Examples of some of the features of Jigsaw released in the Early Access build of JDK9.
The examples here are directly from the Project Jigsaw: Module System Quick-Start Guide, see http://openjdk.java.net/projects/jigsaw/quick-start.
-
Session 1: Jigsaw Introduction
- Greetings ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/01_Greetings
- Greetings world ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/02_GreetingsWorld
- Multi-module compilation ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/03_MultiModuleCompilation
- Packaging ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/04_Packaging
- Missing requires ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/05_Missing_requires
- Missing exports ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/05_Missing_exports
- Services ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/06_Services
- javac --patch-module option ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/07_patch_module_option
- Modules export conflict ./session-1-jigsaw-intro/08_ModulesExportConflict
-
Session 2: JLink
- JLink example ./session-2-jlink/01_JLink
- JMod example ./session-2-jlink/02_JMod
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Session 3: JShell
- JShell examples ./session-3-jshell/
Each example is enclosed in a folder of its own containing bash scripts to compile, package and run the respective examples. Use these scripts for each of the examples.
Note: the bash files provided should work on Linux and in theory on the MacOS as well.
For Windows if you use git-bash
(recommended) or cgywin
they should work for you. In the worst case scenario, we would have to manually convert the .sh
files into .bat
, with minor tweaks
should also work there. Happy to received a pull request for it.
- Download JDK 9 EA Early Access build of Jigsaw JDK9 is available at http://jdk.java.net/jigsaw/. Alternative site to download JDK 9 EA binaries from http://bit.ly/2oyOAnf (build 166).
Linux and MacOSX users only: the bash script getJigsawJDK.sh
in the root directory of this repo, helps download the latest Jigsaw JDK from Oracle. Please run this once the repo is cloned.
Windows users: please feel free to run this script and if there are any tweaks to get it to work successfully, please let us know via a pull request.
-
Install JDK 9 EA
-
Linux
tar -xvf jigsaw-jdk-9*.tar
mv -f jdk-9 [destination]
(might need to usesudo
here)- update your
.bashrc
withexport JAVA_HOME=[destination]
source ~/.bashrc
[destination]
usually/usr/lib/...
or related folder -
MacOSX
- Please refer to this guide - thanks Nolita (@musinoli) for your help
- In case a
.dmg
file is available, download it and follow the installation steps, you will still have to update yourJAVA_HOME
and start script as mentioned in this guide.
-
Windows
- Run the executable file.
- Follow the installation steps
- Make a note of the destination
- Edit the
JAVA_HOME
andPATH
environment variables via theMy Computer
>Properties
option
-
Say you have downloaded and installed the JDK 9 EA (build 165) binary from the above step, try the below command:
$ java -version
As output you should get something like this:
java version "9-ea"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 9-ea+165)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 9-ea+165, mixed mode)
- Ensure you have a
git
client installed on your local machine/VM/vagrant box, for Windows usersgit-bash
is recommended
Please install the tree
command before moving forward:
-
Linux
sudo apt-get install tree sudo apt-get install wget
-
MacOSX
install tree - http://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/128876/whats-the-equivalent-of-the-unix-tree-command-on-osx install wget - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4572153/os-x-equivalent-of-linuxs-wget
-
Windows
install `git-bash` (recommended) or `cgywin`
The
tree
command is built into Windows. From withingit-bash
orcygwin
. In case a script is invoking thetree
command and failing, please replace thetree -fl
keywords withcmd //c "tree /f /a"
. If that does not work either usels -R
instead, except you won't see the output in a tree format.Or manually convert the
.sh
files into.bat
, with minor tweaks should also work there.Thanks Richard Kolb (@rjdkolb) for your continued support in this area.
- Alternatively a Vagrant box is available at https://github.com/ali-ince/LJC_April2017_Hackday, please make use of this facility (thanks @ali-ince).
- Install the latest IDE (IntelliJ, Eclipse, Netbeans - paid or community version) that supports JDK 9 EA, once installed configure the IDE to pickup the JDK 9 EA installed in the previous steps.
-
Get familiar with the command-line a bit as we will be using much of it during the weekend
-
Prepare your VMs or cloud instances with the above, in case your local machine is not up for any installation or configurations