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The final release date of the JPA 1.0 specification was 11 May 2006 as part of Java Community Process JSR 220. The JPA 2.0 specification was released 10 December 2009 (the Java EE 6 platform requires JPA 2.0 [2]). The JPA 2.1 specification was released 22 April 2013 (the Java EE 7 platform requires JPA 2.1 [3]). The JPA 2.2 specification was ...
BEA Systems acquired SolarMetric in 2005, where Kodo was expanded to be an implementation of both the JDO (JSR 12) [2] and JPA (JSR 220) [3] specifications. In 2006, BEA donated a large part of the Kodo source code to the Apache Software Foundation under the name OpenJPA.
The Jakarta Persistence Query Language (JPQL; formerly Java Persistence Query Language) is a platform-independent object-oriented query language [1]: 284, §12 defined as part of the Jakarta Persistence (JPA; formerly Java Persistence API) specification. JPQL is used to make queries against entities stored in a relational database.
Initial specification release ... 1.2 2.0 2.0 Jakarta Persistence (JPA) 2.0: 2.1: ... technologies in Java EE 7 are used together to build a web form for editing a ...
Hibernate ORM (known as Hibernate Core before release 4.1 [15]) – the base software for an object–relational mapping solution for Java environments [16] Hibernate Annotations (merged into Hibernate Core/ORM since version 3.6 [ 17 ] ) – metadata that governs the transformation of data between the object-oriented model and the relational ...
In December 2005, it was announced that WebWork 2.2 was adopted as Apache Struts 2, which reached its first full release in February 2007. [ 2 ] Struts 2 has a history of critical security bugs, [ 3 ] many tied to its use of OGNL technology; [ 4 ] some vulnerabilities can lead to arbitrary code execution .
The software release life cycle is the process of developing, testing, and distributing a software product (e.g., an operating system). It typically consists of several stages, such as pre-alpha, alpha, beta, and release candidate, before the final version, or "gold", is released to the public. An example of a basic software release life cycle
The first production release, 1.0, was released in March 2004. [6] The Spring 1.2.6 framework won a Jolt productivity award and a JAX Innovation Award in 2006. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Spring 2.0 was released in October 2006, Spring 2.5 in November 2007, Spring 3.0 in December 2009, Spring 3.1 in December 2011, and Spring 3.2.5 in November 2013. [ 9 ]