On Thu, Mar 21, 2002 at 02:00:50PM -0700, Andrew Taylor wrote: > > Jim Pick wrote: > > I'll start off the list: > > > > 1) Tomcat: http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/ - for running servlets
We use Tomcat's servlet classes as the basis for the servlet support in the Freenet daemon's web server, and it runs fine. We don't use the jsp part, but it builds against the Klasses without any problems. <> > 4) Ant: http://jakarta.apache.org/ant/ - Java based make-like build tool. I build this and it's dependancies from source last night, and it works fine. Some of the taskdefs will fail to build because they are hardcoded against sun.tools.javac, but it has compiler tasks for jikes and kjc that work well if you just set the compiler accordingly. On Fri, Mar 22, 2002 at 12:16:39PM +0200, Jukka Santala wrote: <> > 3) Ogg/Vorbis Java codec, this was added recently, probably doesn't work If you mean Jorbis decoder, then I did get it to build and run, but it gives me weird (pulsating) sound artifacts. I don't know if it my system or something with kaffe. I assuming the included java player would not work do to 1.2+ java sound APIs. > 7) CSIRO SVG; I can unqualifiedly say this doesn't work, and I doubt > adding Java2D to Kaffe is going to happen in near future. I'm looking at > implementing Mobile SVG to run with Kaffe. It tried to get Batik (Apache's SVG library) to work some time ago, but I ended up giving up after several hours of trying to hack around missing 1.2isms. <> > 9) Apache Xerces+Xalan with sax, moving to version 2.0 probably They seem to build fine and to the extent that they are used for Ant I'm having no problems with them. I can't promise they work since I don't really know what they do though :-). <> > In addition it was mentioned on GCJ list I believe that FreeNet runs on > Kaffe. Freenet runs fine, but that is to a large extent do to me developing using kaffe and making sure that it stays that way. (IMHO it would make little sense to build a free network if the reference implementation is bound to a locked down and proprietary platform.) But that said, all JVMs seem to have issues, and kaffe's openness has made it a lot less painful to deal with them. > > -Jukka Santala -- Oskar Sandberg [EMAIL PROTECTED]
