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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.
JDK Mission Control supports OpenJDK 11 (and above) and Oracle JDK 7u40 (and above). JDK Mission Control primarily consists of the following tools: A JFR (JDK Flight Recorder) analyzer and visualizer; A JMX Console; There are also various plug-ins available, such as: A heap dump (hprof format) analyzer (JOverflow)
Eclipse OpenJ9 – open-source from IBM J9, for AIX, Linux (x86, Power, and Z), macOS, Windows, MVS, OS/400, Pocket PC, z/OS. GraalVM – is based on HotSpot/OpenJDK, it has a polyglot feature, to transparently mix and match supported languages. HotSpot – the open-source Java VM implementation by Oracle.
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. This release also added module encapsulation to isolate Graal compiler and Truffle API code from the application code.
OpenJDK Other Interpretation AOT JIT; GCJ: No longer maintained or distributed by GNU as of GCC 7 [16]? Yes No Yes Yes No HotSpot, OpenJDK edition Reference implementation. 1.8 No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Oracle JDK edition Reference implementation. 1.8 No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Java SE embedded edition ? No Yes Yes No Yes HotSpot, Zero port
It is derivative of the community driven OpenJDK which Oracle stewards. [5] It provides software for working with Java applications. Examples of included software are the Java virtual machine, a compiler, performance monitoring tools, a debugger, and other utilities that Oracle considers useful for Java programmers.
OpenJDK 10 was released on March 20, 2018, with twelve new features confirmed. [262] ... Release Doesn't Correctly Recognize Windows 11 (core-libs/java.lang)
The Eclipse Temurin project produces Temurin (/ ˈ t ɛ m j ər ɪ n /), a certified binary build of OpenJDK. The initial release in October 2021 [8] supported Java LTS 8, 11, 17, and 21. The name for the project, Temurin, is an anagram of the word runtime. [9]