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OpenJDK builds from Red Hat; Microsoft Build of OpenJDK; SapMachine, the OpenJDK build of SAP; Reinhold, Mark. "Java in 2018: Change is the Only Constant Keynote". YouTube. Benson, Gary (May 21, 2009). "Zero and Shark: a Zero-Assembly Port of OpenJDK". java.net. Archived from the original on May 31, 2009
September 2028 for Microsoft Build of OpenJDK [11] December 2029 for Red Hat [4] December 2029 for Eclipse Temurin [8] October 2030 for Amazon Corretto [9] September 2031 for Azul [3] September 2031 for Oracle [10] March 2032 for BellSoft Liberica [6] Java SE 22: 66: 19th March 2024: September 2024 — Java SE 23: 67
Microsoft however, officially started distributing Java again in 2021 (though not bundled with Windows or its web browsers as before), i.e. their build of Oracle's OpenJDK, [3] which Microsoft plans to support for at least 6 years, for LTS versions, i.e. to September 2027 for Java 17.
Oracle also continues to release no-cost public Java 17 LTS updates for all users, including commercial and production use until September 2024. [5] In the case of OpenJDK, both commercial long-term support and free software updates are available from multiple organizations in the broader community. [6] Java 23 was released on September 17, 2024.
Microsoft however, officially started distributing Java again in 2021 (though not bundled with Windows or its web browsers as before with J++), i.e. their build of Oracle's OpenJDK, [6] which Microsoft plans to support for at least 6 years, for LTS versions, i.e. to September 2027 for Java 17.
OpenJDK Other Interpretation AOT JIT; GCJ: No longer maintained or distributed by GNU as of GCC 7 [16]? Yes No Yes Yes No HotSpot, OpenJDK edition Reference implementation. 1.8 No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Oracle JDK edition Reference implementation. 1.8 No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Java SE embedded edition ? No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Zero port
The Eclipse Temurin project produces Temurin (/ ˈ t ɛ m j ər ɪ n /), a certified binary build of OpenJDK. The initial release in October 2021 [8] supported Java LTS 8, 11, 17, and 21. The name for the project, Temurin, is an anagram of the word runtime. [9]
[16] [17] [18] LittleCMS has replaced the native color-management system. [17] There is a pluggable layer in the JDK, so that the commercial version can use the old color management system and OpenJDK can use LittleCMS. The open-sourced Pisces renderer used in the phoneME project has replaced the anti-aliasing graphics rasterizer code.