Eclipse POOSL (Parallel Object-Oriented Specification Language, https://www.es.ele.tue.nl/premadona/publications/TFGHPV07.pdf) and the accompanying tools offer a general purpose method for describing and simulating (embedded) system architectures for the early evaluation of key structural and behavioral concepts, requirements and performance.
The main goal of Jakarta RPC project is to make gRPC easier to use within Jakarta EE ecosystem, by allowing developers to define gRPC services and clients the same way they are defining REST services and clients today -- via annotated classes (a la JAX-RS) on the server, and annotated interfaces (a la Eclipse MicroProfile REST Client) on the client -- and by making them easier to integrate with existing Jakarta EE technologies, such as CDI and Config.
The core python framework (creates the testing environment and run the tests)
Plugins for the core framework (functionalities that can be used for creating the testing environment and used by the running tests)
Additional libraries for different target platforms (e.g., stm32, ...) or languages (C, C++, ...) that enable you to deploy tests on different targets.
With the Kiso-testing platform it is possible to write tests by directly
Eclipse Kanto is a modular IoT edge software stack for devices that enables them for AIoT with all the essentials - cloud connectivity and digital twins, local messaging, container management and software updates - all configurable and remotely manageable by an IoT cloud ecosystem of choice.
Eclipse Angus provides implementations of Jakarta Activation, a standard extension to the Java platform that lets you take advantage of standard services to: determine the type of an arbitrary piece of data; encapsulate access to it; discover the operations available on it; and instantiate the appropriate bean to perform the operation(s), and Jakarta Mail, a platform-independent and protocol-independent framework to build mail and messaging applications.
Eclipse Mission Control enables you to monitor and manage Java applications without introducing the performance overhead normally associated with these types of tools. It uses data collected for normal adaptive dynamic optimization of the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). Besides minimizing the performance overhead, this approach eliminates the problem of the observer effect, which occurs when monitoring tools alter the execution characteristics of the system.
Existing open-source projects address the technical challenges of cataloguing and transferring data for a wide range of use cases. However, there is no open-source effort aimed at providing an interoperable, cross-organization framework for data sharing that is built on a common identity model and uniform policy enforcement. This project will integrate with existing data exchange technologies and provide these missing pieces to create a system for data sharing where each organization is able to exert control over how its shared data is used.
Jakarta Config is a Java API for working with configurations. It supports externalized configuration allowing applications to use different configurations for different environments (dev, test, prod), and allows reading data from different layered configuration sources such as property files, environment variables, etc.