Free Java implementations
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Free Java implementations are software projects that implement Sun Microsystem's Java technologies and are distributed under free software licences, thus making them free software. Sun released most of its Java source code as free software in May 2007, so it can now almost be considered a free Java implementation.
Java implementations include compilers, runtimes, class libraries, etc.
Advocates[who?] of free and open source software refer to free or open source Java virtual machine software as free runtimes or free Java runtimes.
Some advocates[who?] in this movement prefer not to use the term "Java" as it has trademark issues associated with it. Hence, even though it is a "free Java movement", the term "free Java runtimes" is avoided by them.
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[edit] Mid-90s to 2006
Probably the first free project to offer substantial parts of Java platform functionality was guavac, which began some time before November 1995.[1][2]
Since then, the free software movement developed other java compilers, most notably the GNU Compiler for Java. Others include ECJ the Eclipse Java Compiler, which is maintained by the Eclipse Foundation, and Jikes, which is no longer actively maintained. With the upcoming GCC 4.3 release, GCJ (GCC for Java) will use ECJ parser front-end, for parsing Java.[3]
Examples of free runtime environments include Kaffe, SableVM, and gcj.
GNU Classpath is the main free software class library for Java. Most free runtimes use GNU Classpath as their class library.
In May 2005, Apache Harmony was announced, however, the project chose the Apache License, which was at the time incompatible with all existing free Java implementations.
Another event in May 2005 was the announcement that OpenOffice.org 2.0 would depend on Java features which free software implementations couldn't provide. Red Hat solved this problem by extending the free software implementations to be adequate for their purposes.
Notable applications that already worked with free software Java implementations before November 2006 include OpenOffice.org and Azureus, both of which work when compiled with GCJ.
[edit] Sun's November 2006 announcement
In 13 November 2006, Sun released its compiler, javac, under the GNU General Public License.
As of September 2007, as well as javac, Sun has released the code of HotSpot (the virtual machine) and almost all the Java Class Library as free software.
Following their promise to release a fully buildable JDK based almost completely on free and open source code in the first half of 2007 [4], Sun released the complete source code of the Class library under the GPL on May 8, 2007, except some limited parts that were licensed by Sun from 3rd parties who did not want their code to be released under a free software licence.[5] Sun has stated that it aims to replace the parts that remain proprietary and closed source with alternative implementations and make the class library completely free and open source. Since there's some encumbered code in the JDK, Sun will continue to use that code in commercial releases until it's replaced by fully-functional free and open-source alternatives.
[edit] After the May 2007 code release
- See also: OpenJDK
As of May 2008, the only part of the Class library that remain proprietary and closed-source (4% as of May 2007 for OpenJDK 7[6], and less than 1% as of May 2008 and OpenJDK 6[7][8]) is[9] [10]:
Since the first May 2007 release, Sun Microsystems, with the help of the community, has released as Open-source or replaced with Open-source alternatives almost all the encumbered code:
- All the audio engine code, including the software synthetizer, has been released as Open-source[11][10]. The closed-source software synthesizer has been replaced by a new synthesizer developed specifically for OpenJDK called Gervill[12],
- All cryptography classes used in the Class library have been released as Open-source[13],
- The code that scales and rasterizes fonts has been replaced by FreeType [14][15][16]
- The native color management system has been replaced by LittleCMS [15]. There is a pluggable layer in the JDK, so that the commercial version can use the old color management system and OpenJDK can use LittleCMS.
- The anti-aliasing graphics rasterizer code has been replaced by the Open-sourced Pisces renderer used in the phoneME project[17] [18] [15]. This code is fully functional, but still needs some performance enhancements [19],
- The Javascript plugin has been open-sourced (the JavaScript engine itself was open-sourced from the beginning)[20].
Because of these encumbered components, it was not possible to build OpenJDK only with Free Software components. In order to be able to do this before the whole class library is made free, and to be able to bundle OpenJDK in Fedora Core and other free Linux distributions, a project called IcedTea has been started by Red Hat. It is basically an OpenJDK/GNU Classpath hybrid that can be used to bootstrap OpenJDK using only Free Software.[21][22]
As of March 2008, the Fedora 9 distribution has been released with OpenJDK 6 instead of IcedTea[8]. Some of the stated reasons for this changes are:
- Sun has replaced most of the encumbrances for which IcedTea was providing replacements (there is less than 1% of encumbered code in the class library, and this code is not necessary to run OpenJDK).
- OpenJDK 6 is a stable branch, whereas OpenJDK 7 is unstable and not expected to ship a stable release until 2009.
- Sun has licensed the OpenJDK trademark for use in Fedora.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Announcing: guavac 0.2.5, A free compiler for the Java language (1996-09-07). Retrieved on 2007-06-24.
- ^ Changelog of guavac, showing the first release happening in January 1996. “Wed Nov 22 05:43:07 1995 [...] CompilerMain.C, Compiler. C, Compiler.h, lexer.l, parser.y: Initial revision”
- ^ GCC 4.3 Release Series -- Changes, New Features, and Fixes. Retrieved on 2007-10-08.
- ^ OpenJDK FAQ
- ^ Open JDK is here!. Sun Microsystems (2007-05-08). Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
- ^ Fitzsimmons, Thomas (2007-05-18). Plans for OpenJDK. Retrieved on 2007-05-22.
- ^ Angel, Lillian (2008-03-13). OpenJDK to replace IcedTea in Fedora 9. Retrieved on 2008-04-05.
- ^ a b Wade, Karsten (2008-03-13). OpenJDK in Fedora 9!. redhatmagazine.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-05. “Thomas Fitzsimmons updated the Fedora 9 release notes source pages to reflect that Fedora 9 would ship with OpenJDK 6 instead of the IcedTea implementation of OpenJDK 7. Fedora 9 (Sulphur) is due to release in May 2008.”
- ^ Herron, David (2007-10-04). Plans for OpenJDK. Retrieved on 2007-10-09.
- ^ a b c OpenJDK 6 b10 source posted (2008-05-30). Retrieved on 2008-06-01.
- ^ audio-engine project page
- ^ Gervill - Software Synthesizer. Retrieved on 2008-06-01.
- ^ Crypto has been added to OpenJDK (2007-09-27). Retrieved on 2007-10-07.
- ^ font-scaler projectpage
- ^ a b c Java2D project page
- ^ Freetype font rasteriser (2007-08-07). Retrieved on 2007-11-24.
- ^ phoneme.dev.java.net/
- ^ graphics-rasterizer project page
- ^ Graham, Jim (2007-10-03). Open Source rasterizer. Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
- ^ Javascript is encumbered and there is no javascript plugin support.. IcedTea (2008-03-11). Retrieved on 2008-06-01. “Changing Summary. JavaScript is no longer encumbered, but we still need liveconnect support.”
- ^ Andrew, Haley (2007-06-07). Experimental Build Repository at icedtea.classpath.org. Retrieved on 2007-06-09.
- ^ Mark, Wielaard (2007-06-07). Experimental Build Repository at icedtea.classpath.org. Retrieved on 2007-06-09.
[edit] External links
- Free But Shackled - The Java Trap
- Escaping the Java Trap: A practical road map to the Free Software and Open Source alternatives
- Hybrids Combine GNU Classpath and OpenJDK
- Hour long 2007 video of a workshop with Sun, GGJ, and GNU Classpath developers
- Java Trademark Issues
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