ppc64le-linux-gnu
920 s390x-linux-gnu
921
922`BASE_OS` must be one of "OEL6" for Oracle Enterprise Linux 6 or
923"Fedora" (if not specified "OEL6" will be the default). If the base OS
924is "Fedora" the corresponding Fedora release can be specified with the
925help of the `BASE_OS_VERSION` option (with "27" as default version).
926If the build is successful, the new devkits can be found in the
927`build/devkit/result` subdirectory:
928```
929cd make/devkit
930make TARGETS="ppc64le-linux-gnu aarch64-linux-gnu" BASE_OS=Fedora BASE_OS_VERSION=21
931ls -1 ../../build/devkit/result/
932x86_64-linux-gnu-to-aarch64-linux-gnu
933x86_64-linux-gnu-to-ppc64le-linux-gnu
934```
935
936Notice that devkits are not only useful for targeting different build
937platforms. Because they contain the full build dependencies for a
938system (i.e. compiler and root file system), they can easily be used
939to build well-known, reliable and reproducible build environments. You
940can for example create and use a devkit with GCC 7.3 and a Fedora 12
941sysroot environment (with glibc 2.11) on Ubuntu 14.04 (which doesn't
942have GCC 7.3 by default) to produce OpenJDK binaries which will run on
943all Linux systems with runtime libraries newer than the ones from
944Fedora 12 (e.g. Ubuntu 16.04, SLES 11 or RHEL 6).
945
946### Boot JDK and Build JDK
947
948When cross-compiling, make sure you use a boot JDK that runs on the *build*
949system, and not on the *target* system.
950
951To be able to build, we need a "Build JDK", which is a JDK built from the
952current sources (that is, the same as the end result of the entire build
953process), but able to run on the *build* system, and not the *target* system.
954(In contrast, the Boot JDK should be from an older release, e.g. JDK 8 when
955building JDK 9.)
956
957The build process will create a minimal Build JDK for you, as part of building.
958To speed up the build, you can use `--with-build-jdk` to `configure` to point
959to a pre-built Build JDK. Please note that the build result is unpredictable,
960and can possibly break in subtle ways, if the Build JDK does not **exactly**
961match the current sources.
962
963### Specifying the Target Platform
964
965You *must* specify the target platform when cross-compiling. Doing so will also
966automatically turn the build into a cross-compiling mode. The simplest way to
967do this is to use the `--openjdk-target` argument, e.g.
968`--openjdk-target=arm-linux-gnueabihf`. or `--openjdk-target=aarch64-oe-linux`.
969This will automatically set the `--build`, `--host` and `--target` options for
970autoconf, which can otherwise be confusing. (In autoconf terminology, the
971"target" is known as "host", and "target" is used for building a Canadian
972cross-compiler.)
973
974### Toolchain Considerations
975
976You will need two copies of your toolchain, one which generates output that can
977run on the target system (the normal, or *target*, toolchain), and one that
978generates output that can run on the build system (the *build* toolchain). Note
979that cross-compiling is only supported for gcc at the time being. The gcc
980standard is to prefix cross-compiling toolchains with the target denominator.
981If you follow this standard, `configure` is likely to pick up the toolchain
982correctly.
983
984The *build* toolchain will be autodetected just the same way the normal
985*build*/*target* toolchain will be autodetected when not cross-compiling. If
986this is not what you want, or if the autodetection fails, you can specify a
987devkit containing the *build* toolchain using `--with-build-devkit` to
988`configure`, or by giving `BUILD_CC` and `BUILD_CXX` arguments.
989
990It is often helpful to locate the cross-compilation tools, headers and
991libraries in a separate directory, outside the normal path, and point out that
992directory to `configure`. Do this by setting the sysroot (`--with-sysroot`) and
993appending the directory when searching for cross-compilations tools
994(`--with-toolchain-path`). As a compact form, you can also use `--with-devkit`
995to point to a single directory, if it is correctly setup. (See `basics.m4` for
996details.)
997
998### Native Libraries
999
1000You will need copies of external native libraries for the *target* system,
1001present on the *build* machine while building.
1002
1003Take care not to replace the *build* system's version of these libraries by
1004mistake, since that can render the *build* machine unusable.
1005
1006Make sure that the libraries you point to (ALSA, X11, etc) are for the
1007*target*, not the *build*, platform.
1008
1009#### ALSA
1010
1011You will need alsa libraries suitable for your *target* system. For most cases,
1012using Debian's pre-built libraries work fine.
1013
1014Note that alsa is needed even if you only want to build a headless JDK.
1015
1016  * Go to [Debian Package Search](https://www.debian.org/distrib/packages) and
1017    search for the `libasound2` and `libasound2-dev` packages for your *target*
1018    system. Download them to /tmp.
