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sunflow(1) [debian man page]

SUNFLOW(1)						       SUNFLOW DOCUMENTATION							SUNFLOW(1)

NAME
sunflow - rendering system for photo-realistic image synthesis SYNOPSIS
sunflow [option(s)] file(s) DESCRIPTION
sunflow is an open source rendering system for photo-realistic image synthesis. It is written in Java and built around a flexible ray tracing core and an extensible object-oriented design. It was created as a framework for experimenting with global illumination algorithms and new surface shading models. GENERAL OPTIONS
A summary of the options can be obtained by using one of the following options: -h, -help Display the list of available commands PERFORMANCES
Sunflow will run considerably faster with the so called server VM (Virtual Machine). This server VM is part of Java, but it's not included in the standard (JRE) installation of Java. The server VM starts up more slowly and uses more memory than the standard VM, but it runs a lot faster in many cases. Sunflow's built-in realtime raytracing benchmark (-rtbench) for example runs more than twice as fast with the server VM (exact speedup depends on your hardware). The easiest way to get the server VM is by installing the Java Development Kit (JDK). On Debian, it is possible to install different JVM at the same time, amongst which: gij-4.2 (main), openjdk-6-jre (main), sun-java5-jre (non-free), sun-java6-jre (non-free). To change the java link from one to another, use (with root privileges): "update-alternatives --config java" A pretty good choice should be openjdk-6-jre. See also the "CONFIGURATION FILES" section. SUGGESTED OPTIONS
As explained above, the following options can be used to obtain a performance gain, but depend on JVM used: -server Use the server virtual machine. The JDK matching the selected JVM has to be installed for this option to actually work, e.g. sun-java5-jdk (non-free). A warning will be displayed otherwise, and this option ignored. -XmxMEM Use a memory upper limit of MEM instead of the default (probably 64M). Example of valid values: 512M, 1G. Those options are best set through the SUNFLOW_JAVA_OPTIONS environment variable, or stored in the configuration files. CONFIGURATION FILES
To allow flexible configuration, the sunflow wrapper sources two configuration files: /etc/sunflowrc and ~/.sunflowrc, in this order. The syntax is simple "export KEY=VALUE". Lines beginning with a sharp sign are ignored. The following options are supported: SUNFLOW_JAVA The java virtual machine to use. It's then possible to have e.g. a system-wide java alternative pointing to /usr/bin/gij-4.2, while sunflow uses a different JVM, e.g. /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.5.0-sun-1.5.0.12/bin/java. If not set (the default), java will be called, meaning the system-wide alternative will be used. SUNFLOW_JAVA_OPTIONS Those are the options to be passed to the java interpreter, see above for examples. SUNFLOW_OPTIONS The list of options to pass to sunflow automatically to avoid repeating them on each invokation of sunflow. Quotation marks are needed if more than one option is specified. If not set (the default), no option is passed to sunflow. SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/sunflow/README.Debian AUTHOR
Sunflow was written by Christopher Kulla <ckulla@gmail.com>. This manual page was written by Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others). It is licensed under the same terms as the package itself. 0.07.2.svn396 2011-08-07 SUNFLOW(1)

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javap(1)						      General Commands Manual							  javap(1)

NAME
javap - Java class file disassembler SYNOPSIS
javap [ options ] class ... DESCRIPTION
The javap command disassembles a Java class file. The options determine the output. If no options are used, javap prints out the package, protected, and public fields and methods of the classes passed to it. The javap command displays its output to stdout. For example, com- pile the following class declaration: import java.awt.*; import java.applet.*; public class DocFooter extends Applet { String date; String email; public void init() { resize(500,100); date = getParameter("LAST_UPDATED"); email = getParameter("EMAIL"); } public void paint(Graphics g) { g.drawString(date + " by ",100, 15); g.drawString(email,290,15); } } The output from javap DocFooter yields: Compiled from DocFooter.java public class DocFooter extends java.applet.Applet { java.lang.String date; java.lang.String email; public void init(); public void paint(java.awt.Graphics); public DocFooter(); } OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -b Ensures backward compatibility with javap in JDK 1.1. -bootclasspath path Specifies path from which to load bootstrap classes. By default, the bootstrap classes are the classes implementing the core Java platform located in jre/lib/rt.jar and jre/lib/charsets.jar. -c Prints out disassembled code, that is, the instructions that comprise the Java bytecodes, for each of the methods in the class. These are documented in the Java Virtual Machine Specification. -classpath path Specifies the path javap uses to look up classes. Overrides the default or the CLASSPATH environment variable if it is set. Directories are separated by colons (:). Thus the general format for path is: .:<your_path> For example: .:/home/avh/classes:/usr/local/java/classes -extdirs dirs Overrides location at which installed extensions are searched. The default location for extensions is jre/lib/ext. -help Prints out help message for javap. -Jflag Passes flag directly to runtime system. javap -J-version javap -JJ-Djava.security.manager -Djava.security.policy=MyPolicy MyClassName -l Displays line and local variable tables. -package Shows only package, protected, and public classes and members. This is the default. -private Shows all classes and members. -protected Shows only protected and public classes and members. -public Shows only public classes and members. -s Displays internal type signatures. -verbose Prints stack size, number of locals, and args for methods. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
CLASSPATH Used to provide the system with a path to user-defined classes. Directories are separated by colons. For example: .:/home/avh/classes:/usr/local/java/classes SEE ALSO
java(1), javac(1), javadoc(1), javah(1), jdb(1) 13 June 2000 javap(1)
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