The _ALLBSD_SOURCE symbol is defined by the HotSpot Makefile infrastructure.
It is used to identify code specific to the BSD family of OSes.
The __APPLE__ symbol is defined by the Apple compiler(s) and it is used to
identify code specific to MacOS X.
Typically you'll see something like:
#ifdef _ALLBSD_SOURCE
<code that works on all BSDs>
#ifdef __APPLE__
<code specific to MacOS X>
#else
<code for other BSDs>
#endif // __APPLE__
#endif // _ALLBSD_SOURCE
As for building on non-MacOS X BSDs, that would be nice, but we
don't have the infrastructure to do it.
Dan
On 2/15/12 6:57 AM, Mikael Gerdin wrote:
Hi Staffan,
It looks like you're adding Mac-specific stuff like thread_t and calls
to ::mach_thread_self() inside _ALLBSD_SOURCE #ifdefs, are you sure
this won't break BSD builds?
Does the OSX compiler define _ALLBSD_SOURCE or is that for
(free|net|open)bsd?
It's too bad we don't do regular builds on any of the BSDs, otherwise
this would have been easier to figure out.
/Mikael
On 2012-02-15 11:29, Staffan Larsen wrote:
Please review the following change:
Bug: http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=7132070
Webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~sla/7132070/webrev.00/
This changes the value returned by OSThread::thread_id() and
os::current_thread_id() on macosx to return the mach thread_t instead of
pthread_t. There is a separate method OSThread:pthread_id() that returns
the pthread_t.
The reason for this change is both that JFR would like a 4 byte value
for thread id, and that SA requires access to the thread_t.
Thanks,
/Staffan