1019
1020  * Install the libraries into the cross-compilation toolchain. For instance:
1021```
1022cd /tools/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-raspbian-2012.09-20120921_linux/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libc
1023dpkg-deb -x /tmp/libasound2_1.0.25-4_armhf.deb .
1024dpkg-deb -x /tmp/libasound2-dev_1.0.25-4_armhf.deb .
1025```
1026
1027  * If alsa is not properly detected by `configure`, you can point it out by
1028    `--with-alsa`.
1029
1030#### X11
1031
1032You will need X11 libraries suitable for your *target* system. For most cases,
1033using Debian's pre-built libraries work fine.
1034
1035Note that X11 is needed even if you only want to build a headless JDK.
1036
1037  * Go to [Debian Package Search](https://www.debian.org/distrib/packages),
1038    search for the following packages for your *target* system, and download them
1039    to /tmp/target-x11:
1040      * libxi
1041      * libxi-dev
1042      * x11proto-core-dev
1043      * x11proto-input-dev
1044      * x11proto-kb-dev
1045      * x11proto-render-dev
1046      * x11proto-xext-dev
1047      * libice-dev
1048      * libxrender
1049      * libxrender-dev
1050      * libxrandr-dev
1051      * libsm-dev
1052      * libxt-dev
1053      * libx11
1054      * libx11-dev
1055      * libxtst
1056      * libxtst-dev
1057      * libxext
1058      * libxext-dev
1059
1060  * Install the libraries into the cross-compilation toolchain. For instance:
1061    ```
1062    cd /tools/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-raspbian-2012.09-20120921_linux/arm-linux-gnueabihf/libc/usr
1063    mkdir X11R6
1064    cd X11R6
1065    for deb in /tmp/target-x11/*.deb ; do dpkg-deb -x $deb . ; done
1066    mv usr/* .
1067    cd lib
1068    cp arm-linux-gnueabihf/* .
1069    ```
1070
1071    You can ignore the following messages. These libraries are not needed to
1072    successfully complete a full JDK build.
1073    ```
1074    cp: cannot stat `arm-linux-gnueabihf/libICE.so': No such file or directory
1075    cp: cannot stat `arm-linux-gnueabihf/libSM.so': No such file or directory
1076    cp: cannot stat `arm-linux-gnueabihf/libXt.so': No such file or directory
1077    ```
1078
1079  * If the X11 libraries are not properly detected by `configure`, you can
1080    point them out by `--with-x`.
1081
1082### Creating And Using Sysroots With qemu-deboostrap
1083
1084Fortunately, you can create sysroots for foreign architectures with tools
1085provided by your OS. On Debian/Ubuntu systems, one could use `qemu-deboostrap` to
1086create the *target* system chroot, which would have the native libraries and headers
1087specific to that *target* system. After that, we can use the cross-compiler on the *build*
1088system, pointing into chroot to get the build dependencies right. This allows building
1089for foreign architectures with native compilation speed.
1090
1091For example, cross-compiling to AArch64 from x86_64 could be done like this:
1092
1093  * Install cross-compiler on the *build* system:
1094```
1095apt install g++-aarch64-linux-gnu gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu
1096```
1097
1098  * Create chroot on the *build* system, configuring it for *target* system:
1099```
1100sudo qemu-debootstrap --arch=arm64 --verbose \
1101       --include=fakeroot,build-essential,libx11-dev,libxext-dev,libxrender-dev,libxrandr-dev,libxtst-dev,libxt-dev,libcups2-dev,libfontconfig1-dev,libasound2-dev,libfreetype6-dev,libpng12-dev \
1102       --resolve-deps jessie /chroots/arm64 http://httpredir.debian.org/debian/
1103```
1104
1105  * Configure and build with newly created chroot as sysroot/toolchain-path:
1106```
1107CC=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc CXX=aarch64-linux-gnu-g++ sh ./configure --openjdk-target=aarch64-linux-gnu --with-sysroot=/chroots/arm64/ --with-toolchain-path=/chroots/arm64/
1108make images
1109ls build/linux-aarch64-normal-server-release/
1110```
1111
1112The build does not create new files in that chroot, so it can be reused for multiple builds
1113without additional cleanup.
1114
1115Architectures that are known to successfully cross-compile like this are:
1116
1117  Target        `CC`                      `CXX`                       `--arch=...`  `--openjdk-target=...`
1118  ------------  ------------------------- --------------------------- ------------- -----------------------
1119  x86           default                   default                     i386          i386-linux-gnu
1120  armhf         gcc-arm-linux-gnueabihf   g++-arm-linux-gnueabihf     armhf         arm-linux-gnueabihf
1121  aarch64       gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu     g++-aarch64-linux-gnu       arm64         aarch64-linux-gnu
1122  ppc64el       gcc-powerpc64le-linux-gnu g++-powerpc64le-linux-gnu   ppc64el       powerpc64le-linux-gnu
1123  s390x         gcc-s390x-linux-gnu       g++-s390x-linux-gnu         s390x         s390x-linux-gnu
1124
1125Additional architectures might be supported by Debian/Ubuntu Ports.
