* HACKING: Updated for hacking classpath in libgcj.

From-SVN: r103324
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Tom Tromey 2005-08-21 23:24:58 +00:00 committed by Tom Tromey
parent beb6ae889f
commit aa5190e9dc
2 changed files with 28 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
2005-08-21 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* HACKING: Updated for hacking classpath in libgcj.
2005-08-20 John David Anglin <dave.anglin@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca>
PR libgcj/21692

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@ -60,6 +60,30 @@ However, there are two (known) exceptions to this rule:
--
You can develop in a GCC tree using a CVS checkout of Classpath, most
of the time. (The exceptions are when an incompatible change has been
made in Classpath and some core part of libgcj has not yet been
updated.)
The way to set this up is very similar to importing a new version of
Classpath into the libgcj tree. In your working tree:
* cd gcc/libjava; rm -rf classpath
* cvs co classpath
* cd classpath
Now run the auto tools as specified in the import process; then
cd ..
* Run 'scripts/makemake.tcl > sources.am' in the source tree
* Run automake for libgcj
Now you should be ready to go.
If you are working in a tree like this, you must remember to run
makemake.tcl and automake whenever you update your embedded classpath
tree.
--
If you add a class to java.lang, java.io, or java.util
(including sub-packages, like java.lang.ref).