I created runtime image using jlink on my Linux machine. And I see linux
folder under the include
folder. Does it mean that I can use this runtime image only for Linux platform? If yes, are there any ways to create runtime images on one platform for another (e.g. on Linux for Windows and vice versa)
问题:
回答1:
The include
directory is for header files, such as jni.h
, that are needed when compiling C/C++ code that uses JNI and other native interfaces. It's nothing to do with jlink
.
The jlink
tool can create a run-time image for another platform (cross targeting). You need to download two JDKs to do this. One for the platform where you run jlink
, the other for the target platform. Run jlink
with --module-path $TARGET/jmods
where $TARGET
is the directory where you've unzipped the JDK for the target platform.
回答2:
Being generally unable to add anything to Alan Bateman's answers in terms of information, I'll offer a working example. This example illustrates using jlink
on Mac OS and then running the binary on Ubuntu in a Docker container.
The salient points are as follows.
Given two simple modules, we compile on Mac OS:
javac -d build/modules \
--module-source-path src \
`find src -name "*.java"`
jar --create --file=lib/net.codetojoy.db@1.0.jar \
-C build/modules/net.codetojoy.db .
jar --create --file=lib/net.codetojoy.service@1.0.jar \
-C build/modules/net.codetojoy.service .
Assuming that the Linux 64 JDK is unpacked in a local directory (specified as command-line arg), we call jlink
(on Mac OS in this example). JAVA_HOME
is the crux of the solution:
# $1 is ./jdk9_linux_64/jdk-9.0.1
JAVA_HOME=$1
rm -rf serviceapp
jlink --module-path $JAVA_HOME/jmods:build/modules \
--add-modules net.codetojoy.service \
--output serviceapp
Then, assuming we've pulled the ubuntu
image for Docker, we can execute the following in a Docker terminal (i.e. Linux):
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/data ubuntu /data/serviceapp/bin/java net.codetojoy.service.impl.UserServiceImpl
TRACER : hello from UserServiceImpl
To re-iterate this feature of Java 9/jlink
: Linux does not have Java installed and the Linux binary was built on Mac OS.