From d4efa08b536d7dc500c2df45d7efa8087ca19557 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Arnout Engelen Date: Sat, 19 Sep 2020 13:30:09 +0200 Subject: openjdk: add derivation to generate bespoke minimal JRE's Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing --- doc/languages-frameworks/java.xml | 18 ++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc') diff --git a/doc/languages-frameworks/java.xml b/doc/languages-frameworks/java.xml index bf0fc48839223..881d492b5bff7 100644 --- a/doc/languages-frameworks/java.xml +++ b/doc/languages-frameworks/java.xml @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ nativeBuildInputs = [ jdk ]; - If your Java package provides a program, you need to generate a wrapper script to run it using the OpenJRE. You can use makeWrapper for this: + If your Java package provides a program, you need to generate a wrapper script to run it using a JRE. You can use makeWrapper for this: nativeBuildInputs = [ makeWrapper ]; @@ -43,7 +43,21 @@ installPhase = --add-flags "-cp $out/share/java/foo.jar org.foo.Main" ''; - Note the use of jre, which is the part of the OpenJDK package that contains the Java Runtime Environment. By using ${jre}/bin/java instead of ${jdk}/bin/java, you prevent your package from depending on the JDK at runtime. +Since the introduction of the Java Platform Module System in Java 9, Java distributions typically no longer ship with a general-purpose JRE: instead, they allow generating a JRE with only the modules required for your application(s). Because we can't predict what modules will be needed on a general-purpose system, the default jre package is the full JDK. When building a minimal system/image, you can override the modules parameter on jre_minimal to build a JRE with only the modules relevant for you: + +let + my_jre = pkgs.jre_minimal.override { + modules = [ + # The modules used by 'something' and 'other' combined: + "java.base" + "java.logging" + ]; + }; + something = (pkgs.something.override { jre = my_jre; }); + other = (pkgs.other.override { jre = my_jre; }); +in + ... + -- cgit 1.4.1