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Oracle Java Red Hat Software

Red Hat Takes Over Maintenance of OpenJDK 8 and OpenJDK 11 From Oracle (infoworld.com) 55

"Red Hat is taking over maintenance responsibilities for OpenJDK 8 and OpenJDK 11 from Oracle," reports InfoWorld: Red Hat will now oversee bug fixes and security patches for the two older releases, which serve as the basis for two long-term support releases of Java. Red Hat's updates will feed into releases of Java from Oracle, Red Hat, and other providers... Previously, Red Hat led the OpenJDK 6 and OpenJDK 7 projects. Red Hat is not taking over OpenJDK 9 or OpenJDK 10, which were short-term releases with a six-month support window.
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Red Hat Takes Over Maintenance of OpenJDK 8 and OpenJDK 11 From Oracle

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  • IBM own's Redhat. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday April 21, 2019 @05:51PM (#58468664) Journal
    So finally after years of trying, IBM controls Java.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia!

  • Crap (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Hope my boss doesn't read this.

    I just convinced him to spend $10k on Java licenses with Oracle.

    Which, by the way, was one of the most frustrating experiences of my professional career.

    Oracle is *so terrible*:

    * Buying the licenses was a pain.
    * Associating the purchases licenses with a support account was a pain.
    * Using the support account to find or download anything was a pain.

    I will be happy to just deal with RedHat's RPM releases instead.

    • This is Red Hat taking over maintenance control of several of the older versions of the JDK.

      • Given the comical difficulties in deploying and integrating Oracle JDK with a working environment, the unpredictable download locations, the confused packaging and the misnaming of the RPM packages published by Sun and later by Oracle, it would take genuine effort for Red Hat to do worse. Many projects have switched from Oracle Java to OpenJDK in the last 5 years due to just such unreliability and instability.

  • by Mandrel ( 765308 ) on Sunday April 21, 2019 @10:10PM (#58469364)
    Hopefully Red Hat will fully-open the Java bug reporting and commenting system. Oracle's system is semi-closed: ordinary users can submit bug reports, but have no control or input after that. I once spent a day preparing a Java bug report, but it seems to have been sent to /dev/null.

It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one.

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