When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. OpenJDK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenJDK

    On November 12, 2010, Apple Inc. (just three weeks after deprecating its own Java runtime port [44]) and Oracle Corporation announced the OpenJDK project for Mac OS X. Apple will contribute most of the key components, tools and technology required for a Java SE 7 implementation on Mac OS X, including a 32-bit and 64-bit HotSpot-based Java ...

  3. Java (software platform) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_(software_platform)

    Current Java is supported on 64-bit Windows 10 (and Server 2016) and later, 64-bit macOS 13.x and later, and 64-bit Linux (e.g. Oracle Enterprise Linux). Others are not supported by Oracle (for building, but may be by IBM, SAP etc.), though are known to work e.g. AIX, Ubuntu, RHEL, and Alphine/ musl . 32-bit Windows support is deprecated since ...

  4. IcedTea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IcedTea

    IcedTea is a build and integration project for OpenJDK launched by Red Hat in June 2007. [3] IcedTea also includes some addon libraries: IcedTea-Web is a free software implementation of Java Web Start and the Java web browser applet plugin.

  5. Adoptium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adoptium

    In addition to Temurin the WG creates an open test suite for OpenJDK based binaries as part of the Eclipse AQAvit project. [6] The Adoptium Working Group was launched by Alibaba Cloud, Huawei, IBM, iJUG, Karakun AG, Microsoft, New Relic, and Red Hat in March 2021. [1] In May 2022, the Adoptium project announced the formation of the Adoptium ...

  6. Java Web Start - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Web_Start

    Sun introduced version 1.0 of Web Start in March 2001, [5] while 64-bit Windows support was added only in Java 6 [6] (later than 64-bit Java was first available). Since J2SE 1.4 Web Start comes as a default part of Java Runtime Environment (JRE) called javaws , computer administrators no longer have to install it separately.

  7. Java Development Kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Development_Kit

    It is derivative of the community driven OpenJDK which Oracle stewards. [5] It provides software for working with Java applications. Examples of included software are the Java virtual machine, a compiler, performance monitoring tools, a debugger, and other utilities that Oracle considers useful for Java programmers.

  8. JDK Mission Control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JDK_Mission_Control

    JDK Mission Control supports OpenJDK 11 (and above) and Oracle JDK 7u40 (and above). JDK Mission Control primarily consists of the following tools: A JFR (JDK Flight Recorder) analyzer and visualizer; A JMX Console; There are also various plug-ins available, such as: A heap dump (hprof format) analyzer (JOverflow)

  9. Red Hat Enterprise Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux

    Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 (Maipo) is based on Fedora 18 and Fedora 19, upstream Linux kernel 3.10, systemd 208 (updated to 219 in RHEL 7.2), and GNOME 3.8 (rebased to GNOME 3.28 in RHEL 7.6) The first beta was announced on 11 December 2013, [52] [53] and a release candidate was made available on 15 April 2014. [54]