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  1. Support for JDK 8. (The Red Hat extension requires JDK 11 or above.)
  2. Polyglot debugging.
  3. Support for OpenJDK projects.

Getting Started

Get VSApacheNetBeans the latest Apache NetBeans VSCode extension from the official VS Code market place, once it is available there.

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or download the latest development version of Until then, download the Apache NetBeans Language Server extension and install it into VSCode via Install from VSIX...

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1. Get an existing Java project, for example, Micronaut: https://micronaut.io/launch/

Don't forget to select Maven and JavaJava. You can select both Maven or Gradle. Generate the project, download it, extract it into local disk.

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  1. Clone sample repository and move to the newly cloned directory.
  2. Make sure that JAVA_HOME points at a JDK11 (or later) export JAVA_HOME=/path/to/jdk11.
    1. Although this archetype is named *jdk11*  it can be used with JDK 8 as well, just set to both variables JAVA_HOME and netbeans.jdkhome to your JDK8 home.
  3. In VS Code, go to Preferences | Settings, search for netbeans.jdkhome, and set it to /path/to/jdk11 (or later).
  4. Open Folder with graal-js-jdk11-maven-demo in VSCode.
  5. Remove App.java and AppTest.java originally coming with the sample Maven project.

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  1. In main/java/com/mycompany/app, add a new file named PolyglotSample.java with the following code:

    Code Block
    languagejava
    titlePolyglotSample.java
    linenumberstrue
    collapsetrue
    package  com.mycompany.app;
    import org.graalvm.polyglot.Context;
    import org.graalvm.polyglot.Source;
    import org.graalvm.polyglot.Value;
    import java.net.URL;
    
    public class PolyglotSample {
        public static void main(String[] args) throws java.io.IOException, java.lang.InterruptedException {
            Context ctx = Context.create();
            URL fibUrl = PolyglotSample.class.getResource("fib.js");
            Source fibSrc = Source.newBuilder("js", fibUrl).build();
            Value fib = ctx.eval(fibSrc);
            for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
                Value res = fib.execute(i);
                System.out.println("Polyglot with Graal.JS - fib(" + i + ") = " + res.asInt());
                Thread.sleep(500);
            }
        }
    }  


  2. Create the following structure to store the JS source file, so that Java can find it, within the main folder: resources/com/mycompany/app
  3. In this resources/com/mycompany/app folder, create a file named fib.js and paste in the following JS code:

    Code Block
    languagejs
    titlefib.js
    linenumberstrue
    collapsetrue
    (function(n) {
        function fib(x) {
            if (x <= 2) {
                return 1;
            }
            let fibX1 = fib(x - 1);
            let fibX2 = fib(x - 2);
            return fibX1 + fibX2;
        }
     
        let fibN = fib(n);
        print(`JavaScript computed that fib(${n}) is ${fibN}`);
     
        return fibN;
    })


  4. Save all files and invoke action from Command Palette: Java: Compile Workspace.

    Note:
    • This is an action provided by VSNetBeans which builds the project.
    • The project is also built when the debugger starts, but it is worth checking before the first debug session to make sure that the Maven build passes.

Once the build succeeds, let's test the project.

Testing
  1. Set breakpoint to line 11 in fib.js and
  2. Select F5 to launch debugger and select type Java 8+ which is VSNetBeans provided debugger for JDK 8 and Polyglot capable of debugging Java and scripting languages like Graal.JS impl. of JS.
  3. When started you should see something like following screenshot with Call Stack from JS to Java and variables from JS and Java depending on what context you have  currently stepped into.

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Happy Polyglot development and debugging with VSNetBeans! 

Scenario 3: Open OpenJDK Source

to be done...

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The OpenJDK sources can be directly open in VS Code using VSNetBeans.

SetUp

Follow these steps to prepare the OpenJDK sources:

  1. Clone the OpenJDK from https://github.com/

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  1. openjdk/jdk
  2. configure using bash configure, and provide a path to jtreg, like using the --with-jtreg=<JTREG_HOME> option
  3. build the JDK using make images

Open Sources

To open an OpenJDK module inside VS Code, open the src/<module-name> directory. For example, to open the most basic java.base module, open src/java.base. When opening the first module, use File/Open Folder..., to open additional modules and/or tests, using File/Add Folder To Workspace... . Tests are typically in either the test/jdk or test/langtools folder.

After opening the folders, it is recommended to wait for the "Indexing Complete." messages in the status line.

Then, enjoy browsing and editing the OpenJDK sources!

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Scenario 4: GraalVM Sources

Get the Graal repository (or related repositories like Graal.js, Graal Python, etc.) and prepare it for development (most importantly make sure the mx tool is on PATH ). Then select a suite (graal/sdk , graal/truffle, graal/compiler, etc.) and build it using mx build . Then open the suite  in code  as a folder (_File/Open Folder_). Wait for the Apache NetBeans Language Server extension to be initialized (shows Indexing finished  in the status line). Use Ctrl-O  to open any Java file. Edit, use code completions provided by the system, open tests, run and debug them. Open a test class, locate @Test  method to debug and choose Debug :

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The system invokes mx build  and mx unittest ...  automatically for you and connects debugger to the started JVM. Then it's up to you to step through the code, hit breakpoints, etc. Should you debug Truffle language (like JavaScript, Python, etc.), the debugger steps in and shows you the guest language statements - see scenario 2  for more details.

Should you need to explicitly build from the code  choose Ctrl+Shift-P and type Java: Compile Workspace - that invokes mx build .