On 2 Jul 2012, at 09:08, Lindenmaier, Goetz wrote:
Hi Steve,
sorry, I can't help you with that. Freetype is only used in OpenJDK, therefore we did not port it. We use code that is not available in the open, so we may not share it.
Ok that's fine. Next question.. How do I build Hotspot on AIX? I used the instructions in the PPC guide in the root of the repo - specifically HOTSPOT_TARGET=all_debugcore CC_INTERP=true OPENJDK=true CORE_BUILD=true but I'm getting a build failure of: make[6]: *** No rule to make target `/home/spoole/hudson/workspace/sp.ppcaix.jdk7u.aix.ppc64/work/hotspot/make/aix/makefiles/tiered.make.o', needed by `/home/spoole/hudson/workspace/sp.ppcaix.jdk7u.aix.ppc64/work/hotspot/make/aix/makefiles/tiered.make'. Stop. Does that problem sound familiar?
Sorry for that, Goetz.
-----Original Message----- From: ppc-aix-port-dev-bounces@openjdk.java.net [mailto:ppc-aix-port-dev-bounces@openjdk.java.net] On Behalf Of Steve Poole Sent: Samstag, 30. Juni 2012 10:47 To: ppc-aix-port-dev@openjdk.java.net Subject: Re: AIX Changes
Hi Goetz,
As we discussed via the phone yesterday I started to do a sanity build with this patch applied.
One thing I've found already is that the freetypecheck fails to build as its makefile is not AIX aware and tries to use -rpath. Your patch correctly fixes the same sort of problem in Program.gmk so I assume that either you missed make/tools/freetypecheck/Makefile or you have another sort of work-around?
On 28 Jun 2012, at 11:00, Steve Poole wrote:
Hi guys - we've taken a look at Goetz's AIX changes and we would really like them to be committed. I think it would be best if someone for SAP did that :-)
Attempting to reconcile the different approaches between the IBM and the SAP code bases in a piecemeal manner just means it will take a long time before we have a working codebase - which is somewhat mad given you already have one.
If you're happy with doing a bulk commit , then, once the changes are in the codebase, we can work through any remaining IBM changes we think are needed and offer them up.
What do you think?
Cheers
Steve