--- Bryce McKinlay <mckinlay(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Thanks for the reply Bryce. I used much of it to update the
beginning of:
http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/How%20to%20BC%20compile%20with%20GCJ
It sounds like, to be able to mix interpreted and natively
compiled code at runtime, you need to have compiled your .jars
with the -findirect-dispatch option, right?
If so, why isn't -findirect-dispatch simply the default
compilation mode?
[snip]
On the other
hand, if you compile an application using the old style "C++ ABI", it
will break as soon as any changes to the public APIs of dependent class
libraries are made.
Right -- since the Java runtime should be smart enough to use
the lib as long as the signatures of the methods _it wants to
use_ match up, correct?
What does it mean to compile code with the "old style 'C++ ABI'"?
(Is that referred to as the "standard ABI"?) Does that just simply
mean to *not* use the -findirect-dispatch option?
Thanks,
---John
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