Eclipse OpenJ9 0.17.0 Release Review

Type
Release
State
Successful
End Date of the Review Period

Reviews run for a minimum of one week. The outcome of the review is decided on this date. This is the last day to make comments or ask questions about this review.

Project
Release

0.17.0

Description

This release includes the October security updates for Java 8, 11, 13.

Architectural Issues

This is a source code only project, containing a portion of the overall function needed to provide a full Java Developer's Kit (JDK) implementation. To run Java applications, OpenJ9 must be combined with the non-VM parts of a JDK, such as OpenJDK.

Security Issues

This release corresponds to the OpenJDK quarterly releases for October. Builds with OpenJDK will include the October security updates.

Non-Code Aspects

User documentation is available on the Eclipse OpenJ9 web site (https://www.eclipse.org/openj9/), covering aspects such as how to get downloads, what's new, how to build OpenJDK binaries with OpenJ9, frequently asked questions, links to articles, project news, a link to the OpenJ9 blog, how to join the Slack channel. The User Guide for Eclipse OpenJ9, which continues to be improved, is published for the last release at https://www.eclipse.org/openj9/docs/. Documention in progress for the next release is also published at https://eclipse.github.io/openj9-docs/. There is an documentation archive found at https://github.com/eclipse/openj9-docs/tree/master/downloads.

Conforms To UI/UX Guidelines
Not verified
Communities

The project uses GitHub issues at the main repository (eclipse/openj9) to handle the work of the project and communicate with the community. There is a slack workspace for all users, adopters, and contributors/committers to be able to reach out to the community, and a Slack link on the OpenJ9 main web page enables anyone to join. The dev list is used sporadically, and is monitored and questions answered. There is a weekly community web conference, where every so often short talks about features are presented. For details see the #planning channel on Slack. It's used to discuss interesting issues for the project, external participation is welcomed. The meetings are recorded and made publicly available on YouTube. There are a number of articles, some listed here https://www.eclipse.org/openj9/oj9_resources.html. Several committers have delivered talks at conferences like Java One, QCON SF, CASCON, FOSDEM, and there are talks scheduled at future conferences to continue to get the word out.