1126
1127### Building for ARM/aarch64
1128
1129A common cross-compilation target is the ARM CPU. When building for ARM, it is
1130useful to set the ABI profile. A number of pre-defined ABI profiles are
1131available using `--with-abi-profile`: arm-vfp-sflt, arm-vfp-hflt, arm-sflt,
1132armv5-vfp-sflt, armv6-vfp-hflt. Note that soft-float ABIs are no longer
1133properly supported by the JDK.
1134
1135### Verifying the Build
1136
1137The build will end up in a directory named like
1138`build/linux-arm-normal-server-release`.
1139
1140Inside this build output directory, the `images/jdk` will contain the newly
1141built JDK, for your *target* system.
1142
1143Copy these folders to your *target* system. Then you can run e.g.
1144`images/jdk/bin/java -version`.
1145
1146## Build Performance
1147
1148Building the JDK requires a lot of horsepower. Some of the build tools can be
1149adjusted to utilize more or less of resources such as parallel threads and
1150memory. The `configure` script analyzes your system and selects reasonable
1151values for such options based on your hardware. If you encounter resource
1152problems, such as out of memory conditions, you can modify the detected values
1153with:
1154
1155  * `--with-num-cores` -- number of cores in the build system, e.g.
1156    `--with-num-cores=8`.
1157
1158  * `--with-memory-size` -- memory (in MB) available in the build system, e.g.
1159    `--with-memory-size=1024`
1160
1161You can also specify directly the number of build jobs to use with
1162`--with-jobs=N` to `configure`, or `JOBS=N` to `make`. Do not use the `-j` flag
1163to `make`. In most cases it will be ignored by the makefiles, but it can cause
1164problems for some make targets.
1165
1166It might also be necessary to specify the JVM arguments passed to the Boot JDK,
1167using e.g. `--with-boot-jdk-jvmargs="-Xmx8G"`. Doing so will override the
1168default JVM arguments passed to the Boot JDK.
1169
1170At the end of a successful execution of `configure`, you will get a performance
1171summary, indicating how well the build will perform. Here you will also get
1172performance hints. If you want to build fast, pay attention to those!
1173
1174If you want to tweak build performance, run with `make LOG=info` to get a build
1175time summary at the end of the build process.
1176
1177### Disk Speed
1178
1179If you are using network shares, e.g. via NFS, for your source code, make sure
1180the build directory is situated on local disk (e.g. by `ln -s
1181/localdisk/jdk-build $JDK-SHARE/build`). The performance penalty is extremely
1182high for building on a network share; close to unusable.
1183
1184Also, make sure that your build tools (including Boot JDK and toolchain) is
1185located on a local disk and not a network share.
1186
1187As has been stressed elsewhere, do use SSD for source code and build directory,
1188as well as (if possible) the build tools.
1189
1190### Virus Checking
1191
1192The use of virus checking software, especially on Windows, can *significantly*
1193slow down building of the JDK. If possible, turn off such software, or exclude
1194the directory containing the JDK source code from on-the-fly checking.
1195
1196### Ccache
1197
1198The JDK build supports building with ccache when using gcc or clang. Using
1199ccache can radically speed up compilation of native code if you often rebuild
1200the same sources. Your milage may vary however, so we recommend evaluating it
1201for yourself. To enable it, make sure it's on the path and configure with
1202`--enable-ccache`.
1203
1204### Precompiled Headers
1205
1206By default, the Hotspot build uses preccompiled headers (PCH) on the toolchains
1207were it is properly supported (clang, gcc, and Visual Studio). Normally, this
1208speeds up the build process, but in some circumstances, it can actually slow
1209things down.
1210
1211You can experiment by disabling precompiled headers using
1212`--disable-precompiled-headers`.
1213
1214### Icecc / icecream
1215
1216[icecc/icecream](http://github.com/icecc/icecream) is a simple way to setup a
1217distributed compiler network. If you have multiple machines available for
1218building the JDK, you can drastically cut individual build times by utilizing
1219it.
1220
1221To use, setup an icecc network, and install icecc on the build machine. Then
1222run `configure` using `--enable-icecc`.
1223
1224### Using sjavac
1225
1226To speed up Java compilation, especially incremental compilations, you can try
1227the experimental sjavac compiler by using `--enable-sjavac`.
1228
1229### Building the Right Target
1230
1231Selecting the proper target to build can have dramatic impact on build time.
