IBM SDK for Linux, Java Technology Edition, Version 6 ===================================================== This READMEFIRST file applies to Version 6, and to all subsequent releases, modifications, and service refreshes, until otherwise indicated in a new READMEFIRST file. This READMEFIRST file provides release notes that were not incorporated into the User Guides. This file must be read in conjunction with any User Guides. The SDK provided in this release is functionally equivalent to the Sun FCS version of Java 6 Update 14 Build 07 codebase. IBM provides additional content with the SDK. Known problems: --------------- - There is no ECC provider. - In the XL TXE-J XSLT compiler: - A low split limit might cause compilation errors - It is not recommended to call Java extension functions that have side effects. The order of execution is not guaranteed. - Versions of Ant prior to 1.7.0 will not work with the XL TXE-J compiler. Use the XSLT4J interpreter instead: -Djavax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory= org.apache.xalan.processor.TransformerFactoryImpl. - When using the Attach API directly or through tools such as JConsole, you might have the following exception: com.ibm.tools.attach.AttachNotSupportedException: acknowledgment timeout from 1234 on port 5678 This is the result of Attach API resources left by crashed processes. To work around this issue, do the following: 1) Go to the system temporary directory, for example: /tmp 2) Go into the directory: .com_ibm_tools_attach Note: There is a full-stop at the start of the directory name. You see a number of directories, each corresponding to a Java process and typically identified by the process ID. 3) Delete all the directories *except* those for the active Java processes you wish to attach to; for example process 1234 from the above exception. If you accidentally delete a directory that corresponds to a running process, the only effect is that you cannot attach to that process. IBM Monitoring and Diagnostic Tools for Java - Health Center: ------------------------------------------------------------- You can enable IBM Monitoring and Diagnostic Tools for Java - Health Center by using the -Xhealthcenter flag. This increases the native memory requirements on a per thread basis, and so might cause problems if used on a system working with limited memory constraints such as the available addressable memory.