Substrate VM is a framework that allows ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation of Java applications under closed-world assumption into executable images or shared objects (ELF-64 or 64-bit Mach-O).
Install mx and point JAVA_HOME
to a labsjdk.
For compilation native-image
depends on the local toolchain, so make sure: glibc-devel
, zlib-devel
(header files for the C library and zlib
) and gcc
are available on your system.
After cloning the repository, run
cd substratevm
mx build
echo "public class HelloWorld { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(\"Hello World\"); } }" > HelloWorld.java
$JAVA_HOME/bin/javac HelloWorld.java
mx native-image HelloWorld
./helloworld
Using Substrate VM requires the mx tool to be installed first, so that it is on your path. Visit the MX Homepage for more details.
Substrate VM requires a JDK 8 with JVMCI. It is available from OTN.
In the main directory, invoke mx help
to see the list of commands. Most of the commands are inherited from the Graal and Truffle code bases. The most important commands for the Substrate VM are listed below. More information on the parameters of a command is available by running mx help <command>
build
: Compile all Java and native code.clean
: Remove all compilation artifacts.ideinit
: Create project files for Eclipse and other common IDEs. See the documentation on IDE integration for details.
After running mx build
you can use mx native-image
to build native images. You can specify the main entry point, i.e., the application you want to create the image for. For more information run mx native-image --help
.
Native image generation is performed by a Java program that runs on JDK 8 with JVMCI. You can debug it with a regular Java debugger. Use mx native-image --debug-attach
to start native image generation so that it waits for a Java debugger to attach first (by default, at port 8000). In Eclipse, use the debugging configuration "substratevm-localhost-8000" to attach to it. This debugging configuration is automatically generated by mx ideinit
.
If you find yourself having to debug into the Graal level of SubstrateVM, you should read the Graal debugging page. You can use Ideal Graph Visualizer to view individual compilation steps:
mx igv &>/dev/null &
mx native-image HelloWorld -H:Dump= -H:MethodFilter=HelloWorld.*
An SVM image can be built as a standalone executable, which is the default, or as a shared library by passing --shared
to native-image
. For an image to be useful, it needs to have at least one entry point method.
For executables, SVM supports Java main methods with a signature that takes the command-line arguments as an array of strings:
public static void main(String[] arg) { /* ... */ }
For shared libraries, SVM provides the @CEntryPoint
annotation to specify entry point methods that should be exported and callable from C. Entry point methods must be static and may only have non-object parameters and return types – this includes Java primitives, but also Word types (including pointers). The first parameter of an entry point method has to be of type IsolateThread
or Isolate
. This parameter provides the current thread's execution context for the call. For example:
@CEntryPoint static int add(IsolateThread thread, int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
Shared library builds generate an additional C header file. This header file contains declarations for the SVM C API, which allows creating isolates and attaching threads from C code, as well as declarations for each entry point in user code. The generated C declaration for the above example is:
int add(graal_isolatethread_t* thread, int a, int b);
Both executable images and shared library images can have an arbitrary number of entry points, for example to implement callbacks or APIs.
More information about options, and the important distinction between hosted and runtime options, is available here.
The list of projects is defined in a custom format in the file mx.substratevm/suite.py
. It is never necessary to create new projects in the IDE. Instead, a new project is created by adding it in suite.py
and running mx ideinit
to generate a corresponding IDE project.
Style rules and procedures for checking adherence are described in the style guide.
Sometimes, Eclipse gives strange error messages, especially after pulling a bigger changeset. Also, projects are frequently added or removed, leading to error messages about missing projects if you do not import the new projects. The following should reset everything:
- Delete all projects in Eclipse
mx clean
mx ideclean
mx fsckprojects
mx build
mx ideinit
- Import all projects into Eclipse again
The Substrate VM is licensed under the GPL 2 with Classpath exception.