Thursday, 4 May 2017

What is 64-bit Java?


A 64-bit version of Java has been available to Solaris SPARC users since the 1.4.0 release of J2SE.

A 64-bit capable J2SE is an implementation of the Java SDK (and the JRE along with it) that runs in the 64-bit environment of a 64-bit OS on a 64-bit processor. You can think of this environment as being just another platform to which we've ported the SDK.
The primary advantage of running Java in a 64-bit environment is the larger address space. This allows for a much larger Java heap size and an increased maximum number of Java Threads, which is needed for certain kinds of large or long-running applications.

The primary complication in doing such a port is that the sizes of some native data types are changed. Not surprisingly the size of pointers is increased to 64 bits. On Solaris and most Unix platforms, the size of the C language long is also increased to 64 bits. Any native code in the 32-bit SDK implementation that relied on the old sizes of these data types is likely to require updating.  
Within the parts of the SDK written in Java things are simpler, since Java specifies the sizes of its primitive data types precisely. However even some Java code needs updating, such as when a Java int is used to store a value passed to it from a part of the implementation written in C.

What it is NOT?

Many Java users and developers assume that a 64-bit implementation means that many of the built-in Java types are doubled in size from 32 to 64.  This is not true.  We did not increase the size of Java integers from 32 to 64 and since Java longs were already 64 bits wide, they didn't need updating.  Array indexes, which are defined in the Java Virtual Machine Specification, are not widened from 32 to 64.  We were extremely careful during the creation of the first 64-bit Java port to insure Java binary and API compatibility so all existing 100% pure Java programs would continue running just as they do under a 32-bit VM.



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