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Learning to use Wholly GraalVM!

I'm still learning by michelangeloCitation: credits to the feature image goes to Anne Davis  and reused under a CC license, the original image can be found on this Flickr page.

Introduction

In the post Truffle served in a Holy Graal: Graal and Truffle for polyglot language interpretation on the JVM, we got a brief introduction and a bit of deep dive into Graal, Truffle and some of the concepts around it. But no technology is fun without diving deep into its practicality, otherwise its like Theoretical Physics or Pure Maths — abstract for some, boring for others (sorry the last part was just me ranting).

In this post we will be taking a look into the GraalVM, by installing it, comparing SDK differences and looking at a some of the examples that illustrate how different languages can be compiled and run on the GraalVM, and also how they can be run in the same context and finally natively (more performant).

GraalVM is similar to any Java SDK (JDK) that we download from any vendor, except that it has JVMCI: Java-level JVM Compiler Interface support and Graal is the default JIT compiler. It can, not just execute Java code but also languages like JS, Ruby, Python and R. It can also enable building ahead-of-time (AOT) compiled executable (native images) or share library for Java programs and other supported languages. Although we won’t be going through every language but only a selected few of them.

Just to let you know, that all of the commands and actions have been performed on a Ubuntu 16.04 operating system environment (should work on the MacOSX with minor adaptations, on Windows a bit more changes would be required – happy to receive feedback with the differences, will update post with them).

Practical hands-on

We can get our hands on the GraalVM in more than one way, either build it on our own or download a pre-built version from a vendor website:

As we are using a Linux environment, we it would be best to download the linux (preview) version of GraalVM based on JDK8 (> 500MB file, need to Accept the license, need to be signed in on OTN or you will be taken to https://login.oracle.com/mysso/signon.jsp) and install it.

Follow the installation information on the download page after unpacking the archive, you will find a folder by the name graalvm-0.30 (at the time of the writing of this post), after executing the below command:

$ tar -xvzf graalvm-0.30-linux-amd64-jdk8.tar.gz

Eagle eyeing: compare SDKs

We will quickly check the contents of the SDK to gain familiarity, so let’s check the contents of the GraalVM SDK folder:

$ cd graalvm-0.30
$ ls

which looks familiar, and has similarities, when compared with the traditional Java SDK folder (i.e. JDK 1.8.0_44):

$ cd /usr/lib/jdk1.8.0_44
$ ls

Except we have quite a few additional artifacts to learn about, i.e. the launchers on the VM for the supported languages, like FastR, JS (GraalJS), NodeJS (GraalNodeJS), Python, Ruby and Sulong (C/C++, Fortran).

Comparing the bin  folder between the GraalVM SDK and say JDK 1.8.0_44 SDK, we can see that we have a handful of additional files in there:

(use tools like meld or just diff to compare directories)

Similarly we can see that the jre folder has interesting differences, although semantically similar to the traditional Java SDKs. A few items that look interesting in the list are Rscript, lli and ployglot.

Now we haven’t literally compared the two SDKs to mark elements that are different or missing in one or the other, but the above gives us an idea about what is offered with the pre how to use the features it provides – well this SDK has them baked into it the examples folder.

If the examples folder is NOT distributed in the future versions, please use the respective code snippets provided for each of the sections referred to (for each language). For this post, you won’t need the examples folder to be present.

<pre>$ tree -L 1 

(use the tree command – sudo apt-get tree to see the above, available on the MacOSX & Windows)

Each of the sub-folders contain examples for the respective languages supported by the GraalVM, including embed and native-image which we will also be looking at.

Exciting part: hands-on using the examples

Let’s get to the chase, but before we can execute any code and see what the examples do, we should move the graalvm-0.30 to where the other Java SDKs reside, lets say under /usr/lib/jvm/ and set an environment variable called GRAAL_HOME to point to it:

$ sudo mv -f graalvm-0.30 /usr/lib/jvm
$ export GRAAL_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/graalvm-0.30
$ echo "export GRAAL_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/graalvm-0.30" >> ~/.bashrc
$ cd examples

R language

Let’s pick the R and run some R scripts files:

$ cd R
$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/Rscript --help    # to get to see the usage text

Beware we are running Rscript and not R, both can run R scripts, the later is a R REPL.

Running hello_world.Rusing Rscript:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/Rscript hello_world.R
[1] "Hello world!"

JavaScript

Next we try out some Javascript:

$ cd ../js/
$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/js --help         # to get to see the usage 

Running hello_world.js with js:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/js hello_world.js
Hello world!

Embed

Now lets try something different, what if you wish to run code written in multiple languages, all residing in the same source file, on the JVM — never done before, which is what is meant by embed.

