Re: Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-03 Thread Context Grey
A better JIT for Linux is definitely needed. TYA may well become such, but it has a long ways to go- I've timed it on several applications and gotten between 0 and 30% speedup -- not very impressive yet.

Re: Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-03 Thread Joe Carter
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > 8< > > Well, there is the TYA JIT ftp://gonzalez.cyberus.ca/pub/Linux/java/ > It certainly *seems* fast, but I am curious if there are any > benchmarks for it. > Attached (html) Joe -- Joe Carter Software Engineer Brite Voice Systems Ltd, Gatley, Cheshire. UK.

Re: Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-03 Thread SHUDOH Kazuyuki
> I couldn't tell whether the 1.2 announcement from Sun > meant that there was going to be a reasonable JIT on Linux with 1.2. Please tell us whether the source code of JDK 1.2 contains JIT compiler or not, if the license allow the porting team to mention it. Kazuyuki SHUDO

Re: Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-02 Thread Java News Collector
At 03:40 PM 11/2/98 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> user who happens to work for IBM in the Research division, I've been wondering >> if some of the technology we have here could be useful to the Java on Linux >> effort. More specifically, I was thinking that I might be able to get a >> "resea

Re: Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-02 Thread mlorton
> user who happens to work for IBM in the Research division, I've been wondering > if some of the technology we have here could be useful to the Java on Linux > effort. More specifically, I was thinking that I might be able to get a > "research" effort going to port IBM's Intel JVM with its JIT (

Interest in a JIT on Linux

1998-11-02 Thread James R Russell
Hi, I've been seeing a lot of articles like the following recently, and as a Linux user who happens to work for IBM in the Research division, I've been wondering if some of the technology we have here could be useful to the Java on Linux effort. More specifically, I was thinking that I might be