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I am using IKVM to get SVNKit on a Mono project I'm working with, I have a class that implements an interface from SVNKit, and I can't compile:

On windows and on .NET, everything compiles fine, just getting this on Mono.

/home/nubela/Workspace/subsync/subsync/Core/Subversion/PropGetHandler.cs(22,22): Error CS0535: Subsync.Core.Subversion.PropGetHandler' does not implement interface member org.tmatesoft.svn.core.wc.ISVNPropertyHandler.__<clinit>()` (CS0535) (subsync)

I googled __<clinit>() method, and it seems to be the initializer method for the base class in the Java library compiled from IKVM.

I have no clue how to proceed now, any idea guys? :)

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  • thanks for the upvote guys :) appreciate that.
    – nubela
    Mar 1, 2010 at 16:17
  • Have you tried to run the .NET compilation result under Mono to see if it is the compiler or the run time?
    – weismat
    Mar 9, 2010 at 9:41
  • Apparently .NET compiles properly but Mono doesn't. But it doesn't matter because I need it on Mono as its supposed to be a crossplatform app.
    – nubela
    Mar 9, 2010 at 12:24
  • Afaik you can compile it using .NET and then run on mono, even on linux-platform. Am I wrong? Mar 9, 2010 at 23:06
  • This is why I asked, because I wanted to find out which component is broken or if it is related to unsupported functions, but IKVM is supposed to support Mono...
    – weismat
    Mar 10, 2010 at 18:13

4 Answers 4

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I'm going to take a risk in alot of downvotes and suggest another solution, that is, for my opinion, much more better... I don't really understand why you are using Java libraries in a .NET application, if there are many alternatives in .NET, and good alternatives.

Why don't you use a svn library that is native for .NET, like Svn.NET? It would be much more faster. If you have existing code using SVNKit, you can convert it to Svn.NET or just create some wrappers for that.

A fish can't live outside the water, right? It can live only in its natrual environment, water. So, SVNKit, should live in its natrual environment either... Java, and not .NET. SVNKit in .NET is like human in Mars, and it is ok, but I would prefer human in the earth.

Svn.NET supports the following platforms:

  • .NET 2.0 on Win32
  • Mono on Win32 (2.0 framework)
  • Mono on Linux (2.0 framework)

Note that .NET/Mono 3.5 is just an extension to 2.0, so it will work either on 3.5.

Why to become entangled? It will be much more easier for you.

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  • because. i used that, and it doesn't work. besides, it only supports legacy svn, and not the latest ones. so yes, there you go.
    – nubela
    Mar 23, 2010 at 15:39
  • Well, you could use SharpSvn too.. there are alot of alternatives.thoughtspark.org/node/11 Mar 23, 2010 at 16:14
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If you have access to the code in Java library, then you can implemnt correctly method __().

Method void __() {} - compiles just fine. If that won't help can you provide a code sample that reproduces the error?

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  • The interface does not have __(), that __() is a method that IKVM uses for some base class initialisation, and has nothing to do with the Java code.
    – nubela
    Mar 14, 2010 at 8:25
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Since your class can build with Microsoft's compiler, this must be a bug in the Mono compiler or runtime.

You can use assemblies built with Microsoft's compilers with Mono on any platform.

I can suggest two work-arounds:

a) Build a helper assembly svnkitutil.dll on Windows. This would contain a default implementation of ISVNPropertyHandler and any other problematic interfaces. You would then implement the interface by subclassing the default implementation.

This might still fail with the same issue.

b) Modify the Java sources to remove the static field in the interface (ISVNPropertyHandler.NULL).

This might be a lot of work, if this is a common pattern throughout SVNKit.

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  • Yeah, but I dev on Linux, and I can't be rebooting everytime to compile.
    – nubela
    Mar 14, 2010 at 20:43
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I am going to ask an obvious question here..., but did you run your code through moma http://www.mono-project.com/MoMA ? I also got some really weird compiler errors which was caused by subtle incompatibilities (core methods not implemented etc).

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  • Also, if missing stuff is found, submit a report at the end of the wizard, so they'll know what to fix.
    – Dykam
    Mar 17, 2010 at 20:03

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