This documentation is for an old GraalVM version. See the latest version.

Frequently Asked Questions

Below are the most frequently asked questions and answers about JavaScript running on GraalVM.

Compatibility #

Is GraalVM compatible with the JavaScript language? #

GraalVM is compatible with the ECMAScript 2021 specification and is further developed alongside the 2022 draft specification. The compatibility of GraalVM’s JavaScript runtime is verified by external sources, like the Kangax ECMAScript compatibility table.

GraalVM JavaScript is tested against a set of test engines, like the official test suite of ECMAScript, test262, as well as tests published by V8 and Nashorn, Node.js unit tests, and GraalVM’s own unit tests.

For a reference of the JavaScript APIs that GraalVM supports, see GRAAL.JS-API.

Is GraalVM compatible with the original node implementation? #

Node.js based on GraalVM is largely compatible with the original Node.js (based on the V8 engine). This leads to a high number of npm-based modules being compatible with GraalVM. In fact, out of the 95k modules we test, more than 90% of them pass all tests. Still, several sources of differences have to be considered:

  • Setup: GraalVM mostly mimicks the original setup of Node, including the node executable, npm, and similar. However, not all command-line options are supported (or behave exactly identically). You need to (re-)compile native modules against the v8.h file, etc.

Since GraalVM 21.1, Node.js and all related executables (e.g., node, npm, etc.) are not included by default in the GraalVM binary. Node.js support is now packaged in a separate component that can be installed with the GraalVM Updater using $GRAALVM/bin/gu install nodejs.

  • Internals: GraalVM is implemented on top of a JVM, and thus has a different internal architecture than Node.js based on V8. This implies that some internal mechanisms behave differently and cannot exactly replicate V8 behaviour. This will hardly ever affect user code, but might affect modules implemented natively, depending on V8 internals.

  • Performance: Due to GraalVM being implemented on top of a JVM, performance characteristics vary from the original native implementation. While GraalVM’s peak performance can match V8 on many benchmarks, it will typically take longer to reach the peak (known as warmup). Be sure to give the GraalVM compiler some extra time when measuring (peak) performance.

In addition, GraalVM uses the following approaches to check and retain compatibility with Node.js code:

  • node-compat-table: GraalVM is compared against other engines using the node-compat-table module, highlighting incompatibilities that might break Node.js code.
  • automated mass-testing of modules using mocha: in order to test a large set of modules, GraalVM is tested against 95k modules that use the mocha test framework. Using mocha allows automating the process of executing the test and comprehending the test result.
  • manual testing of popular modules: a select list of npm modules is tested in a manual test setup. These highly-relevant modules are tested in a more sophisticated manner.

My application used to run on Nashorn, it does not work on GraalVM JavaScript? #

Reason:

  • GraalVM JavaScript tries to be compatible with the ECMAScript specification, as well as competing engines (including Nashorn). In some cases, this is a contradicting requirement; then, ECMAScript is given precedence. Also, there are cases where GraalVM Javascript is not exactly replicating Nashorn features intentionally, e.g., for security reasons.

Solution:

  • In many cases, enabling GraalVM’s Nashorn compatibility mode enables features not enabled by default. Note that this can have negative effects on application security! See the Nashorn Migration Guide for details.

Specific applications:

  • For JSR 223 ScriptEngine, you might want to set the system property polyglot.js.nashorn-compat to true in order to use the Nashorn compatibility mode.
  • For ant, use ANT_OPTS="-Dpolyglot.js.nashorn-compat=true" ant when using GraalVM JavaScript via ScriptEngine.

Builtin functions like array.map() or fn.apply() are not available on non-JavaScript objects like ProxyArrays from Java #

Reason:

  • Java objects provided to JavaScript are treated as close as possible to their JavaScript counterpart. For instance, Java arrays provided to JavaScript are treated like JavaScript Array exotic objects (JavaScript arrays) whenever possible; the same is true for functions. One obvious difference is that such object’s prototype is null. This means that while you can, e.g., read the length or read and write the values of a Java array in JavaScript code, you cannot call sort() on it, as the Array.prototype is not provided by default.

Solution:

  • While the objects do not have the methods of the prototype assigned, you can explicitly call them, e.g., Array.prototype.call.sort(myArray).
  • We offer the option js.foreign-object-prototype. When enabled, objects on the JavaScript side get the most prototype (e.g. Array.prototype, Function.prototype, Object.prototype) set and can thus behave more similarly to native JavaScript objects of the respective type. Normal JavaScript precedence rules apply here, e.g., own properties (of the Java object in that case) take precedence over and hide properties from the prototype.

Note that while the JavaScript builtin functions. e.g., from Array.prototype can be called on the respective Java types, those functions expect JavaScript semantics. This for instance means that operations might fail (typically with a TypeError: Message not supported) when an operation is not supported in Java. Consider Array.prototype.push as an example: while arrays can grow in size in JavaScript, they are fixed-size in Java, thus pushing a value is semantically not possible and will fail. In such cases, you can wrap the Java object and handle that case explicitly. Use the interfaces ProxyObject and ProxyArray for that purpose.

