Thread: GraalVM
Do you know about GraalVM (https://www.graalvm.org/)? This is a new polyglot VM that can run in context of Oracle and MySql, I think that supporting it on Postgresql will be a good thing.
On 12/19/18 07:42, Massimo Fidanza wrote: > Do you know about GraalVM (https://www.graalvm.org/)? This is a new > polyglot VM that can run in context of Oracle and MySql, I think that > supporting it on Postgresql will be a good thing. PL/Java will run on it now ... just set pljava.libjvm_location to the libjvm.so under the graalvm installation. There's not (yet) support for declaring SQL functions directly in the other languages supported; for now, there can be Java functions that will call into javascript, R, python, etc. as needed. Ability to directly declare functions in the various supported languages would be the obvious next step; I'm working on some refactoring to make that easier. There are many things cool about GraalVM. Historically, if you're implementing a language, you might do the work about three times (first developing an interpreter, then a simple JIT for the regions the interpreter finds to be hot, then a more optimizing version ...). GraalVM only asks you to write the interpreter (with some clever annotations) ... and by partial evaluation it can derive your compiler. -Chap
This is a good news, also for code portability
Il giorno mer 19 dic 2018, 15:17 Chapman Flack <chap@anastigmatix.net> ha scritto:
On 12/19/18 07:42, Massimo Fidanza wrote:
> Do you know about GraalVM (https://www.graalvm.org/)? This is a new
> polyglot VM that can run in context of Oracle and MySql, I think that
> supporting it on Postgresql will be a good thing.
PL/Java will run on it now ... just set pljava.libjvm_location to the
libjvm.so under the graalvm installation.
There's not (yet) support for declaring SQL functions directly in the
other languages supported; for now, there can be Java functions that
will call into javascript, R, python, etc. as needed.
Ability to directly declare functions in the various supported languages
would be the obvious next step; I'm working on some refactoring to make
that easier.
There are many things cool about GraalVM. Historically, if you're
implementing a language, you might do the work about three times
(first developing an interpreter, then a simple JIT for the regions
the interpreter finds to be hot, then a more optimizing version ...).
GraalVM only asks you to write the interpreter (with some clever
annotations) ... and by partial evaluation it can derive your compiler.
-Chap