Re: Linux JDK 1.3 and hotspot (native threads)

2001-06-09 Thread Georg-W. Koltermann
At Mon, 30 Apr 2001 11:59:38 +0200, Georg-W. Koltermann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Fri, Apr 27, 2001 at 09:32:58PM -0400, Andrew Gallatin wrote: Georg-W. Koltermann writes: ... In order to get real performance I would like to run either the SUN JDK with -hotspot, or the IBM

Re: Linux JDK 1.3 and hotspot (native threads)

2001-05-03 Thread Peter Mutsaers
Georg-W == Georg-W Koltermann [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Georg-W I tried the patch and found it makes no difference. The current SUN Georg-W JVM (1.3.0_02) gives the SIG11 as I indicated before. The latest IBM Georg-W JVM (IBM build cx130-20010329) hangs around and eats up CPU

Re: Linux JDK 1.3 and hotspot (native threads)

2001-04-30 Thread Georg-W. Koltermann
On Fri, Apr 27, 2001 at 09:32:58PM -0400, Andrew Gallatin wrote: Georg-W. Koltermann writes: ... In order to get real performance I would like to run either the SUN JDK with -hotspot, or the IBM 1.3 JVM. Both of these use native linux threads. With a recent -current I can

Re: Linux JDK 1.3 and hotspot (native threads)

2001-04-27 Thread Andrew Gallatin
Georg-W. Koltermann writes: ... In order to get real performance I would like to run either the SUN JDK with -hotspot, or the IBM 1.3 JVM. Both of these use native linux threads. With a recent -current I can successfully execute small JAVA test programs, but when I start a real

Linux JDK 1.3 and hotspot (native threads)

2001-04-26 Thread Georg-W. Koltermann
I remember some reports of success running Linux JAVA with native threads on -current. I've tried several times myself, and can't get it to work. The Linux JDK 1.3 (SUN's version) runs fine on -current as well as 4.x as long as I use the classic VM. This version doesn't use native Linux