How can one verify GraalVM works on their application? #

If your module ships with tests, execute them with GraalVM. Of course, this will only test your application, but not its dependencies. You can use the Compatibility tool to find whether the module you are interested in is tested on GraalVM, and whether the tests pass successfully. Additionally, you can upload your package-lock.json or package.json file into that tool and it will analyze all your dependencies at once.

Performance #

My application is slower on GraalVM JavaScript than on another engine #

Reason:

  • Ensure your benchmark considers warmup. During the first few iterations, GraalVM JavaScript will be slower than natively implemented engines, while on peak performance, this difference should level out.
  • GraalVM JavaScript is shipped in two different modes: native (default) and JVM. While the default of native offers fast startup, it might show slower peak performance once the application is warmed up. In the JVM mode, the application might need a few hundred milliseconds more to start, but typically shows better peak performance.

Solution:

  • Use proper warmup in your benchmark, and disregard the first few iterations where the application still warms up.
  • Use the --jvm option for slower startup, but higher peak performance.
  • Double-check you have no flags set that might lower your performance, e.g., -ea/-esa.
  • Try to minify the problem to the root cause and file an issue so the GraalVM team can have a look.

How to achieve the best peak performance? #

Here are a few tips you can follow to analyse and improve peak performance:

  • When measuring, ensure you have given the GraalVM compiler enough time to compile all hot methods before starting to measure peak performance. A useful command line option for that is --engine.TraceCompilation=true – this outputs a message whenever a (JavaScript) method is compiled. As long as this still prints frequently, measurement should not yet start.
  • Compare the performance between the Native Image and the JVM mode if possible. Depending on the characteristics of your application, one or the other might show better peak performance.
  • The Polyglot API comes with several tools and options to inspect the performance of your application:
    • --cpusampler and --cputracer will print a list of the hottest methods when the application is terminated. Use that list to figure out where most time is spent in your application.
    • --experimental-options --memtracer can help you understand the memory allocations of your application. Refer to the Profiling Command Line Tool reference for more detail.

What is the difference between running GraalVM’s JavaScript in a Native Image compared to the JVM? #

In essence, the JavaScript engine of GraalVM is a plain Java application. Running it on any JVM (JDK 8 or higher) is possible, but, for a better result, it should be GraalVM or a compatible JVMCI-enabled JDK using the GraalVM compiler. This mode gives the JavaScript engine full access to Java at runtime, but also requires the JVM to first (just-in-time) compile the JavaScript engine when executed, just like any other Java application.

Running in a Native Image means that the JavaScript engine, including all its dependencies from, e.g., the JDK, is pre-compiled into a native binary. This will tremendously speed up the startup of any JavaScript application, as GraalVM can immediately start to compile JavaScript code, without itself requiring to be compiled first. This mode, however, will only give GraalVM access to Java classes known at the time of image creation. Most significantly, this means that the JavaScript-to-Java interoperability features are not available in this mode, as they would require dynamic class loading and execution of arbitrary Java code at runtime.

Can npm packages be installed globally? #

Node packages can be installed globally using npm and the -g option, both with the original Node.js implementation and GraalVM.

While the original Node.js implementation has one main folder (NODE/bin) to put binaries and globally installed packages and their commandline tools, GraalVM has several: the main GRAALVM/bin folder, and separate folders for each language, e.g. GRAALVM/jre/languages/js/bin. When installing npm packages globally in GraalVM, links to the executables e.g. for command line interface tools are put to the JavaScript-specific folder. In order for globally installed packages to function properly, you might need to add GRAALVM/jre/languages/js/bin to your $PATH.

Another option is to specify the global installation folder of npm by setting the $PREFIX environment variable, or by specifying the --prefix option when running npm install.

For more details, see Installing npm Packages Globally.

Errors #

TypeError: Access to host class com.myexample.MyClass is not allowed or does not exist #

Reason:

  • You are trying to access a Java class that is not known to the js or node process, or is not among the allowed classes your code can access.

Solution:

  • Ensure there is no typo in the class name.
  • Ensure the class is on the classpath. Use the --vm.cp=<classpath> option of the launchers.
  • Ensure access to the class is permitted, by having @HostAccess.Export on your class and/or the Context.Builder.allowHostAccess() set to a permissive setting. See JavaDoc of org.graalvm.polyglot.Context.

TypeError: UnsupportedTypeException #

TypeError: execute on JavaObject[Main$$Lambda$63/1898325501@1be2019a (Main$$Lambda$63/1898325501)] failed due to: UnsupportedTypeException

Reason:

  • GraalVM JavaScript in some cases does not allow concrete callback types when calling from JavaScript to Java. A Java function expecting, e.g., a Value object, might fail with the quoted error message due to that.

Solution:

  • Change the signature in the Java callback method.

