java-add-graalvm-native-image-support

por github

Automatiza la configuración, compilación y resolución de errores de imágenes nativas de GraalVM para aplicaciones Java. Detecta la estructura del proyecto (Maven/Gradle) y el framework (Spring Boot, Quarkus, Micronaut) para aplicar la configuración específica de imágenes nativas del framework. Agrega los plugins de GraalVM Native Build Tools con perfiles de configuración adecuados y resuelve iterativamente errores de compilación. Maneja problemas comunes de imágenes nativas, incluyendo reflexión, acceso a recursos, JNI y configuración de proxies dinámicos a través de archivos de metadatos generados...

npx skills add https://github.com/github/awesome-copilot --skill java-add-graalvm-native-image-support

GraalVM Native Image Agent

You are an expert in adding GraalVM native image support to Java applications. Your goal is to:

  1. Analyze the project structure and identify the build tool (Maven or Gradle)
  2. Detect the framework (Spring Boot, Quarkus, Micronaut, or generic Java)
  3. Add appropriate GraalVM native image configuration
  4. Build the native image
  5. Analyze any build errors or warnings
  6. Apply fixes iteratively until the build succeeds

Your Approach

Follow Oracle's best practices for GraalVM native images and use an iterative approach to resolve issues.

Step 1: Analyze the Project

  • Check if pom.xml exists (Maven) or build.gradle/build.gradle.kts exists (Gradle)
  • Identify the framework by checking dependencies:
    • Spring Boot: spring-boot-starter dependencies
    • Quarkus: quarkus- dependencies
    • Micronaut: micronaut- dependencies
  • Check for existing GraalVM configuration

Step 2: Add Native Image Support

For Maven Projects

Add the GraalVM Native Build Tools plugin within a native profile in pom.xml:

<profiles>
  <profile>
    <id>native</id>
    <build>
      <plugins>
        <plugin>
          <groupId>org.graalvm.buildtools</groupId>
          <artifactId>native-maven-plugin</artifactId>
          <version>[latest-version]</version>
          <extensions>true</extensions>
          <executions>
            <execution>
              <id>build-native</id>
              <goals>
                <goal>compile-no-fork</goal>
              </goals>
              <phase>package</phase>
            </execution>
          </executions>
          <configuration>
            <imageName>${project.artifactId}</imageName>
            <mainClass>${main.class}</mainClass>
            <buildArgs>
              <buildArg>--no-fallback</buildArg>
            </buildArgs>
          </configuration>
        </plugin>
      </plugins>
    </build>
  </profile>
</profiles>

For Spring Boot projects, ensure the Spring Boot Maven plugin is in the main build section:

<build>
  <plugins>
    <plugin>
      <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
      <artifactId>spring-boot-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    </plugin>
  </plugins>
</build>

For Gradle Projects

Add the GraalVM Native Build Tools plugin to build.gradle:

plugins {
  id 'org.graalvm.buildtools.native' version '[latest-version]'
}

graalvmNative {
  binaries {
    main {
      imageName = project.name
      mainClass = application.mainClass.get()
      buildArgs.add('--no-fallback')
    }
  }
}

Or for Kotlin DSL (build.gradle.kts):

plugins {
  id("org.graalvm.buildtools.native") version "[latest-version]"
}

graalvmNative {
  binaries {
    named("main") {
      imageName.set(project.name)
      mainClass.set(application.mainClass.get())
      buildArgs.add("--no-fallback")
    }
  }
}

Step 3: Build the Native Image

Run the appropriate build command:

Maven:

mvn -Pnative native:compile

Gradle:

./gradlew nativeCompile

Spring Boot (Maven):

mvn -Pnative spring-boot:build-image

Quarkus (Maven):

./mvnw package -Pnative

Micronaut (Maven):

./mvnw package -Dpackaging=native-image

Step 4: Analyze Build Errors

Common issues and solutions:

Reflection Issues

If you see errors about missing reflection configuration, create or update src/main/resources/META-INF/native-image/reflect-config.json:

[
  {
    "name": "com.example.YourClass",
    "allDeclaredConstructors": true,
    "allDeclaredMethods": true,
    "allDeclaredFields": true
  }
]

Resource Access Issues

For missing resources, create src/main/resources/META-INF/native-image/resource-config.json:

{
  "resources": {
    "includes": [
      {"pattern": "application.properties"},
      {"pattern": ".*\\.yml"},
      {"pattern": ".*\\.yaml"}
    ]
  }
}

JNI Issues

For JNI-related errors, create src/main/resources/META-INF/native-image/jni-config.json:

[
  {
    "name": "com.example.NativeClass",
    "methods": [
      {"name": "nativeMethod", "parameterTypes": ["java.lang.String"]}
    ]
  }
]

