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Building The Regression Test Harness for the OpenJDK platform: jtreg (This information is also available at http://openjdk.java.net/jtreg/build.html) jtreg depends on a number of external components: JT Harness, TestNG, JUnit, AsmTools. Ant, and JCov. The fundamental way to build jtreg is with GNU make, specifying where to find those external components, but a script is also available that will download appropriate copies of those components before building jtreg. Building jtreg with the build-all.sh script This is the recommended way to build jtreg, for those that want a simple, basic way to build jtreg. The script is intended to be run in a Unix-like shell, such as bash on Linux or Mac OS X, or with Cygwin or WSL on Windows. It takes one argument which is the installation of JDK to be used to build jtreg. In addition, Ant must be on your execution path as well as a suitable version of Java to run Ant. The version of JDK must be either JDK 7 or JDK 8. % cd jtreg-root-directory % sh make/build-all.sh JDK-directory The script will create a build sub-directory, download and build dependencies, and finally build jtreg itself. The resulting image will be in build/images/jtreg. No environment variables need to be specified to get a standard build of jtreg. However, the following environment variables may be set, for a non-standard build: ASMTOOLS_VERSION, JCOV_VERSION, JTHARNESS_VERSION These variables may be set to the name of a tag identifying a specific changeset in the corresponding OpenJDK repository, or to the pseudo-tag "tip". MAKE_ARGS Arguments for the internal invocation of "make". The default is to just build jtreg, but setting this environment variable allows additional targets, such as test targets, to be run. The explicit target to build jtreg is "build"; the target to run some basic sanity tests is "quick-test"; and the target to run all tests is "test". You can also use the make "-j" option to build targets in parallel. For example: MAKE_ARGS="-j 4 build quick-test" sh make/build-all.sh UNZIP_OPTS, WGET_OPTS These two variables default to "-q", to suppress unnecessary output. You can set these variables to change the default behavior. Building jtreg with GNU Make The Makefile is in make/Makefile, and creates deliverables in the build/ directory, similar to OpenJDK. By default, the build file just builds an image for jtreg. You can build jtreg from a Unix-like command shell with the following commands: % cd <jtreg-root-directory> % make -C make Dependencies jtreg has a number of build dependencies. These can be set with values on the make command line or with values in make/Defs.gmk. You can also include the appropriate license files in the jtreg image, by setting the appropriate make variables. These are documented in make/Defs.gmk JDK 1.7 (or better) Set JDKHOME to the JDK or equivalent used to build jtreg. It must be equivalent to JDK 1.7 or later. JT Harness See https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/CodeTools/JT+Harness. Set JTHARNESS_HOME to the installed copy of the version of JT Harness to be used. It should be version 5.0 or better. Ant See http://ant.apache.org/. Set ANTHOME to an installed copy of Ant. It should be version 1.9.x. or better. AsmTools See https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/CodeTools/asmtools. Set ASMTOOLS_HOME to the installed copy of the version of AsmTools to be used. It should be version 6.0 or better. Note: Do not confuse this component with ASM bytecode engineering library available at http://asm.ow2.org/ JUnit See http://junit.org/. The recommended version is currently JUnit 4.10. TestNG See http://testng.org/. The recommended version is currently 6.9.5. The following dependencies are optional. JCov See https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/CodeTools/jcov. Set JCOV_HOME to the installed copy of the version of JCov to be used. It should be version 2.0 or better. JDK 1.5 This is used when running some of the tests. Set JDK15HOME to run these tests. It need not be set if you are just building jtreg. JDK 1.6 This is used when running some of the tests. Set JDK16HOME to run these tests. It need not be set if you are just building jtreg. JDK 1.7 This is used when running some of the tests. Set JDK17HOME to run these tests. It need not be set if you are just building jtreg. JDK 1.8 This is used when running some of the tests. Set JDK18HOME to run these tests. It need not be set if you are just building jtreg. JDK 1.9 This is used when running some of the tests. Set JDK19HOME to run these tests. It need not be set if you are just building jtreg. Running jtreg Self-Tests The tests can be invoked with individual make targets, or collectively via the "test" target. Some of the tests need to pop up windows while they execute. No interaction with these windows is normally required. Since this can be a problem on a headless server machine, and an annoyance on a personal workstation, the tests will attempt to use VNC to create a dummy X-server for use by the tests while they are running. Various implementations of VNC are available, such as from http://www.realvnc.com/. Using VNC is optional; it is not required in order to run the tests. By default, VNC will be used if vncserver is found on your execution path, or if VNC_HOME points to an installed copy of VNC. To explicitly disable the use of VNC, set the VNC environment variable to one of false, off, no, or 0. Unless explicitly disabled, the tests will check the following: * You must have a password set in $HOME/.vnc/passwd. This is the standard location used by the vncserver command. * If you set the environment variable VNC_HOME, it will be prepended to your execution path to find vncserver. * vncserver must be on your execution path, after VNC_HOME has been added, if set. If the tests find any issue with using VNC, it will not be used. If VNC is used to create a dummy X server, the server will be terminated when the test is complete. The logic for using VNC is encapsulated within the script make/display.sh. Building jtreg with Ant It is possible to build jtreg with Ant, but this is primarily intended as a convenience while working on the jtreg source code. If you are building jtreg to run OpenJDK tests, it is recommended that you build jtreg using the Makefile, perhaps via the build-all.sh wrapper script. The build file is in make/build.xml; it creates intermediate files in the build/ directory and deliverables in the dist/ directory. By default, the build file just builds jtreg, but does not run any tests. You can build jtreg from a Unix-like command shell with the following commands: % cd jtreg-root-directory % ant -f make/build.xml You can also use this build file when creating a NetBeans free form project with an existing build file. Dependencies Some of the tasks that are used are listed as "Optional Tasks" in the Ant manual. You may need to make sure that these tasks are available for use by Ant. For example, on Ubuntu Linux these tasks are in the ant-optional package. Running Tests Some of the tests can be invoked with individual targets beginning "-jtreg-test-", or collectively via the "jtreg-test" target. (The use of "jtreg-test" rather than "test" is to protect against interactions with JUnit in older versions of NetBeans.) Using the IntelliJ IDE The jtreg repo also contains a plugin for the IntelliJ IDE. This is a convenience plugin which adds jtreg capabilities to the IntelliJ IDE. With this plugin, OpenJDK developers can write, run, and debug jtreg tests without leaving their IDE environment. For more details, see the file `plugins/idea/README.md` in this repo.
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