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Does the browser have to load all the java_home content (97 MB)? If it's so, I figure that it cannot be used in real world use cases.
DoppioJVM needs to load all of the classes that might be used at runtime. The 97MB java_home compresses into ~40MB. The DoppioJVM demo loads and decompresses a gzipped Java home into browser storage, so the user only needs to download the files once. I think this download is acceptable in certain scenarios.
It is possible to reduce java_home's size by removing components/classes your program does not use. Historically, this is hard to do in Java, although I believe that is changing in Java 9.
I wasn't able to run a jar in a web page: I get a blank page.
I haven't looked at your code yet, but I'm confused by your question!
When you add DoppioJVM to a webpage, it doesn't add any GUI components or anything. It's like any other JavaScript library; you need to integrate it with your webpage. If you expected a terminal interface, you'll need to build the DoppioJVM demo and use that.
Hello,
I followed the instructions to put Doppio inside a web page, but I wasn't able to run a jar in a web page: I get a blank page.
I attach my project (I omit java_home content because it's too big): what's wrong?
myapp.zip
Thank you very much for any help.
P.S.: Does the browser have to load all the java_home content (97 MB)? If it's so, I figure that it cannot be used in real world use cases.
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