Hi Alexander,

 

>The JVMTI always reports 3 unnamed modules: the boot module, the system module 
>and the application module. 

>The Java API does not report any unnamed modules.

 

I’ll leave this up to you if this is something that we need to verify or not, 
the code for doing this is also overcomplicated and can be reduced to a simple 
assertGTE.

 

>This should be doable without using JAR's and custom loaders by using 
>Layer.defineModules(), see the examples in 
>jdk/test/java/lang/reflect/Layer/BasicLayerTest.java

>The test has been written from the user perspective. The user loads a new 
>module in the form of jar using the ModuleLoader.loadModule() API. Then the 
>test checks that JVMTI does return the info about that loaded module.

>Probably, defining the module using Layer.defineModules would not be the same 
>as loading the module using ModuleLoader.loadModule(), since the JVMTI 
>GetAllModules() returns the info about all the currently loaded modules.

>As the JVMTI spec says: "GetAllModules: Return an array of all modules loaded 
>in the virtual machine.", it does not mention defining modules.

 

There are several ways to get modules loaded/defined, the Layer.defineModules 
is part of the official Java API and is one of them. It doesn’t matter to JVMTI 
if they come from JAR files on disk or if they’re defined using a Java API, so 
I suggest you go with Layer.defineModules.

 

Thanks,

Christian

 

From: Alexander Kulyakhtin [mailto:alexander.kulyakh...@oracle.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2016 10:04 AM
To: Serguei Vladimirovich Spitsyn <serguei.spit...@oracle.com>; 
christian.tornqv...@oracle.com
Cc: serviceability-dev@openjdk.java.net
Subject: Re: RFR:8153978:New test to verify the modules info as returned by the 
JVMTI

 

Christian,

Thank you very much for your comments. I have some concerns about the proposed 
changes:

@45 & @67 

Why is this check needed? Why are there least 3 unnamed modules?
The JVMTI always reports 3 unnamed modules: the boot module, the system module 
and the application module. 
The Java API does not report any unnamed modules.

@54

This should be doable without using JAR's and custom loaders by using 
Layer.defineModules(), see the examples in 
jdk/test/java/lang/reflect/Layer/BasicLayerTest.java
The test has been written from the user perspective. The user loads a new 
module in the form of jar using the ModuleLoader.loadModule() API. Then the 
test checks that JVMTI does return the info about that loaded module.
Probably, defining the module using Layer.defineModules would not be the same 
as loading the module using ModuleLoader.loadModule(), since the JVMTI 
GetAllModules() returns the info about all the currently loaded modules.
As the JVMTI spec says: "GetAllModules: Return an array of all modules loaded 
in the virtual machine.", it does not mention defining modules.

Could you, please, clarify these points for me so I fix the test appropriately?

Best regards,
Alexander

 





----- Original Message -----
From: christian.tornqv...@oracle.com <mailto:christian.tornqv...@oracle.com> 
To: alexander.kulyakh...@oracle.com <mailto:alexander.kulyakh...@oracle.com> , 
serviceability-dev@openjdk.java.net 
<mailto:serviceability-dev@openjdk.java.net> 
Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2016 8:11:14 PM GMT +03:00 Iraq
Subject: RE: RFR:8153978:New test to verify the modules info as returned by     
   the JVMTI




Hi Alexander,

 

This test is unnecessarily complicated, it could be simplified a lot.

JvmtiGetAllModulesTest.java

 

Move getModulesNative() into JvmtiGetAllModulesTest.java and have it return a 
Set<Module> to be able to use equals later

 

@27  * @compile JvmtiGetAllModulesTest.java

No need for this, jtreg will compile it for you

  

@45 & @67 

Why is this check needed? Why are there least 3 unnamed modules?

 

@50

Change this to: assertTrue(Layer.boot().equals(getModulesNative()));

 

@54

This should be doable without using JAR's and custom loaders by using 
Layer.defineModules(), see the examples in 
jdk/test/java/lang/reflect/Layer/BasicLayerTest.java

 

@65

Change this to an assertTrue using the layer containing the new module, similar 
to the change @50

 

@73

No need for this method

 

@81

Change this method to use the Layer.defineModules() method to define a module 
instead, this eliminates the need for external JAR's 

 

@98

No need for this method

 

If you use Layer.defineModules(), the following files can be removed:

JarBuilder.java

JavaModulesInfo.java

JvmtiModulesInfo.java

ModuleLoader.java 

ModulesInfo.java 

module-info.java

 

Thanks,

Christian

 

From: serviceability-dev [mailto:serviceability-dev-boun...@openjdk.java.net] 
On Behalf Of serguei.spit...@oracle.com <mailto:serguei.spit...@oracle.com> 
Sent: Monday, May 2, 2016 6:06 PM
To: Alexander Kulyakhtin <alexander.kulyakh...@oracle.com 
<mailto:alexander.kulyakh...@oracle.com> >; Serviceability-Dev 
<serviceability-dev@openjdk.java.net 
<mailto:serviceability-dev@openjdk.java.net> >
Subject: Re: RFR:8153978:New test to verify the modules info as returned by the 
JVMTI

 

Hi Alexander,


Could you, fix a couple of minor issues?

test/serviceability/jvmti/GetModulesInfo/JvmtiGetAllModulesTest.java

  58         for(Module mod : my.modules()) {
  59             if(!jvmtiModules.contains(mod)) {
 
  A space is missed after the 'for' and 'if' keywords.


test/serviceability/jvmti/GetModulesInfo/ModulesInfo.java.

  31     boolean compareExcludingUnnamed(ModulesInfo other) {
 
  I'd suggest to call it compareNamed.


Otherwise, the new test looks great.
Thanks a lot for taking care about it!

Thanks,
Serguei



On 4/29/16 06:12, Alexander Kulyakhtin wrote:

Hi, 
 
Could you, please, review these test-only changes (adding a new test).
 
CR: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8153978 "New test to verify the 
modules info as returned by the JVMTI"
Webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~akulyakh/8153978_01/
 
The new test verifies that JVMTI returns the correct info about the modules 
loaded at the application startup. 
It also verifies that the returned info is consistent with the same info 
returned by the Java API.
It then loads a new named module and checks the correctness of the JVMTI info 
again.
 
Due to a tools issue https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/CODETOOLS-7901662 the 
test can only be pushed in when the updated jtreg is released.
The test passes fine with the nightly jtreg build, containing the 
CODETOOLS-7901662 fix.
 
Best regards,
Alexander

 

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