1232For normal usage, `jdk` or the default target is just fine. You only need to
1233build `images` for shipping, or if your tests require it.
1234
1235See also [Using Fine-Grained Make Targets](#using-fine-grained-make-targets) on
1236how to build an even smaller subset of the product.
1237
1238## Troubleshooting
1239
1240If your build fails, it can sometimes be difficult to pinpoint the problem or
1241find a proper solution.
1242
1243### Locating the Source of the Error
1244
1245When a build fails, it can be hard to pinpoint the actual cause of the error.
1246In a typical build process, different parts of the product build in parallel,
1247with the output interlaced.
1248
1249#### Build Failure Summary
1250
1251To help you, the build system will print a failure summary at the end. It looks
1252like this:
1253
1254```
1255ERROR: Build failed for target 'hotspot' in configuration 'linux-x64' (exit code 2)
1256
1257=== Output from failing command(s) repeated here ===
1258* For target hotspot_variant-server_libjvm_objs_psMemoryPool.o:
1259/localhome/git/jdk-sandbox/hotspot/src/share/vm/services/psMemoryPool.cpp:1:1: error: 'failhere' does not name a type
1260   ... (rest of output omitted)
1261
1262* All command lines available in /localhome/git/jdk-sandbox/build/linux-x64/make-support/failure-logs.
1263=== End of repeated output ===
1264
1265=== Make failed targets repeated here ===
1266lib/CompileJvm.gmk:207: recipe for target '/localhome/git/jdk-sandbox/build/linux-x64/hotspot/variant-server/libjvm/objs/psMemoryPool.o' failed
1267make/Main.gmk:263: recipe for target 'hotspot-server-libs' failed
1268=== End of repeated output ===
1269
1270Hint: Try searching the build log for the name of the first failed target.
1271Hint: If caused by a warning, try configure --disable-warnings-as-errors.
1272```
1273
1274Let's break it down! First, the selected configuration, and the top-level
1275target you entered on the command line that caused the failure is printed.
1276
1277Then, between the `Output from failing command(s) repeated here` and `End of
1278repeated output` the first lines of output (stdout and stderr) from the actual
1279failing command is repeated. In most cases, this is the error message that
1280caused the build to fail. If multiple commands were failing (this can happen in
1281a parallel build), output from all failed commands will be printed here.
1282
1283The path to the `failure-logs` directory is printed. In this file you will find
1284a `<target>.log` file that contains the output from this command in its
1285entirety, and also a `<target>.cmd`, which contain the complete command line
1286used for running this command. You can re-run the failing command by executing
1287`. <path to failure-logs>/<target>.cmd` in your shell.
1288
1289Another way to trace the failure is to follow the chain of make targets, from
1290top-level targets to individual file targets. Between `Make failed targets
1291repeated here` and `End of repeated output` the output from make showing this
1292chain is repeated. The first failed recipe will typically contain the full path
1293to the file in question that failed to compile. Following lines will show a
1294trace of make targets why we ended up trying to compile that file.
1295
1296Finally, some hints are given on how to locate the error in the complete log.
1297In this example, we would try searching the log file for "`psMemoryPool.o`".
1298Another way to quickly locate make errors in the log is to search for "`]
1299Error`" or "`***`".
1300
1301Note that the build failure summary will only help you if the issue was a
1302compilation failure or similar. If the problem is more esoteric, or is due to
1303errors in the build machinery, you will likely get empty output logs, and `No
1304indication of failed target found` instead of the make target chain.
1305
1306#### Checking the Build Log File
1307
1308The output (stdout and stderr) from the latest build is always stored in
1309`$BUILD/build.log`. The previous build log is stored as `build.log.old`. This
1310means that it is not necessary to redirect the build output yourself if you
1311want to process it.
1312
1313You can increase the verbosity of the log file, by the `LOG` control variable
1314to `make`. If you want to see the command lines used in compilations, use
1315`LOG=cmdlines`. To increase the general verbosity, use `LOG=info`, `LOG=debug`
1316or `LOG=trace`. Both of these can be combined with `cmdlines`, e.g.
1317`LOG=info,cmdlines`. The `debug` log level will show most shell commands
1318executed by make, and `trace` will show all. Beware that both these log levels
1319will produce a massive build log!
1320
1321### Fixing Unexpected Build Failures
1322
1323Most of the time, the build will fail due to incorrect changes in the source
1324code.
1325
1326Sometimes the build can fail with no apparent changes that have caused the
1327failure. If this is the first time you are building the JDK on this particular
1328computer, and the build fails, the problem is likely with your build
1329environment. But even if you have previously built the JDK with success, and it
1330now fails, your build environment might have changed (perhaps due to OS
1331upgrades or similar). But most likely, such failures are due to problems with
1332the incremental rebuild.
