I'm good with JDK17! Just don't skip ahead to 21 LTS [required] yet, I think it's healthy to lag behind one LTS edition.
On Fri, Apr 5, 2024 at 9:24 AM Thomas Andraschko <andraschko.tho...@gmail.com> wrote: > > +1 for Java17 > > seems we have no other choice > maybe we can try to get certified on Java17 but we still need green TCKs > first anyway, which is not reachable without Java17 right now. > > Am Fr., 5. Apr. 2024 um 16:00 Uhr schrieb Richard Zowalla <r...@apache.org>: > > > Hello everyone, > > > > We should discuss the following to get up to speed on our EE-10 > > efforts. > > > > For EE-10 we need > > > > - JMS 3.1 [1] > > - JAX-RS 3.1 [2] > > > > AMQ-6 (which will become JMS 3) has changed it's baseline to Java 17 > > [3]. CXF 4.1.0-SNAPSHOT (which will target JAX-RS 3.1) has switched > > it's baseline to Java 17 [4]. > > > > From my understanding of the EE10 specification, we would have to pass > > the TCK with Java 11 and Java 17 to be "certified". > > > > With CXF 4.1 going to Java 17 as a baseline, we won't be able to run > > the TCK on a Java 11 setup, making it impossible to get "certified" (as > > far as I understand the requirements from the TCK/EE platform spec). > > > > We can still work on the TCK setup and get as many green tests as we > > want to gain more confidence in our work/implementation and gain > > experience in setup etc. > > > > Therefore, I would like to discuss the following > > > > - Do we have any other option than to change our baseline to 17 for > > TomEE 10 as well? > > > > From my point of view, we should make this change (baseline to 17), > > bite the bad apple of no longer being able to get certified with it, > > and get a final TomEE 10 soon so we can look at the upcoming EE-11. > > > > Wdyt? > > > > > > Gruß > > Ricahrd > > > > [1] https://jakarta.ee/specifications/messaging/3.1/ > > [2] https://jakarta.ee/specifications/restful-ws/3.1/ > > [3] https://lists.apache.org/thread/gjmhcj4frqp9x00cg5kylvy4s1lys7z6 > > [4] > > > > https://github.com/apache/cxf/commit/e8cd5e904419cfd21437db6bfb0e7b309c575715 > > > > -- Jonathan | exabr...@gmail.com Pessimists, see a jar as half empty. Optimists, in contrast, see it as half full. Engineers, of course, understand the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.