OpenJDK

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Revision as of 07:56, 30 January 2014 by JaroslavTulach (Talk | contribs)
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OpenJDK is a version of JDK released under GPL (with GNU Classpath exception) open source license. OpenJDK comes with various improvements over the classical Oracle's JDK which often makes the OpenJDK much less usable than the original. One of the problems is the modified launcher parameters as described in Virtualization page. Instead of being helpful, it just makes the whole system unusable. However, at least the system starts.

For a while I've been struggling with Java on my hosted Linux (Cent OS). Whenever I tried:

$ java
Error occurred during initialization of VM
Could not reserve enough space for object heap
Could not create the Java virtual machine.

Why? The system has a lot of resources, so where is the problem? It turned out that the workaround is easy. Just to limit the number of available memory (this by itself is ridiculous, but it shows that allowing virtualization is not the primary driver for evolution of Java technology):

$ java -mx64M
Usage: java [-options] class [args...]
           (to execute a class)
   or  java [-options] -jar jarfile [args...]
           (to execute a jar file)

The question however is: How to modify each JDK utility (jar, javac, javadoc, etc.) to use this changed setting? Usual Unix style is to locate /etc/java.conf and tweak it. But of course Java has multiplatform, not Unix roots, so no such configuration file exists, as far as I can tell. I thought configuring the default options for all Java processes is impossible. However today I realized that

$ java -client

works too fine as well. From that moment it was just a small step to symlink the server directory inside the JDK installation to client:

$ cd jre/lib/i386/
$ mv server/ server.bak/
$ ln -s client server

Now I can use all the JDK functionality without problems. However it took me a while to get there. No surprise nobody offers Java in virtualized environments, when it is so hard to set it up (and PHP is instantly ready).

Btw. this shows that location of your files on disk is an important type of API which can compensate missing presence of a configuration file.

Jan 30, 2014 update

I've run into the same problem again after switching to new CentOS 6. This time it is amd64 bit virtualized environment and to make things worse, the 64-bit Java does not have the client mode anymore! Luckily the old i386 version runs as well, so I had to install 32-bit Java and do the above trick with renaming server/client dirs. Now my hudson runs OK. Am I really the only person on a planet to run into such issues?
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