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https://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-5732?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Robert Scholte updated MNG-5732:
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Priority: Major (was: Blocker)
> Java 9 completely changes JDK directory layout and drops tools.jar
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>
> Key: MNG-5732
> URL: https://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MNG-5732
> Project: Maven
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: General
> Environment: JDK 9
> Reporter: Markus KARG
>
> Oracle published plans to drop the existence of tools.jar and totally
> restructure the directory layout of the JDK beginning with JDK 9, including
> changes in the extensions mechanism and location of rt.jar. As a side effect,
> all plugins relying on a particular layout structure and / or the existence
> of tools.jar won't work on JDK 9.
> The intention is to move from a histrically grown infrastructure to a layout
> which is specified by a JSR standard, hence it can be considered consistent
> on all future JDKs even from different vendors, which is a positive thing,
> but imposed problems for many tool vendors.
> As this is a cross-plugin concern, all plugins have to be checked and
> possibly fixed.
> For more information see http://openjdk.java.net/jeps/220.
> A pre-release of JDK 9 can be downloaded from https://jdk9.java.net/download/.
> Oracle is interested to get in touch with projects being currently dependend
> of the existing pre-9 JDK structure. Such projects shall report on the
> jigsaw-dev mailing list.
> Some effects in short:
> ⢠JRE and JDK images now have identical structures. Previously a JDK
> image embedded the JRE in a jre subdirectory; now a JDK image is simply a
> run-time image that happens to contain the full set of development tools and
> other items historically found in the JDK.
> ⢠User-editable configuration files previously located in the lib
> directory are now in the new 'conf' directory. The files that remain in the
> lib directory are private implementation details of the run-time system, and
> should never be opened or modified.
> ⢠The endorsed-standards override mechanism has been removed.
> Applications that rely upon this mechanism, either by setting the system
> property java.endorsed.dirs or by placing jar files into the lib/endorsed
> directory of a JRE, will not work. We expect to provide similar functionality
> later in JDK 9 in the form of upgradeable modules.
> ⢠The extension mechanism has been removed. Applications that rely upon
> this mechanism, either by setting the system property java.ext.dirs or by
> placing jar files into the lib/ext directory of a JRE, will not work. In most
> cases, jar files that were previously installed as extensions can simply be
> placed at the front of the class path.
> ⢠The internal files rt.jar, tools.jar, and dt.jar have been removed. The
> content of these files is now stored in a more efficient format in
> implementation-private files in the lib directory. Class and resource files
> previously in tools.jar and dt.jar are now always visible via the bootstrap
> or application class loaders in a JDK image.
> ⢠A new, built-in NIO file-system provider can be used to access the
> class and resource files stored in a run-time image. Tools that previously
> read rt.jar and other internal jar files directly should be updated to use
> this file system.
> (Source: December Oracle Java CAP Program Newsletter)
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