Status:

Example:

import java.util.function.Function;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.Context;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.Value;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.HostAccess;

public class Minified {
  public static void main(String ... args) {
    //change signature to Function<Object, String> to make it work
    Function<Value, String> javaCallback = (test) -> {
      return "passed";
    };
    try(Context ctx = Context.newBuilder()
    .allowHostAccess(HostAccess.ALL)
    .build()) {
      Value jsFn = ctx.eval("js", "f => function() { return f(arguments); }");
      Value javaFn = jsFn.execute(javaCallback);
      System.out.println("finished: "+javaFn.execute());
    }
  }
}

TypeError: Message not supported #

TypeError: execute on JavaObject[Main$$Lambda$62/953082513@4c60d6e9 (Main$$Lambda$62/953082513)] failed due to: Message not supported.

Reason:

  • You are trying to execute an operation (a message) on a polyglot object that this object does not handle. E.g., you are calling Value.execute() on a non-executable object.
  • A security setting (e.g., org.graalvm.polyglot.HostAccess) might prevent the operation.

Solution:

  • Ensure the object (type) in question does handle the respective message.
  • Specifically, ensure the JavaScript operation you try to execute on a Java type is possible semantically in Java. For instance, while you can push a value to an array in JavaScript and thus automatically grow the array, arrays in Java are of fixed length and trying to push to them will result in a Message not supported failure. You might want to wrap Java objects for such cases, e.g., as a ProxyArray.
  • Ensure access to the class is permitted, by having @HostAccess.Export on your class and/or the Context.Builder.allowHostAccess() set to a permissive setting. See JavaDoc of org.graalvm.polyglot.Context.
  • Are you trying to call a Java Lambda expression or Functional Interface? Annotating the proper method with @HostAccess.Export can be a pitfall. While you can annotate the method the functional interface refers to, the interface itself (or the Lambda class created in the background) fails to be properly annotated and recognized as exported. See below for examples highlighting the problem and a working solution.

An example that triggers a Message not supported error with certain HostAccess settings, e.g., HostAccess.EXPLICIT:

{
  ...
  //a JS function expecting a function as argument
  Value jsFn = ...;
  //called with a functional interface as argument
  jsFn.execute((Function<Integer, Integer>)this::javaFn);
  ...
}

@Export
public Object javaFn(Object x) { ... }

@Export
public Callable<Integer> lambda42 = () -> 42;

In the example above, the method javaFn is seemingly annotated with @Export, but the functional interface passed to jsFn is not, as the functional interface behaves like a wrapper around javaFn, thus hiding the annotation. Neither is lambda42 properly annotated - that pattern annotates the field lambda42, not its executable function in the generated lambda class.

In order to add the @Export annotation to a functional interface, use this pattern instead:

import java.util.function.Function;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.Context;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.Value;
import org.graalvm.polyglot.HostAccess;

public class FAQ {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    try(Context ctx = Context.newBuilder()
    .allowHostAccess(HostAccess.EXPLICIT)
    .build()) {
      Value jsFn = ctx.eval("js", "f => function() { return f(arguments); }");
      Value javaFn = jsFn.execute(new MyExportedFunction());
      System.out.println("finished: " + javaFn.execute());
    }
  }

  @FunctionalInterface
  public static class MyExportedFunction implements Function<Object, String> {
    @Override
    @HostAccess.Export
    public String apply(Object s) {
      return "passed";
    }
  };
}

Another option is to allow access to java.function.Function’s apply method. However, note that this allows access to ALL instances of this interface - in most production setups, this will be too permissive and open potential security holes.

HostAccess ha = HostAccess.newBuilder(HostAccess.EXPLICIT)
  //warning: too permissive for use in production
  .allowAccess(Function.class.getMethod("apply", Object.class))
  .build();

Warning: Implementation does not support runtime compilation. #

If you get the following warning, you are not running on GraalVM or a JVMCI-enabled JVM using the GraalVM compiler:

[engine] WARNING: The polyglot context is using an implementation that does not support runtime compilation.
The guest application code will therefore be executed in interpreted mode only.
Execution only in interpreted mode will strongly impact the guest application performance.
To disable this warning the '--engine.WarnInterpreterOnly=false' option or use the '-Dpolyglot.engine.WarnInterpreterOnly=false' system property.

To resolve this, use GraalVM or see the Run GraalVM JavaScript on a Stock JDK guide for instructions how to set up the Graal compiler on a compatible JVMCI-enabled stock JDK.

Nevertheless, if this is intentional, you can disable the warning and continue to run with degraded performance by setting the above mentioned option, either via the command line or using the Context.Builder, e.g.:

try (Context ctx = Context.newBuilder("js")
    .option("engine.WarnInterpreterOnly", "false")
    .build()) {
  ctx.eval("js", "console.log('Greetings!');");
}

Note that when using an explicit polyglot engine, the option has to be set on the Engine, e.g.:

try (Engine engine = Engine.newBuilder()
    .option("engine.WarnInterpreterOnly", "false")
    .build()) {
  try (Context ctx = Context.newBuilder("js").engine(engine).build()) {
    ctx.eval("js", "console.log('Greetings!');");
  }
}

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