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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T13:53:25+00:00 2026-05-16T13:53:25+00:00

As Oracle sues Google over the Dalvik VM it becomes clear, that you cannot

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As Oracle sues Google over the Dalvik VM it becomes clear, that you cannot implement a Java VM without license from Oracle (EDIT: Matthew Flaschen points out, that the claims of Oracle may not be valid. Anyways we have currently a situation, where Oracle threats VM-implementations.). That may become the death for Open-Source-implementations of Java (like Apache Harmony).

I don’t want to discuss the impact or the legitimation of this lawsuit. but as a Java-programmer I want to take a deeper look into the alternatives, to be prepared for every case. As I see the creation of a compiler as a minor problem, my main interest are alternative VM-implementations, that serve a similar purpose as the JVM.

The VM I’m looking for, should meet some conditions:

  • free of patent-issues
  • an Open-Source-implementation exists
  • potential for optimizations/good performance
  • platform independent (the VM can be ported to different platforms without bigger hurdles)

Please add some recommendations for me.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T13:53:26+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 1:53 pm

    LLVM is a really good optimizing, low level virtual machine. It can support languages like C and C++, and does not have built in support for high level features like garbage collection.

    VMKit is an implementation of the Java and CLI virtual machines on top of LLVM. Since it uses Java bytecode, this probably wouldn’t help with the patent issues.

    HLVM is another interesting high level virtual machine built on top of LLVM. It is probably different enough to avoid most well known patents, but it is mainly targeted at numerical computing and functional programming.

    On the dynamically typed side, there is Parrot.

    I am actually working on a compiler and VM for a language of my own design, but don’t count on it ever being finished. 😉

    Keep in mind that any large piece of software will infringe on numerous patents, the important thing is how well known they are (and how much the patents’ owners actively seek out infringers). Of course, the whole patent system is absurd, and we would be much better off getting rid of it.

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