You can defer the change if you need to. I'm going on vacation from the 6th to the 16th, so there are timing issues around that. At Google, we plug in a different version of malloc that checks to make sure that you've freed everything you've allocated. It's a bit painful to write this from scratch, but I might be able to hack something together for you (that only runs on Linux), if you want. Jeremy On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 8:52 AM, Vincent Ryan <vincent.x.ryan@oracle.com> wrote:
I’ll begin reviewing your changeset and get back to you. Thanks.
On 28 May 2014, at 16:28, Jeremy Manson <jeremymanson@google.com> wrote:
Ah, okay. Thanks, Iris. I should already know known that - Martin has explained it to me before.
Vincent - let me know how you want to proceed.
Jeremy
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 10:00 PM, Iris Clark <iris.clark@oracle.com> wrote:
Hi, Jeremy.
As an "Author", you can create a changeset but you can't push to the repo until you're a "Committer". Additional details about the differences between Author and Committer may be found here [1,2].
The diffs to create a changeset are (of course) in your webrev. Your Sponsor can use that along with the "hg commit -u jmanson ..." to list you as the changeset Author. Alternatively, your Sponsor may want you to just send the output of "hg export -g" which would preserve information in the changeset header including the author, commit comment, etc.
Thanks, iris
[1]: http://openjdk.java.net/projects/#project-author [2]: http://openjdk.java.net/projects/#project-committer
-----Original Message----- From: Jeremy Manson [mailto:jeremymanson@google.com] Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2014 2:19 PM To: Vincent Ryan Cc: OpenJDK; core-libs-dev Subject: Re: RFR: 8044059: Memory Leak in Elliptic Curve Private Key Generation
Thanks, Vincent. This would be the first change I've made as an author, so I'm not sure what the process is. I think I just need someone to do the review, and then I can check it in?
Jeremy
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 1:55 PM, Vincent Ryan <vincent.x.ryan@oracle.com> wrote:
Thanks Jeremy. I believe you have JDK 9 Author status so can sponsor your fix if you wish.
On 27 May 2014, at 21:09, Jeremy Manson <jeremymanson@google.com> wrote:
Just like the title says - every time you generate a new private key, you leak a little memory. Webrev here:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~jmanson/8044059/webrev/
This is probably the wrong mailing list for this bug, but I expect someone on this list will point me in the right direction.
Jeremy