1333
1334#### Problems with the Build Environment
1335
1336Make sure your configuration is correct. Re-run `configure`, and look for any
1337warnings. Warnings that appear in the middle of the `configure` output is also
1338repeated at the end, after the summary. The entire log is stored in
1339`$BUILD/configure.log`.
1340
1341Verify that the summary at the end looks correct. Are you indeed using the Boot
1342JDK and native toolchain that you expect?
1343
1344By default, the JDK has a strict approach where warnings from the compiler is
1345considered errors which fail the build. For very new or very old compiler
1346versions, this can trigger new classes of warnings, which thus fails the build.
1347Run `configure` with `--disable-warnings-as-errors` to turn of this behavior.
1348(The warnings will still show, but not make the build fail.)
1349
1350#### Problems with Incremental Rebuilds
1351
1352Incremental rebuilds mean that when you modify part of the product, only the
1353affected parts get rebuilt. While this works great in most cases, and
1354significantly speed up the development process, from time to time complex
1355interdependencies will result in an incorrect build result. This is the most
1356common cause for unexpected build problems.
1357
1358Here are a suggested list of things to try if you are having unexpected build
1359problems. Each step requires more time than the one before, so try them in
1360order. Most issues will be solved at step 1 or 2.
1361
1362 1. Make sure your repository is up-to-date
1363
1364    Run `git pull origin master` to make sure you have the latest changes.
1365
1366 2. Clean build results
1367
1368    The simplest way to fix incremental rebuild issues is to run `make clean`.
1369    This will remove all build results, but not the configuration or any build
1370    system support artifacts. In most cases, this will solve build errors
1371    resulting from incremental build mismatches.
1372
1373 3. Completely clean the build directory.
1374
1375    If this does not work, the next step is to run `make dist-clean`, or
1376    removing the build output directory (`$BUILD`). This will clean all
1377    generated output, including your configuration. You will need to re-run
1378    `configure` after this step. A good idea is to run `make
1379    print-configuration` before running `make dist-clean`, as this will print
1380    your current `configure` command line. Here's a way to do this:
1381
1382    ```
1383    make print-configuration > current-configuration
1384    make dist-clean
1385    bash configure $(cat current-configuration)
1386    make
1387    ```
1388
1389 4. Re-clone the Git repository
1390
1391    Sometimes the Git repository gets in a state that causes the product
1392    to be un-buildable. In such a case, the simplest solution is often the
1393    "sledgehammer approach": delete the entire repository, and re-clone it.
1394    If you have local changes, save them first to a different location using
1395    `git format-patch`.
1396
1397### Specific Build Issues
1398
1399#### Clock Skew
1400
1401If you get an error message like this:
1402```
1403File 'xxx' has modification time in the future.
1404Clock skew detected. Your build may be incomplete.
1405```
1406then the clock on your build machine is out of sync with the timestamps on the
1407source files. Other errors, apparently unrelated but in fact caused by the
1408clock skew, can occur along with the clock skew warnings. These secondary
1409errors may tend to obscure the fact that the true root cause of the problem is
1410an out-of-sync clock.
1411
1412If you see these warnings, reset the clock on the build machine, run `make
1413clean` and restart the build.
1414
1415#### Out of Memory Errors
1416
1417On Windows, you might get error messages like this:
1418```
1419fatal error - couldn't allocate heap
1420cannot create ... Permission denied
1421spawn failed
1422```
1423This can be a sign of a Cygwin problem. See the information about solving
1424problems in the [Cygwin](#cygwin) section. Rebooting the computer might help
1425temporarily.
1426
1427### Getting Help
1428
1429If none of the suggestions in this document helps you, or if you find what you
1430believe is a bug in the build system, please contact the Build Group by sending
1431a mail to [build-dev@openjdk.java.net](mailto:build-dev@openjdk.java.net).
1432Please include the relevant parts of the configure and/or build log.
1433
1434If you need general help or advice about developing for the JDK, you can also
1435contact the Adoption Group. See the section on [Contributing to OpenJDK](
1436#contributing-to-openjdk) for more information.
1437
1438## Hints and Suggestions for Advanced Users
1439
1440### Bash Completion
1441
1442The `configure` and `make` commands tries to play nice with bash command-line
1443completion (using `<tab>` or `<tab><tab>`). To use this functionality, make
1444sure you enable completion in your `~/.bashrc` (see instructions for bash in
1445your operating system).
1446
1447Make completion will work out of the box, and will complete valid make targets.
1448For instance, typing `make jdk-i<tab>` will complete to `make jdk-image`.
