OpenJDK 8 includes a core class (java.lang.Thread) which so many
fields that it exceeds the class size limit in type-generator dictated
by the logic responsible for calculating each class's GC object mask,
at least on 32-bit systems. There was no fundamental need for this
limit -- it just made the code simpler.
This commit removes the above limit at the cost of slightly more
complicated code. The original motivation for this change is that the
platform=macosx arch=i386 openjdk=$jdk8 build was failing. However,
there doesn't seem to be a prebuild JDK 8 for 32-bit OS X anywhere on
the Internet, nor is there any obvious way to build one on a modern
Mac, so it's safe to say we won't be supporting this combination
anyway. The problem also occurs on Linux and Windows, though,
so it needs to be fixed.
So there I was, planning to just fix one little bug: Thread.holdsLock
and Thread.yield were missing for the Android class library. Easy
enough, right? So, I added a test, got it passing, and figured I'd go
ahead and run ci.sh with all three class libraries. Big mistake.
Here's the stuff I found:
* minor inconsistency in README.md about OpenSSL version
* untested, broken Class.getEnclosingMethod (reported by Josh)
* JNI test failed for tails=true Android build
* Runtime.nativeExit missing for Android build
* obsolete assertion in CallEvent broke tails=true Android build
* obsolete superclass field offset padding broke bootimage=true Android build
* runtime annotation parsing broke bootimage=true Android build
(because we couldn't modify Addendum.annotationTable for classes in
the heap image)
* ci.sh tried building with both android=... and openjdk=..., which
the makefile rightfully balked at
Sorry this is all in a single commit; I didn't expect so many
unrelated issues, and I'm too lazy to break them apart.
If an JNI_OnLoad implementation calls FindClass when using the OpenJDK
class library, the calling method on the Java stack will be
ClassLoader.loadLibrary. However, we must use the class loader of the
class attempting to load the library in this case, not the system
classloader.
Therefore, we now maintain a stack such that the latest class to load
a library in the current thread is at the top, and we use that class
whenever FindClass is called by ClassLoader.loadLibrary (via
JNI_OnLoad).
Note that this patch does not attempt to address the same problem for
the Avian or Android class libraries, but the same strategy should
work for them as well.
This ensures that all tests pass when Avian is built with an
openjdk=$path option such that $path points to either OpenJDK 7 or 8.
Note that I have not yet tried using the openjdk-src option with
OpenJDK 8. I'll work on that next.
There's more work to do to derive all the properties of a given class
from its code source (e.g. JAR file), but this at least ensures that
ClassLoader.getPackage will actually return something non-null when
appropriate.
getDeclaredMethods was returning methods which were inherited from
interfaces but not (re)declared in the class itself, due to the VM's
internal use of VMClass.methodTable differing from its role in
reflection. For reflection, we must only include the declared
methods, not the inherited but un-redeclared ones.
Previously, we saved the original method table in
ClassAddendum.methodTable before creating a new one which contains
both declared and inherited methods. That wasted space, so this patch
replaces ClassAddendum.methodTable with
ClassAddendum.declaredMethodCount, which specifies how many of the
methods in VMClass.methodTable were declared in that class.
Alternatively, we could ensure that undeclared methods always have
their VMMethod.class_ field set to the declaring class instead of the
inheriting class. I tried this, but it led to subtle crashes in
interface method lookup. The rest of the VM relies not only on
VMClass.methodTable containing all inherited interface methods but
also that those methods point to the inheriting class, not the
declaring class. Changing those assumptions would be a much bigger
(and more dangerous in terms of regression potential) effort than I
care to take on right now. The solution I chose is a bit ugly, but
it's safe.
An inner class has two sets of modifier flags: one is declared in the
usual place in the class file and the other is part of the
InnerClasses attribute. Not only is that redundant, but they can
contradict, and the VM can't just pick one and roll with it. Instead,
Class.getModifiers must return the InnerClasses version, whereas
reflection must check the top-level version. So even if
Class.getModifiers says the class is protected, it might still be
public for the purpose of reflection depending on what the
InnerClasses attribute says. Crazy? Yes.
When calculating field offsets in the bootimage generator, we failed
to consider alignment at inheritence boundaries (i.e. the last field
inherited by from a superclass should be followed by enough padding to
align the first non-inherited field at a machine word boundary). This
led to a mismatch between native code and Java code in terms of class
layouts, including that of java.lang.reflect.Method.
Most of these regressions were simply due to testing a lot more stuff,
esp. annotations and reflection, revealing holes in the Android
compatibility code. There are still some holes, but at least the
suite is passing (except for a fragile test in Serialize.java which I
will open an issue for).
Sorry this is such a big commit; there was more to address than I
initially expected.
Method.invoke should initialize its class before invoking the method,
throwing an ExceptionInInitializerError if it fails, without wrapping
said error in an InvocationTargetException.
Also, we must initialize ExceptionInInitializerError.exception when
throwing instances from the VM, since OpenJDK's
ExceptionInInitializerError.getCause uses the exception field, not the
cause field.
When creating an object array with more than two dimensions, the
component type was erroneously set to the base type, not the array
type of one less dimension.
This prevented Collection<Class[]>#toArray(Class[][]) from working
properly.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>