In particular when constructing regular expressions before compiling them,
it is a good idea to state which exact expression is non-trivial when
complaining about it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Previously, I used a shell script to extract modification date ranges
from the Git history, but that was complicated and unreliable, so now
every file just gets the same year range in its copyright header. If
someone needs to know when a specific file was modified and by whom,
they can look at the Git history themselves; no need to include it
redundantly in the header.
Added to collection:
public boolean containsAll(Collection<?> c);
public boolean removeAll(Collection<?> c);
Added to list:
public boolean addAll(int startIndex, Collection<? extends T> c);
Also where possible for inner classes I made them extend the abstract version instead of just implement the interface. This helps reduce code duplication where possible.
These changes were necessary to support protobuf 2.5.0
This mainly moves several sun.misc.Unsafe method implementations from
classpath-openjdk.cpp to builtin.cpp so that the Avian and Android
builds can use them.
It also replaces FinalizerReference.finalizeAllEnqueued with a no-op,
since the real implementations assumes too much about how the VM
handles (or delegates) finalization.
This package name must match the URL protocol we use for loading
embedded resources, but OpenJDK's URL class won't tolerate underscores
in a protocol name. Also, I had not updated the names of the native
methods in avian.avianvmresource.Handler, leading to
UnsatisfiedLinkErrors when they were called.
Java requires that NaNs be converted to zero and that numbers at or
beyond the limits of integer representation be clamped to the largest
or smallest value that can be represented, respectively.
Our implementation uses Object.wait(long) to implement Thread.sleep,
which had the side effect of interpreting zero as infinity. However,
for Thread.sleep, zero just means zero. I assume that doesn't mean
"don't sleep at all", though, or else the app wouldn't have called
Thread.sleep in the first place, so this patch sleeps for one
millisecond when zero is passed -- just enough to yield the processor
for a bit. Thread.yield might be a better choice in this case, but I
assume the app would have called that directly if that's what it
wanted.