1449
1450The `configure` script can get completion for options, but for this to work you
1451need to help `bash` on the way. The standard way of running the script, `bash
1452configure`, will not be understood by bash completion. You need `configure` to
1453be the command to run. One way to achieve this is to add a simple helper script
1454to your path:
1455
1456```
1457cat << EOT > /tmp/configure
1458#!/bin/bash
1459if [ \$(pwd) = \$(cd \$(dirname \$0); pwd) ] ; then
1460  echo >&2 "Abort: Trying to call configure helper recursively"
1461  exit 1
1462fi
1463
1464bash \$PWD/configure "\$@"
1465EOT
1466chmod +x /tmp/configure
1467sudo mv /tmp/configure /usr/local/bin
1468```
1469
1470Now `configure --en<tab>-dt<tab>` will result in `configure --enable-dtrace`.
1471
1472### Using Multiple Configurations
1473
1474You can have multiple configurations for a single source repository. When you
1475create a new configuration, run `configure --with-conf-name=<name>` to create a
1476configuration with the name `<name>`. Alternatively, you can create a directory
1477under `build` and run `configure` from there, e.g. `mkdir build/<name> && cd
1478build/<name> && bash ../../configure`.
1479
1480Then you can build that configuration using `make CONF_NAME=<name>` or `make
1481CONF=<pattern>`, where `<pattern>` is a substring matching one or several
1482configurations, e.g. `CONF=debug`. The special empty pattern (`CONF=`) will
1483match *all* available configuration, so `make CONF= hotspot` will build the
1484`hotspot` target for all configurations. Alternatively, you can execute `make`
1485in the configuration directory, e.g. `cd build/<name> && make`.
1486
1487### Handling Reconfigurations
1488
1489If you update the repository and part of the configure script has changed, the
1490build system will force you to re-run `configure`.
1491
1492Most of the time, you will be fine by running `configure` again with the same
1493arguments as the last time, which can easily be performed by `make
1494reconfigure`. To simplify this, you can use the `CONF_CHECK` make control
1495variable, either as `make CONF_CHECK=auto`, or by setting an environment
1496variable. For instance, if you add `export CONF_CHECK=auto` to your `.bashrc`
1497file, `make` will always run `reconfigure` automatically whenever the configure
1498script has changed.
1499
1500You can also use `CONF_CHECK=ignore` to skip the check for a needed configure
1501update. This might speed up the build, but comes at the risk of an incorrect
1502build result. This is only recommended if you know what you're doing.
1503
1504From time to time, you will also need to modify the command line to `configure`
1505due to changes. Use `make print-configure` to show the command line used for
1506your current configuration.
1507
1508### Using Fine-Grained Make Targets
1509
1510The default behavior for make is to create consistent and correct output, at
1511the expense of build speed, if necessary.
1512
1513If you are prepared to take some risk of an incorrect build, and know enough of
1514the system to understand how things build and interact, you can speed up the
1515build process considerably by instructing make to only build a portion of the
1516product.
1517
1518#### Building Individual Modules
1519
1520The safe way to use fine-grained make targets is to use the module specific
1521make targets. All source code in the JDK is organized so it belongs to a
1522module, e.g. `java.base` or `jdk.jdwp.agent`. You can build only a specific
1523module, by giving it as make target: `make jdk.jdwp.agent`. If the specified
1524module depends on other modules (e.g. `java.base`), those modules will be built
1525first.
1526
1527You can also specify a set of modules, just as you can always specify a set of
1528make targets: `make jdk.crypto.cryptoki jdk.crypto.ec jdk.crypto.mscapi`
1529
1530#### Building Individual Module Phases
1531
1532The build process for each module is divided into separate phases. Not all
1533modules need all phases. Which are needed depends on what kind of source code
1534and other artifact the module consists of. The phases are:
1535
1536  * `gensrc` (Generate source code to compile)
1537  * `gendata` (Generate non-source code artifacts)
1538  * `copy` (Copy resource artifacts)
1539  * `java` (Compile Java code)
1540  * `launchers` (Compile native executables)
1541  * `libs` (Compile native libraries)
1542
1543You can build only a single phase for a module by using the notation
1544`$MODULE-$PHASE`. For instance, to build the `gensrc` phase for `java.base`,
1545use `make java.base-gensrc`.
1546
1547Note that some phases may depend on others, e.g. `java` depends on `gensrc` (if
1548present). Make will build all needed prerequisites before building the
1549requested phase.
1550
1551#### Skipping the Dependency Check
1552
1553When using an iterative development style with frequent quick rebuilds, the
1554dependency check made by make can take up a significant portion of the time
1555spent on the rebuild. In such cases, it can be useful to bypass the dependency
1556check in make.
1557
1558> **Note that if used incorrectly, this can lead to a broken build!**
1559
1560To achieve this, append `-only` to the build target. For instance, `make
1561jdk.jdwp.agent-java-only` will *only* build the `java` phase of the
1562`jdk.jdwp.agent` module. If the required dependencies are not present, the
1563build can fail. On the other hand, the execution time measures in milliseconds.
