The main component of Amlen is the server - a message broker that supports the latest MQTT v5 protocol designed for IoT (as well as the older MQTTv3 and JMS 1.1). It can be deployed in highly available, redundant configurations and has clustering support for horizontal scalability.
The companies involved want to increase the automotive industry’s competitiveness, improve efficiency through industry-specific cooperation and accelerate company processes through standardization and access to information and data. A special focus is also on SMEs, whose active participation is of central importance for the network’s success. That is why Catena-X has been conceived from the outset as an open network with solutions ready for SMEs, where these companies will be able to participate quickly and with little IT infrastructure investment.
Eclipse Exousia implements Jakarta Authorization, a technology that defines a low-level SPI for authorization modules, which are repositories of permissions facilitating subject based security by determining whether a given subject has a given permission, and algorithms to transform security constraints for specific containers (such as Jakarta- Servlet or Enterprise Beans) into these permissions.
Eclipse Exousia provides default implementations of these authorization modules and algorithms, as defined and mandated by the Jakarta Authorization specification.
The Public Access Submission System (PASS) is a platform to assist researchers in complying with the access policies of their funders and institutions.
The OSGi Technology Project will host open source OSGi technology projects which are adjacent to the OSGi Specification Project but don't produce OSGi specifications or TCKs for OSGi specifications. Such projects include testing support (JUnit 4, JUnit 5, AssertJ) for testing in OSGi runtimes, SLF4J bindings to the OSGi Log Service, and the enRoute OSGi development tutorials and examples. Additional projects can be added as proposed by the community.
The OSGi Specification Project is an open source initiative to create new, and evolve existing, software specifications, implementations of those specifications, and Technology Compatibility Kits (TCKs) for those specifications that enable development, deployment, and management of embedded, server-side and cloud-native applications.
AQAvit is the quality and runtime branding evaluation project for Java SE runtimes and associated technology. During a release it takes a functionally complete Java runtime and ensures that all the additional qualities are present that make it suitable for production use. These quality criteria include good performance, exceptional security, resilience and endurance, and the ability to pass a wide variety of application test suites. In addition to verifying that functionally complete runtimes are release ready, the AQA tests may also serve to verify new functionality during runtime devel
The Temurin Compliance project is responsible for obtaining, managing, and executing the Oracle Java SE Compatibility Kit (JCK) on Eclipse Temurin binaries. The work is done on private infrastructure and using code managed in closed repositories only available to committers of the Temurin Compliance. The public artefacts produced by this project are limited to an indication of whether a particular Eclipse Temurin binary is Java SE compliant or not.
The Temurin project provides code and processes that support the building of runtime binaries and associated technologies that are high performance, enterprise-caliber, cross-platform, open-source licensed, and Java SE TCK-tested for general use across the Java ecosystem.