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OpenJDK Cookbook

You're reading from   OpenJDK Cookbook Over 80 recipes to build and extend your very own version of Java platform using OpenJDK project

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2015
Last Updated in Feb 2025
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849698405
Length 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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 Kobylyanskiy Kobylyanskiy
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Kobylyanskiy
 Mironchenko Mironchenko
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Mironchenko
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with OpenJDK FREE CHAPTER 2. Building OpenJDK 6 3. Building OpenJDK 7 4. Building OpenJDK 8 5. Building IcedTea 6. Building IcedTea with Other VM Implementations 7. Working with WebStart and the Browser Plugin 8. Hacking OpenJDK 9. Testing OpenJDK 10. Contributing to OpenJDK 11. Troubleshooting 12. Working with Future Technologies 13. Build Automation Index

Working with Mercurial forest


Mercurial is a cross-platform version control system. It was designed to work with big projects and large amounts of code, which undoubtedly are present in the OpenJDK project. The OpenJDK official repository is a Mercurial.

The Forest plugin is the one used for various OpenJDK subprojects to merge and coexist. It works with nested Mercurial repositories, which normally are regarded as isolated. The main idea is to propagate changes from the root repository to the nested ones.

The main purpose of it is to allow a developer to work with the code, which is a minor part of a full OpenJDK project repository, without needing to make any changes to the whole repository (change a revision number, for example).

Getting ready

First of all, we will need to install Mercurial itself. On Windows it can be done by going to the official Mercurial site and downloading it from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/Download.

For Linux distributions, there are, usually, Mercurial versions...

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Tech Concepts
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Programming languages
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