1564
1565A useful pattern is to build the first time normally (e.g. `make
1566jdk.jdwp.agent`) and then on subsequent builds, use the `-only` make target.
1567
1568#### Rebuilding Part of java.base (JDK\_FILTER)
1569
1570If you are modifying files in `java.base`, which is the by far largest module
1571in the JDK, then you need to rebuild all those files whenever a single file has
1572changed. (This inefficiency will hopefully be addressed in JDK 10.)
1573
1574As a hack, you can use the make control variable `JDK_FILTER` to specify a
1575pattern that will be used to limit the set of files being recompiled. For
1576instance, `make java.base JDK_FILTER=javax/crypto` (or, to combine methods,
1577`make java.base-java-only JDK_FILTER=javax/crypto`) will limit the compilation
1578to files in the `javax.crypto` package.
1579
1580## Understanding the Build System
1581
1582This section will give you a more technical description on the details of the
1583build system.
1584
1585### Configurations
1586
1587The build system expects to find one or more configuration. These are
1588technically defined by the `spec.gmk` in a subdirectory to the `build`
1589subdirectory. The `spec.gmk` file is generated by `configure`, and contains in
1590principle the configuration (directly or by files included by `spec.gmk`).
1591
1592You can, in fact, select a configuration to build by pointing to the `spec.gmk`
1593file with the `SPEC` make control variable, e.g. `make SPEC=$BUILD/spec.gmk`.
1594While this is not the recommended way to call `make` as a user, it is what is
1595used under the hood by the build system.
1596
1597### Build Output Structure
1598
1599The build output for a configuration will end up in `build/<configuration
1600name>`, which we refer to as `$BUILD` in this document. The `$BUILD` directory
1601contains the following important directories:
1602
1603```
1604buildtools/
1605configure-support/
1606hotspot/
1607images/
1608jdk/
1609make-support/
1610support/
1611test-results/
1612test-support/
1613```
1614
1615This is what they are used for:
1616
1617  * `images`: This is the directory were the output of the `*-image` make
1618    targets end up. For instance, `make jdk-image` ends up in `images/jdk`.
1619
1620  * `jdk`: This is the "exploded image". After `make jdk`, you will be able to
1621    launch the newly built JDK by running `$BUILD/jdk/bin/java`.
1622
1623  * `test-results`: This directory contains the results from running tests.
1624
1625  * `support`: This is an area for intermediate files needed during the build,
1626    e.g. generated source code, object files and class files. Some noteworthy
1627    directories in `support` is `gensrc`, which contains the generated source
1628    code, and the `modules_*` directories, which contains the files in a
1629    per-module hierarchy that will later be collapsed into the `jdk` directory
1630    of the exploded image.
1631
1632  * `buildtools`: This is an area for tools compiled for the build platform
1633    that are used during the rest of the build.
1634
1635  * `hotspot`: This is an area for intermediate files needed when building
1636    hotspot.
1637
1638  * `configure-support`, `make-support` and `test-support`: These directories
1639    contain files that are needed by the build system for `configure`, `make`
1640    and for running tests.
1641
1642### Fixpath
1643
1644Windows path typically look like `C:\User\foo`, while Unix paths look like
1645`/home/foo`. Tools with roots from Unix often experience issues related to this
1646mismatch when running on Windows.
1647
1648In the JDK build, we always use Unix paths internally, and only just before
1649calling a tool that does not understand Unix paths do we convert them to
1650Windows paths.
1651
1652This conversion is done by the `fixpath` tool, which is a small wrapper that
1653modifies unix-style paths to Windows-style paths in command lines. Fixpath is
1654compiled automatically by `configure`.
1655
1656### Native Debug Symbols
1657
1658Native libraries and executables can have debug symbol (and other debug
1659information) associated with them. How this works is very much platform
1660dependent, but a common problem is that debug symbol information takes a lot of
1661disk space, but is rarely needed by the end user.
1662
1663The JDK supports different methods on how to handle debug symbols. The
1664method used is selected by `--with-native-debug-symbols`, and available methods
1665are `none`, `internal`, `external`, `zipped`.
1666
1667  * `none` means that no debug symbols will be generated during the build.
1668
1669  * `internal` means that debug symbols will be generated during the build, and
1670    they will be stored in the generated binary.
1671
1672  * `external` means that debug symbols will be generated during the build, and
1673    after the compilation, they will be moved into a separate `.debuginfo` file.
1674    (This was previously known as FDS, Full Debug Symbols).
1675
1676  * `zipped` is like `external`, but the .debuginfo file will also be zipped
1677    into a `.diz` file.
