Sunday, March 11, 2012

Canonical Reverses Decision to Remove Sun Java

By Ron Williams


In a recently released statement, Canonical stated that the company had arrived at the conclusion that it will not force empty versions of the Sun Java JDK packages by Oracle into their partner repositories for Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, 10.10 and 11.04. The Java development kit (JDK) is a product of Oracle and is designed for Java developers, based upon an h-online.com article. Canonical will only remove the JDK packages from the repository. The original plan was made in December 2011 and would have witnessed the inclusion of the empty packages. These are packages which were downloaded by users' systems during the process of software updates. It would have also meant leaving only OpenJDK as an alternative, by eliminating any installation of the binary release of Sun Java.

Canonicals viewpoint

Canonical stated that they recognized the need for this move as Oracle is unable to furnish security upgrades in the future. This is mainly due to the fact Oracle released its "Operating System Distributor License for Java" (DLJ). This had been performed in August 2011. The choice to remove Java software programs from their systems was reached to make sure the systems were safeguarded. Canonical was aware that for many users of Java, this could entail uninstalling established installations and applications that utilize packages of Sun Java 6.

The business is telling their clients to move to another solution. It actually suggests a wiki page, with alternative options and pointers on how they may be employed. Users should be aware of the matter that the packages may be manually installed and so can any other updates from Oracle. This can be accomplished by downloading the updates directly from Oracle. It doesn't affect the obtainability of Sun Java for Linux.

Customer reaction

The users of Java are quite numerous, with most professionals taking up obiee courses. The reaction of the online community wasn't in support of this decision. Several customers complained that they required the Java 6 packages. In addition, they expressed that they understood the risks associated with being against their decision. Regardless of the pitfalls they weren't happy about the decision of Canonical to change the configuration of their system. Java is pretty well-liked amongst software developers and this is supported by the increase in the quantity of professionals having taken obiee training classes. Even while there's been success with OpenJDK, you will find a number of packages that will depend on the implementation of Oracle's Sun Java package. Responding to the community's reaction, Canonical will merely purge these packages from the repository. This will leave the existing installations of Sun Java 6 exactly as is. These packages were deleted from the partner archive on the 16th of February.

OpenJDK is the open-source substitute for Java and will in the near future become the official implementation of Java. Oracle will likewise be utilizing OpenJDK for their upcoming launches. These transitions will minimize the users' threat from harmful websites that profit from vulnerable versions of the Sun JDK.




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