$ cd ../embed

We can do that using the org.graalvm.polyglot.context  class. Here’s a snippet of code from  HelloPolyglotWorld.java:

import org.graalvm.polyglot.*;

public class HelloPolyglotWorld {

public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
 System.out.println("Hello polyglot world Java!");
 Context context = Context.create();
 context.eval("js", "print('Hello polyglot world JavaScript!');");
 context.eval("ruby", "puts 'Hello polyglot world Ruby!'");
 context.eval("R", "print('Hello polyglot world R!');");
 context.eval("python", "print('Hello polyglot world Python!');");
 }
}

Compile it with the below to get a.class file created:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/javac HelloPolyglotWorld.java

And run it with the below command to see how that works:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/java HelloPolyglotWorld 
Hello polyglot world Java!
Hello polyglot world JavaScript!
Hello polyglot world Ruby!
[1] "Hello polyglot world R!"
Hello polyglot world Python!

You might have noticed a bit of sluggishness with the execution when switching between languages and printing the “Hello polyglot world….” messages, hopefully we will learn why this happens, and maybe even be able to fix it.

Native image

The native image feature with the GraalVM SDK helps improve startup time of Java applications and give it smaller footprint. Effectively its converting byte-code that runs on the JVM (on any platform) to native code for a specific OS/platform — which is where the performance comes from. It’s using aggressive ahead-of-time (aot) optimisations to achieve good performance.

Let’s see how that works.

$ cd ../native-image

Lets take a snippet of Java code from  HelloWorld.java  in this folder:

public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("Hello, World!");
}
}

Compile it into byte-code:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/javac HelloWorld.java

Compile the byte-code (HelloWorld.class) into native code:

$ $GRAAL_HOME/bin/native-image HelloWorld
 classlist: 740.68 ms
 (cap): 1,042.00 ms
 setup: 1,748.77 ms
 (typeflow): 3,350.82 ms
 (objects): 1,258.85 ms
 (features): 0.99 ms
 analysis: 4,702.01 ms
 universe: 288.79 ms
 (parse): 741.91 ms
 (inline): 634.63 ms
 (compile): 6,155.80 ms
 compile: 7,847.51 ms
 image: 1,113.19 ms
 write: 241.73 ms
 [total]: 16,746.19 ms

Taking a look at the folder we can see the Hello World source and the compiled artifacts:

3.8M -rwxrwxr-x 1 xxxxx xxxxx 3.8M Dec 12 15:48 helloworld
 12K -rw-rw-r-- 1 xxxxx xxxxx     427 Dec 12  15:47 HelloWorld.class
 12K -rw-rw-r-- 1 xxxxx xxxxx     127 Dec 12  13:59 HelloWorld.java

The first file helloworld is the native binary that runs on the platform we compiled it on, using the native-image command, which can be directly executed with the help of the JVM:

$ helloworld
Hello, World!

Even though we gain performance, we might be loosing out on other features that we get running in the byte-code form on the JVM — the choice of which route to take is all a matter of what is the use-case and what is important for us.

It’s a wrap up!

That calls for a wrap up, quite a lot to read and try out on the command-line, but well worth the time to explore the interesting  GraalVM.

To sum up, we went about downloading the GraalVM from Oracle Lab’s website, unpacked it, had a look at the various folders and compared it with our traditional looking Java SDKs, noticed and noted the differences.

We further looked at the examples provided for the various Graal supported languages, and picked up a handful of features which gave us a taste of what the GraalVM can offer. While we can run our traditional Java applications on it, we now also have the opportunity to write applications that expressed in multiple supported languages in the same source file or the same project. This also gives us the ability to do seamlessly interop between the different aspects of the application written in a different language. Ability to even re-compile our existing applications for native environments (native-image) for performance and a smaller foot-print.

For more details on examples, please refer to http://www.graalvm.org/docs/examples/.

Feel free to share your thoughts with me on @theNeomatrix369.

Author: Mani Sarkar

I have been posting articles on the Java Advent calendar for some years.

A passionate developer mainly in the Java/JVM space, based out of London, UK. A JCP Member, OpenJDK contributor, involved with LJC and other developer communities, @adoptopenjdk and other F/OSS projects. Writes code, not just in Java/JVM hence likes to call himself a polyglot developer. He sees himself working in the areas of core Java, JVM, JDK, Hotspot, Graal, GraalVM, Truffle, VMs, and Performance Tuning. An advocate of a number of agile and software craftsmanship practices and a regular at many talks, conferences and hands-on-workshops – speaks, participates, organises and helps out at many of them. Expresses his thoughts often via blog posts, microblogs (tweets) and other forms of social media.

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