1678
1679When building for distribution, `zipped` is a good solution. Binaries built
1680with `internal` is suitable for use by developers, since they facilitate
1681debugging, but should be stripped before distributed to end users.
1682
1683### Autoconf Details
1684
1685The `configure` script is based on the autoconf framework, but in some details
1686deviate from a normal autoconf `configure` script.
1687
1688The `configure` script in the top level directory of the JDK is just a thin
1689wrapper that calls `make/autoconf/configure`. This in turn will run `autoconf`
1690to create the runnable (generated) configure script, as
1691`.build/generated-configure.sh`. Apart from being responsible for the
1692generation of the runnable script, the `configure` script also provides
1693functionality that is not easily expressed in the normal Autoconf framework. As
1694part of this functionality, the generated script is called.
1695
1696The build system will detect if the Autoconf source files have changed, and
1697will trigger a regeneration of the generated script if needed. You can also
1698manually request such an update by `bash configure autogen`.
1699
1700In previous versions of the JDK, the generated script was checked in at
1701`make/autoconf/generated-configure.sh`. This is no longer the case.
1702
1703### Developing the Build System Itself
1704
1705This section contains a few remarks about how to develop for the build system
1706itself. It is not relevant if you are only making changes in the product source
1707code.
1708
1709While technically using `make`, the make source files of the JDK does not
1710resemble most other Makefiles. Instead of listing specific targets and actions
1711(perhaps using patterns), the basic modus operandi is to call a high-level
1712function (or properly, macro) from the API in `make/common`. For instance, to
1713compile all classes in the `jdk.internal.foo` package in the `jdk.foo` module,
1714a call like this would be made:
1715
1716```
1717$(eval $(call SetupJavaCompilation, BUILD_FOO_CLASSES, \
1718    SETUP := GENERATE_OLDBYTECODE, \
1719    SRC := $(TOPDIR)/src/jkd.foo/share/classes, \
1720    INCLUDES := jdk/internal/foo, \
1721    BIN := $(SUPPORT_OUTPUTDIR)/foo_classes, \
1722))
1723```
1724
1725By encapsulating and expressing the high-level knowledge of *what* should be
1726done, rather than *how* it should be done (as is normal in Makefiles), we can
1727build a much more powerful and flexible build system.
1728
1729Correct dependency tracking is paramount. Sloppy dependency tracking will lead
1730to improper parallelization, or worse, race conditions.
1731
1732To test for/debug race conditions, try running `make JOBS=1` and `make
1733JOBS=100` and see if it makes any difference. (It shouldn't).
1734
1735To compare the output of two different builds and see if, and how, they differ,
1736run `$BUILD1/compare.sh -o $BUILD2`, where `$BUILD1` and `$BUILD2` are the two
1737builds you want to compare.
1738
1739To automatically build two consecutive versions and compare them, use
1740`COMPARE_BUILD`. The value of `COMPARE_BUILD` is a set of variable=value
1741assignments, like this:
1742```
1743make COMPARE_BUILD=CONF=--enable-new-hotspot-feature:MAKE=hotspot
1744```
1745See `make/InitSupport.gmk` for details on how to use `COMPARE_BUILD`.
1746
1747To analyze build performance, run with `LOG=trace` and check `$BUILD/build-trace-time.log`.
1748Use `JOBS=1` to avoid parallelism.
1749
1750Please check that you adhere to the [Code Conventions for the Build System](
1751http://openjdk.java.net/groups/build/doc/code-conventions.html) before
1752submitting patches.
1753
1754## Contributing to the JDK
1755
1756So, now you've built your JDK, and made your first patch, and want to
1757contribute it back to the OpenJDK Community.
1758
1759First of all: Thank you! We gladly welcome your contribution.
1760However, please bear in mind that the JDK is a massive project, and we must ask
1761you to follow our rules and guidelines to be able to accept your contribution.
1762
1763The official place to start is the ['How to contribute' page](
1764http://openjdk.java.net/contribute/). There is also an official (but somewhat
1765outdated and skimpy on details) [Developer's Guide](
1766http://openjdk.java.net/guide/).
1767
1768If this seems overwhelming to you, the Adoption Group is there to help you! A
1769good place to start is their ['New Contributor' page](
1770https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/Adoption/New+Contributor), or start
1771reading the comprehensive [Getting Started Kit](
1772https://adoptopenjdk.gitbooks.io/adoptopenjdk-getting-started-kit/en/). The
1773Adoption Group will also happily answer any questions you have about
1774contributing. Contact them by [mail](
1775http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/adoption-discuss) or [IRC](
1776http://openjdk.java.net/irc/).
1777
1778---
1779# Override styles from the base CSS file that are not ideal for this document.
1780header-includes:
1781 - '<style type="text/css">pre, code, tt { color: #1d6ae5; }</style>'
1782---
1783