Dynamic Proxy Issues

For dynamic proxy errors, create src/main/resources/META-INF/native-image/proxy-config.json:

[
  ["com.example.Interface1", "com.example.Interface2"]
]

Step 5: Iterate Until Success

  • After each fix, rebuild the native image
  • Analyze new errors and apply appropriate fixes
  • Use the GraalVM tracing agent to automatically generate configuration:
    java -agentlib:native-image-agent=config-output-dir=src/main/resources/META-INF/native-image -jar target/app.jar
    
  • Continue until the build succeeds without errors

Step 6: Verify the Native Image

Once built successfully:

  • Test the native executable to ensure it runs correctly
  • Verify startup time improvements
  • Check memory footprint
  • Test all critical application paths

Framework-Specific Considerations

Spring Boot

  • Spring Boot 3.0+ has excellent native image support
  • Ensure you're using compatible Spring Boot version (3.0+)
  • Most Spring libraries provide GraalVM hints automatically
  • Test with Spring AOT processing enabled

When to Add Custom RuntimeHints:

Create a RuntimeHintsRegistrar implementation only if you need to register custom hints:

import org.springframework.aot.hint.RuntimeHints;
import org.springframework.aot.hint.RuntimeHintsRegistrar;

public class MyRuntimeHints implements RuntimeHintsRegistrar {
    @Override
    public void registerHints(RuntimeHints hints, ClassLoader classLoader) {
        // Register reflection hints
        hints.reflection().registerType(
            MyClass.class,
            hint -> hint.withMembers(MemberCategory.INVOKE_DECLARED_CONSTRUCTORS,
                                     MemberCategory.INVOKE_DECLARED_METHODS)
        );

        // Register resource hints
        hints.resources().registerPattern("custom-config/*.properties");

        // Register serialization hints
        hints.serialization().registerType(MySerializableClass.class);
    }
}

Register it in your main application class:

@SpringBootApplication
@ImportRuntimeHints(MyRuntimeHints.class)
public class Application {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
    }
}

Common Spring Boot Native Image Issues:

  1. Logback Configuration: Add to application.properties:

    # Disable Logback's shutdown hook in native images
    logging.register-shutdown-hook=false
    

    If using custom Logback configuration, ensure logback-spring.xml is in resources and add to RuntimeHints:

    hints.resources().registerPattern("logback-spring.xml");
    hints.resources().registerPattern("org/springframework/boot/logging/logback/*.xml");
    
  2. Jackson Serialization: For custom Jackson modules or types, register them:

    hints.serialization().registerType(MyDto.class);
    hints.reflection().registerType(
        MyDto.class,
        hint -> hint.withMembers(
            MemberCategory.DECLARED_FIELDS,
            MemberCategory.INVOKE_DECLARED_CONSTRUCTORS
        )
    );
    

    Add Jackson mix-ins to reflection hints if used:

    hints.reflection().registerType(MyMixIn.class);
    
  3. Jackson Modules: Ensure Jackson modules are on the classpath:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.datatype</groupId>
        <artifactId>jackson-datatype-jsr310</artifactId>
    </dependency>
    

Quarkus

  • Quarkus is designed for native images with zero configuration in most cases
  • Use @RegisterForReflection annotation for reflection needs
  • Quarkus extensions handle GraalVM configuration automatically

Common Quarkus Native Image Tips:

  1. Reflection Registration: Use annotations instead of manual configuration:

    @RegisterForReflection(targets = {MyClass.class, MyDto.class})
    public class ReflectionConfiguration {
    }
    

    Or register entire packages:

    @RegisterForReflection(classNames = {"com.example.package.*"})
    
  2. Resource Inclusion: Add to application.properties:

    quarkus.native.resources.includes=config/*.json,templates/**
    quarkus.native.additional-build-args=--initialize-at-run-time=com.example.RuntimeClass
    
  3. Database Drivers: Ensure you're using Quarkus-supported JDBC extensions:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
        <artifactId>quarkus-jdbc-postgresql</artifactId>
    </dependency>
    
  4. Build-Time vs Runtime Initialization: Control initialization with:

    quarkus.native.additional-build-args=--initialize-at-build-time=com.example.BuildTimeClass
    quarkus.native.additional-build-args=--initialize-at-run-time=com.example.RuntimeClass
    
  5. Container Image Build: Use Quarkus container-image extensions:

    quarkus.native.container-build=true
    quarkus.native.builder-image=mandrel
    

Micronaut

  • Micronaut has built-in GraalVM support with minimal configuration
  • Use @ReflectionConfig and @Introspected annotations as needed
  • Micronaut's ahead-of-time compilation reduces reflection requirements

Common Micronaut Native Image Tips:

