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A Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK) is a suite of tests that at least nominally checks a particular alleged implementation of a Java Specification Request (JSR) for compliance. It is one of the three required pieces for a ratified JSR in the Java Community Process, which are: the JSR specification; the JSR reference implementation
The Java Device Test Suite has approximately 11,000 tests that can be extended with new tests written by Sun engineers or by others, including users of the test suite. Users can choose to run any combination of tests, according to the features supported by a device and available resources, and make use of framework features:
This is called Test Optimization [19] and can lead to huge drops in the amount of time spent waiting for automated tests to complete. Clover comes with a number of integrations both developed by Atlassian (Ant, Maven, Grails, Eclipse, IDEA, Bamboo) and by open source community (Gradle, Griffon, Jenkins, Hudson, Sonar).
The platform was known as Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition or J2EE from version 1.2, until the name was changed to Java Platform, Enterprise Edition or Java EE in version 1.5. Java EE was maintained by Oracle under the Java Community Process. On September 12, 2017, Oracle Corporation announced that it would submit Java EE to the Eclipse ...
Checkstyle [1] is a static code analysis tool used in software development for checking if Java source code is compliant with specified coding rules.. Originally developed by Oliver Burn back in 2001, the project is maintained by a team of developers from around the world.
OpenJDK (Open Java Development Kit) is a free and open-source implementation of the Java Platform, Standard Edition (Java SE). [2] It is the result of an effort Sun Microsystems began in 2006, four years before the company was acquired by Oracle Corporation .
A preview of Java Flight Recorder (JFR) functionality was released as a plugin for VisualVM. GraalVM 19.3.0 2019-11-19 Oracle JDK 1.8.0_231, 11.0.5 OpenJDK 1.8.0_232,11.0.5 This release announced the first GraalVM Java SE 11-based builds; added new platforms — Linux AArch64 and experimental Windows x64.
A 1.3 level Java runtime or Java development kit must be installed on the machine in order to run this version of Eclipse. [28] N/A: 18 September 2002 [29] 2.0 N/A: 15 April 2003 [30] 2.1 A 1.4 level Java runtime or Java development kit (JDK) can also be used to run Eclipse.