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InfoQ Homepage News Java News Roundup: Extent-Local Variables, Payara Platform, Project Reactor, Ktor, Spring Web Flow

Java News Roundup: Extent-Local Variables, Payara Platform, Project Reactor, Ktor, Spring Web Flow

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This week's Java roundup for August 8th, 2022, features news from OpenJDK, JDK 19, JDK 20, Jakarta EE 10, Spring WebFlow 3.0.0-M1, Spring Tools 4.15.3, Payara Platform Enterprise 5.42.0, Quarkus 2.11.2, MicroStream 7.0.1-beta, Piranha 22.8.0, JobRunr 5.1.7, Eclipse Vert.x 4.3.3, Project Reactor 2022.0.0-M5, Ktor 2.1.0, Apache Camel 3.18.1 and KCDC Conference.

OpenJDK

JEP 429, Extent-Local Variables (Incubator), was promoted from its JEP Draft 8263012 to Candidate status. This incubating JEP, under the auspices of Project Loom, proposes to enable sharing of immutable data within and across threads. This is preferred to thread-local variables, especially when using large numbers of virtual threads.

InfoQ will follow up with a more detailed news story.

JDK 19

Build 35 of the JDK 19 early-access builds was made available this past week, featuring updates from Build 34 which include fixes to various issues. More details on this build may be found in the release notes.

JDK 20

Build 10 of the JDK 20 early-access builds was also made available this past week, featuring updates from Build 9 which include fixes to various issues. Further details on this build may be found in the release notes.

For JDK 19 and JDK 20, developers are encouraged to report bugs via the Java Bug Database.

The Road to Jakarta EE 10

On the road to Jakarta EE 10, Ivar Grimstad, Jakarta EE developer advocate at the Eclipse Foundation, announced in his Hashtag Jakarta EE weekly blog that the ballot for the Core Profile of Jakarta EE 10 is now open until August 15. Eclipse GlassFish 7.0.0-M7 has passed the Jakarta EE Platform TCK and work continues on the TCK for Jakarta Concurrency 3.0 so that it can be included in the Jakarta EE 10 Web Profile.

Spring Framework

Four years since the last set of releases, the first milestone release of Spring Web Flow 3.0 has been made available. This release focuses on alignment with Spring Framework 6.0 and Jakarta EE and the Spring Web Flow samples have been updated accordingly. It was necessary to remove the Tile application from the samples in favor of the Thymeleaf Page Layout since Tile is not aligned with Jakarta EE. Also, Spring Faces is not included in the release due to its integration with JSF.

One week after the release of version 4.15.2, Spring Tools 4.15.3 has been released which ships with fixes such as: a Spring Boot Tools slow down; and copied files that hadn't retained the copyright ownership. More details on this release may be found in the changelog.

Payara

Payara Platform Enterprise 5.42.0 has been released with a focus on addressing CVE-2021-37422, a zero-day vulnerability that affects web applications deployed in the default context root within all distributions of the Payara Platform. There were also five bug fixes, one improvement and one component upgrade. These fixes will also be included in the upcoming releases of Payara 6 Community (Alpha 4) and Payara Community Version 5.2022.3 during the week of August 15, 2022.

Quarkus

Red Hat has released Quarkus 2.11.2 in which the team is still struggling to find a comprehensive fix for CVE-2022-2466, a vulnerability discovered in the SmallRye GraphQL server extension in which server requests were not properly terminated. It was originally thought that this vulnerability only affects the 2.10.x release train. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

MicroStream

MicroStream 7.0.1-beta has been released featuring enhancements to: validate channel folders against the configured channel count and throw a meaningful exception if there is a mismatch; and add a live object check to GC to ensure retaining of objects in storage when still live in the virtual machine.

Piranha

Piranha 22.8.0 has been released. Dubbed the "Hello, Expressly 5" edition for August 2022, this new release includes: fixing a number of code smells; a dependency upgrade to Eclipse Grizzly 4.0.0; enabling the TCK for the Jakarta Expression Language 5.0 specification; and fixing test errors in the the VirtualHttpServer class. More details on this release may be found in their documentation and issue tracker.

JobRunr

Ronald Dehuysser, founder and primary developer of JobRunr, a utility to perform background processing in Java, has released version 5.1.7 that ships with initial support for the Java Platform Module System and a fix for a double array parameter that was not supported in job methods since JobRunr 4.0.2.

Eclipse Vert.x

In response to a number of reported bugs found in version 4.3.2, Eclipse Vert.x 4.3.3 has been released featuring fixes to those bugs along with documenting deprecations and breaking changes. There is also initial support for the recently-released virtual threads incubation project. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Project Reactor

On the road to Project Reactor 2022.0.0 the fifth milestone release was made available featuring dependency upgrades to the reactor-core 3.5.0-M5, reactor-netty versions 1.1.0-M5 and 2.0.0-M1, and reactor-kafka 1.3.12 artifacts. There was also a realignment to milestone 5 with the reactor-pool 1.0.0-M5, reactor-addons 3.5.0-M5, and reactor-kotlin-extensions 1.2.0-M5 artifacts that remain unchanged.

Ktor

JetBrains has released Ktor 2.1.0, the asynchronous framework for creating microservices and web applications, that includes: a new command line tool for creating Ktor apps; support for Yeoman to generate scaffolding for a variety of projects; a new Gradle deployment plugin; and support for YAMLconfiguration.

Apache Camel

Apache Camel 3.18.1 has been released featuring 41 improvements and fixes to include: dependency upgrade to Spring Boot 2.7.2 and hadoop-common 3.3.3 module, the latter of which addresses CVE-2022-26612. More details on this release may be found in the release notes.

Kansas City Developer Conference

The Kansas City Developer Conference (KCDC) was held at the Kansas City Convention Center in Kansas City, Missouri, this past week featuring many speakers from the Java community who presented talks and workshops.

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