RFR: 8321224: ct.sym for JDK 22 contains references to internal modules
Vicente Romero
vromero at openjdk.org
Mon Dec 4 19:42:47 UTC 2023
On Sun, 3 Dec 2023 21:31:42 GMT, Jan Lahoda <jlahoda at openjdk.org> wrote:
> As part of:
> https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/16505
>
> there are new symbol files for JDK 22, and @jddarcy noted the content looks weird.
>
> I was investigating, and found a few problems, some introduced by https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/commit/fc314740e947b2338ab9e4d4fce0c4f52de56c4b, some pre-existing.
>
> Note that https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/commit/fc314740e947b2338ab9e4d4fce0c4f52de56c4b changed the way we generate `ct.sym` - it now contains `.sig` files also for the current JDK, not only for the past versions. Before this patch, `ct.sym` only contained a list of permitted modules for the current JDK, and the classfiles themselves were read from `lib/modules`.
>
> The problems (and their solution) I've attempted to tackle here:
> - since https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/commit/fc314740e947b2338ab9e4d4fce0c4f52de56c4b, the ct.sym accidentally includes all modules for the current release, including non-API/undocumented modules. The proposed solution is to pass the documented modules together with their transitive dependencies as a parameter when constructing ct.sym, then use them to only generate data for these modules.
> - there are tiny differences between the data that are in `ct.sym` and in the `.sym.txt` historical files, mostly around annotations. The `.sym.txt` files contain references to internal annotations (like `@PreviewFeature`), which are stripped or converted before the `.sig` file is written into `ct.sym`. When generating historical data for JDK N, we run `CreateSymbols` on JDK N, reading the JDK N classfiles, and producing `.sym.txt`. This is done using `--release N`, so that we read the correct span of modules. Sadly, since now `--release N` will always use the `.sig` files, we are loosing a little bit of information esp. around the annotations. The proposal here is to use `--release N` to read the list of modules to cover, and `--source N` to read the actual real classfiles from `lib/modules`. This should basically revert the behavior to the previous state.
> - this is an existing issue, but one that needs to be fixed. Sealed types are not written and read properly - writing was not storing them, and reading permitted subclasses was happening too late, not on the `header` line. Note that when fixing this, we now must store some of the non-exported elements, which are reachable through the permitted subclasses, so that casting works as expected. Also, since the historical record is incorrect here, I re-run the generator for JDK 17-21 (as sealed c...
looks sensible to me
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Marked as reviewed by vromero (Reviewer).
PR Review: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/16942#pullrequestreview-1763256790
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