* pass jvm args to javac #11925
* Update net.ltgt.errorprone to the latest version so that jvm args are not overwritten, add -XX:+PrintFlagsFinal for debugging
* speed up the pure javac case too
It does not help to fork additional VMs (although error-prone will do
this since it messes with bootstrap classpath), so we avoid forking.
Instead it is best to tune org.gradle.jvmargs.
* use the flags consistently everywhere (tests and doc)
* handle the different possible alt toolchain cases
The difference is invoking 'java' versus invoking 'javac', so the args must be fed differently.
Co-authored-by: Dawid Weiss <dawid.weiss@carrotsearch.com>
* pass jvm args to javac #11925
* Update net.ltgt.errorprone to the latest version so that jvm args are not overwritten, add -XX:+PrintFlagsFinal for debugging
* speed up the pure javac case too
It does not help to fork additional VMs (although error-prone will do
this since it messes with bootstrap classpath), so we avoid forking.
Instead it is best to tune org.gradle.jvmargs.
* use the flags consistently everywhere (tests and doc)
Co-authored-by: Dawid Weiss <dweiss@apache.org>
* pass jvm args to javac #11925
* Update net.ltgt.errorprone to the latest version so that jvm args are not overwritten, add -XX:+PrintFlagsFinal for debugging
* speed up the pure javac case too
It does not help to fork additional VMs (although error-prone will do
this since it messes with bootstrap classpath), so we avoid forking.
Instead it is best to tune org.gradle.jvmargs.
* use the flags consistently everywhere (tests and doc)
Co-authored-by: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>