I'm trying to understand how cake implements its multiple JVM approach. At a high level, I thought that cake was working similar to nailgun, where there is a single JVM instance (one JVM process), and new "JVMs" for different projects were actually just clojure/jars evaluated in a new classloader (along with different jar dependencies), which in my eyes is not a new JVM instance. From What's the difference between Cake and Leiningen? however, there is an implication that there are multiple JVMs (one for cake, and * for the projects), not just a single JVM instance.
If there are new JVM instances created, where does the speedup come from? With my understanding, I would reason that starting a new JVM implies creating a new JVM process which incurs the same startup overhead as usual.
If there are not, how are native dependencies added on? From what I understand, the JVM only knows about native dependencies from command line arguments passed before runtime. The only way I know how to circumvent this is with a Sun/Oracle JVM implementation specific hack listed below.
(let [clazz java.lang.ClassLoader
field (.getDeclaredField clazz "sys_paths")]
(.setAccessible field true)
(.set field clazz nil)
(System/setProperty "java.library.path" (apply str (interpose ";" native-paths))))