Thomas Hallgren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> GCJ is a clean house implementation of Java. They don't use the runtime 
> libraries from Sun and they are not really there yet in their efforts to 
> copy the functionality. One of the things that lag behind is security. 
> They hope to have a better security implementation before the year end 
> but there's no promise.

OK, so that is a transient limitation of the GCJ work, not something
fundamental.  Thanks for clarifying.  In that case I agree that trying
to restrict it mechanically isn't a good idea --- the code restriction
would still be around after the problem was gone.

I still think this is irrelevant to the PL template discussion, however,
since neither our past approach nor either of the proposals will make it
the least bit difficult for a user to mislabel pljava as TRUSTED when
the underlying implementation isn't really trustworthy.

(What the PL template approach *would* do is make it difficult to create
a language that is trusted but named pljavau, or untrusted and named
pljava.  Personally I don't see that as a bad thing, however.  The
opportunity for confusion is far too great if you go against the
established naming conventions.)

                        regards, tom lane

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