![]() IBM has announced longer-term support for some Java/JDK versions being utilized by their customers on the IBM SDK, which includes some JFrog customers. Īre there options to obtain or utilize the JDK outside Oracle? ![]() Those differences can be seen in a post from Oracle here. There are some very small differences that remain between the two, some cosmetic and some minorly functional. In fact, the Oracle JDK and OpenJDK are built from the same code base. The main difference is in the long-term support contracts that are provided by Oracle (or not) with the commercial Oracle JDK and the OpenJDK. ![]() Is Oracle’s OpenJDK limited in functionality vs the Oracle JDK? As Oracle notes “ from Java 11 forward, therefore, Oracle JDK builds and OpenJDK builds will be essentially identical.” Some of the differences are delineated in links below. The OpenJDK, as the name suggests, is and was an open-sourced version of the JDK for Java SE that is unsupported and historically lacked a few features of the commercial version. The Oracle JDK is a supported version of the JDK that software companies license and sometimes distribute as part of their own software solutions. These are the Oracle JDK and the OpenJDK. Oracle currently provides two key options to obtain the JDK, which is the platform that provides resources for building and running Java applications. Disclaimer before we get going: of course, consult your legal and compliance teams before you make any decisions around Java 11 adoption or distribution.įirst of all, what are the options to get or distribute Java 11? ![]() ![]() There’s a bit of confusion in the market around Java 11 licensing, so it seems appropriate to share some thoughts and hopefully add some value by saving you the research. ![]()
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