Da Vinci Machine Project Wiki
The Da Vinci Machine Project is a set of modifications of the JVM to support implementations of non-Java languages at a quality level (performance, compactness) near that of Java. The project is a part of the OpenJDK. Developers can write notes here.
Intentions and non-intentions
This wiki contains:
- Instructions and advice on downloading and building this project's code.
- Notes about the ongoing design and development of the various subprojects.
- A place to document likely future work.
- Quick links to similar information in other places on the web.
- http://openjdk.java.net/projects/mlvm/ (Da Vinci Machine Project home)
- http://wikis.sun.com/display/HotSpotInternals/Home (HotSpot internals)
Look for non-technical content on the static project pages: http://openjdk.java.net/projects/mlvm
Contents
Interesting tasks to do
- Document the process of pulling and building on various platforms.
- List relevant RFEs and subprojects. Link or enumerate architectural issues.
- Extract links and info. from messages and blog postings, especially via hotspot-dev@openjdk.
Who writes this wiki?
- We are using the Community Write pattern.
- There is no public write access, except for leaving page comments. You must be registered and logged in to leave comments.
- Please do add page comments when a page should answer your question but doesn't. (That means, potentially on any page.)
- The most effective page comments will include links to relevant email discussion threads, e.g., on the OpenJDK mlvm-dev list.
- Any member of the OpenJDK Hotspot Group or a related group should feel free to contribute.
- Committers, contributors, and users of the Da Vinci Machine Project code base are welcome to contribute.
- Write permissions are not automatic until and unless the DBs (Sun wiki vs. OpenJDK) get on speaking terms. If you think you should have write permission and don't ask jrose.
Overview
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