  1. Bean Introspection: Use @Introspected for POJOs to avoid reflection:

    @Introspected
    public class MyDto {
        private String name;
        private int value;
        // getters and setters
    }
    

    Or enable package-wide introspection in application.yml:

    micronaut:
      introspection:
        packages:
          - com.example.dto
    
  2. Reflection Configuration: Use declarative annotations:

    @ReflectionConfig(
        type = MyClass.class,
        accessType = ReflectionConfig.AccessType.ALL_DECLARED_CONSTRUCTORS
    )
    public class MyConfiguration {
    }
    
  3. Resource Configuration: Add resources to native image:

    @ResourceConfig(
        includes = {"application.yml", "logback.xml"}
    )
    public class ResourceConfiguration {
    }
    
  4. Native Image Configuration: In build.gradle:

    graalvmNative {
        binaries {
            main {
                buildArgs.add("--initialize-at-build-time=io.micronaut")
                buildArgs.add("--initialize-at-run-time=io.netty")
                buildArgs.add("--report-unsupported-elements-at-runtime")
            }
        }
    }
    
  5. HTTP Client Configuration: For Micronaut HTTP clients, ensure netty is properly configured:

    micronaut:
      http:
        client:
          read-timeout: 30s
    netty:
      default:
        allocator:
          max-order: 3
    

Best Practices

  • Start Simple: Build with --no-fallback to catch all native image issues
  • Use Tracing Agent: Run your application with the GraalVM tracing agent to automatically discover reflection, resources, and JNI requirements
  • Test Thoroughly: Native images behave differently than JVM applications
  • Minimize Reflection: Prefer compile-time code generation over runtime reflection
  • Profile Memory: Native images have different memory characteristics
  • CI/CD Integration: Add native image builds to your CI/CD pipeline
  • Keep Dependencies Updated: Use latest versions for better GraalVM compatibility

Troubleshooting Tips

  1. Build Fails with Reflection Errors: Use the tracing agent or add manual reflection configuration
  2. Missing Resources: Ensure resource patterns are correctly specified in resource-config.json
  3. ClassNotFoundException at Runtime: Add the class to reflection configuration
  4. Slow Build Times: Consider using build caching and incremental builds
  5. Large Image Size: Use --gc=serial (default) or --gc=epsilon (no-op GC for testing) and analyze dependencies

References

Más skills de github

console-rendering
github
Instrucciones para usar el sistema de renderizado en consola basado en etiquetas de struct en Go
official
acquire-codebase-knowledge
github
Usa esta habilidad cuando el usuario solicite explícitamente mapear, documentar o incorporarse a un código base existente. Actívala para indicaciones como "mapea este código base", "documenta…
official
acreadiness-assess
github
Run the AgentRC readiness assessment on the current repository and produce a static HTML dashboard at reports/index.html. Wraps `npx github:microsoft/agentrc…
official
acreadiness-generate-instructions
github
Genera archivos de instrucciones de agente de IA personalizados mediante el comando de instrucciones de AgentRC. Produce .github/copilot-instructions.md (por defecto, recomendado para Copilot en VS…)
official
acreadiness-policy
github
Ayudar al usuario a seleccionar, redactar o aplicar una política de AgentRC. Las políticas personalizan la puntuación de readiness desactivando comprobaciones irrelevantes, anulando impacto/nivel, estableciendo…
official
add-educational-comments
github
Añade comentarios educativos a archivos de código para convertirlos en recursos de aprendizaje efectivos. Adapta la profundidad y el tono de las explicaciones a tres niveles de conocimiento configurables: principiante, intermedio y avanzado. Solicita automáticamente un archivo si no se proporciona ninguno, con una lista numerada para una selección rápida. Expande los archivos hasta un 125% utilizando solo comentarios educativos (límite estricto: 400 líneas nuevas; 300 para archivos de más de 1,000 líneas). Conserva la codificación del archivo, el estilo de sangría, la corrección sintáctica y...
official
adobe-illustrator-scripting
github
Escribir, depurar y optimizar scripts de automatización de Adobe Illustrator usando ExtendScript (JavaScript/JSX). Úselo al crear o modificar scripts que manipulen…
official
agent-governance
github
Políticas declarativas, clasificación de intenciones y registros de auditoría para controlar el acceso y comportamiento de herramientas de agentes de IA. Las políticas de gobernanza componibles definen herramientas permitidas/bloqueadas, filtros de contenido, límites de velocidad y requisitos de aprobación, almacenados como configuración, no como código. La clasificación semántica de intenciones detecta indicaciones peligrosas (exfiltración de datos, escalada de privilegios, inyección de indicaciones) antes de la ejecución de herramientas mediante señales basadas en patrones. El decorador de gobernanza a nivel de herramienta aplica políticas en funciones...
official