This updates the GraalVM and Truffle libraries to 2024.1.2.
This also updates the build logic to compile Java sources using Java 21, due to some compile-only dependencies within GraalVM/Truffle using class file version 65. However, the produced artifact is still compatible with Java 17.
This also changes the Gradle build logic to use toolchains, and to test the Java libraries with JDK 17 and 21.
One consequence of this change is that Truffle is no longer shaded within the fat jars.
feat: support for jvm21+ toolchain
feat: support for gradle toolchains
feat: pass -PnativeArch=native to build with -march=native
test: multi-jdk testing support
test: support for jvm-test-suite plugin
test: add tasks to run jpkl eval on multiple jdks
test: make jdk exec tests respect multi-jdk flags and ranges
fix: remove mrjar classes at >jvm17 from fatjars
fix: use jdk21 to run the tests (needed for Unsafe.ensureInitialized)
fix: truffle svm dependency is required after graalvm 24.0.0
fix: warnings for gvm flag usage, renamed truffle svm macro
fix: build with --add-modules=jdk.unsupported where needed
fix: don't use gu tool for modern graalvm versions
fix: catch Throwable instead of deprecated-for-removal ThreadDeath
chore: buildinfo changes for JVM targets, toolchains
chore: enforce testing at exactly jdk21
chore: enforce build tooling at jdk21+
chore: bump graalvm/truffle libs → 24.1.2
chore: toolchains for buildSrc
Signed-off-by: Sam Gammon <sam@elide.dev>
- update Kotlin from 1.7.10 to 2.0.21
- Kotlin 1.6 dependencies in Gradle lock files are expected because kotlinc,
which is also used by some tests, internally uses some 1.6 dependencies
for backwards compatibility reasons.
- update kotlinx-html and kotlinx-serialization
- adapt Kotlin code where necessary
- use Kotlin stdlib Path APIs where possible
- fix IntelliJ Kotlin inspection warnings
- reformat code with `./gradlew spotlessApply`
- ktfmt adds lots of trailing commas
- Add workaround to fix IntelliJ "unresolved reference" errors
This adds a new feature, which allows Pkl to read resources and modules from external processes.
Follows the design laid out in SPICE-0009.
Also, this moves most of the messaging API into pkl-core
Moving to java.net.http.HttpClient brings many benefits, including
HTTP/2 support and the ability to make asynchronous requests.
Major additions and changes:
- Introduce a lightweight org.pkl.core.http.HttpClient API.
This keeps some flexibility and allows to enforce behavior
such as setting the User-Agent header.
- Provide an implementation that delegates to java.net.http.HttpClient.
- Use HttpClient for all HTTP(s) requests across the codebase.
This required adding an HttpClient parameter to constructors and
factory methods of multiple classes, some of which are public APIs.
- Manage CA certificates per HTTP client instead of per JVM.
This makes it unnecessary to set JVM-wide system/security properties
and default SSLSocketFactory's.
- Add executor v2 options to the executor SPI
- Add pkl-certs as a new artifact, and remove certs from pkl-commons-cli artifact
Each HTTP client maintains its own connection pool and SSLContext.
For efficiency reasons, It's best to reuse clients whenever feasible.
To avoid memory leaks, clients are not stored in static fields.
HTTP clients are expensive to create. For this reason,
EvaluatorBuilder defaults to a "lazy" client that creates the underlying
java.net.http.HttpClient on the first send (which may never happen).