On 2020-05-31 14:39, Yasumasa Suenaga wrote:
Hi all,

I tried to build jdk/jdk on WSL 2 with VS2019, but I saw three errors as below.


1) Could not detect VC (cl.exe) version. So configure reports that it could not find valid Microsoft C++ compiler.

2) Could not generate fixpath.exe because $CONFIGURESUPPORT_OUTPUTDIR/bin did not exist. `wslpath -m` in UTIL_REWRITE_AS_WINDOWS_MIXED_PATH - it does not seem to work with unavailable path.

3) LPVOID value is passed to FormatMessage() in fixpath.c . FormatMessage() accepts value for lpBuffer as LPTSTR.


I think it is worth to fix. Someone already has worked for this?
I have been experimenting with building on WSL2. I've noticed the same issues as you have, but solved them somewhat differently. For instance, you cannot grep for "Optimizing Compiler" since this phrase is localized. We've had, and fixed, that bug before.

Incidentally, that fix is actually a workaround for what looks like a worrying issue in WSL2: race conditions on piping. Check this output:

magnusi@winihse:/mnt/c/localdata/hg/sandbox-ALT$ /mnt/c/jib/jib-ma~1/install/jpg/infra/buildd~1/devkit~2/vs2019~1.0/devkit~1.gz/vc/bin/x64/cl.exe 2>&1 | cat
Microsoft (R) C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 19.25.28612 for x64
usage: cl [ option... ] filename... [ /link linkoption... ]
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

magnusi@winihse:/mnt/c/localdata/hg/sandbox-ALT$ /mnt/c/jib/jib-ma~1/install/jpg/infra/buildd~1/devkit~2/vs2019~1.0/devkit~1.gz/vc/bin/x64/cl.exe 2>&1 | cat
usage: cl [ option... ] filename... [ /link linkoption... ]
Microsoft (R) C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 19.25.28612 for x64
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

magnusi@winihse:/mnt/c/localdata/hg/sandbox-ALT$ /mnt/c/jib/jib-ma~1/install/jpg/infra/buildd~1/devkit~2/vs2019~1.0/devkit~1.gz/vc/bin/x64/cl.exe
Microsoft (R) C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 19.25.28612 for x64
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

usage: cl [ option... ] filename... [ /link linkoption... ]
magnusi@winihse:/mnt/c/localdata/hg/sandbox-ALT$ /mnt/c/jib/jib-ma~1/install/jpg/infra/buildd~1/devkit~2/vs2019~1.0/devkit~1.gz/vc/bin/x64/cl.exe
Microsoft (R) C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 19.25.28612 for x64
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

usage: cl [ option... ] filename... [ /link linkoption... ]

Notice how the order of lines are random when piping through cat. Worrying, indeed. I wonder what more will break...

Also, wslpath suddenyl not working with non-existing paths looks like a pure bug to me. :( But the correct workaround is not to go around and touch arbitrary files in the file system. For one thing, you might not have write permission there. I think the proper way (short of awaiting a bug fix from Microsoft) is to iteratively remove the last part of the path until wslpath succeeds, and then add back on what we removed.

Or we need to check how we are using wslpath. If it is used to verify if a file is present, we can use the failure from wslpath as a sign that the file is missing, instead of trying first to convert it to unix path, and then check if it is present.

---

However, the main problem when working with WSL2 is that it is dead slow, for building OpenJDK. :-( The method that was used in WSL1, to have the source code and build directory on a Windows share, is not working at all in WSL2. Access of NTFS drives has horrendous performance. :( On the flip side, WSL2 adds access to the Linux drive for Windows apps. So it might be possible to do the reverse -- make sure we store source and build directory on a Linux drive, and let the windows apps access it.

I have started testing this but have not had time to finish my testing. A lot of the Windows integration code in autoconf do not work  when you do this.

/Magnus

If not, I will file it to JBS, and will send review request.


Thanks,

Yasumasa

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