Hi Anil, If you want to use your local JDK, first build with "make images" and then add the JDK in this directory: <JDK git repo>/build/<config name>/images/jdk "config name" should be chosen by you or configure, looks like "windows-x86-64-server-release" Note there's an exploded jdk at /jdk instead of /images/jdk; the one not in images is exploded and does not have sources.
Regards On Fri, Jul 12, 2024 at 7:55 PM Anil <1dropafl...@gmail.com> wrote: > I am trying to learn the Streams package of the JDK, and successfully > built the jdk. > I set the IDE (IntelliJ Community Edition) to use the JDK. > I put some dummy output statements in a stream method, peek(), and built > the JDK again. > I was stepping through a toy Java program that uses it, but I see that > when it gets to the core/base libraries, it does not use the Java code, but > rather, the decompiled code. > How to get the IDE to use the Java code? > Here is the code I changed in java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline.java > > public final Stream<P_OUT> peek(Consumer<? super P_OUT> action) { > Objects.requireNonNull(action); > System.out.println("=========anil 3 ================"); > return new StatelessOp<>(this, StreamShape.REFERENCE, > 0) { > @Override > Sink<P_OUT> opWrapSink(int flags, Sink<P_OUT> sink) { > return new Sink.ChainedReference<>(sink) { > @Override > public void accept(P_OUT u) { > System.out.println("=========anil 0 ================"); > action.accept(u); > System.out.println("=========anil 1 ================"); > downstream.accept(u); > System.out.println("=========anil 2 ================"); > } > }; > } > }; > } > > thanks, > Anil > > >