I think there can be slight confusion because you can still open
issues in bugzilla and it still comes on top in search engine
results (it will take a while for github to float to the top). It
also appears that some projects have imported their old issues to
github while some did not. But time will sort these things out
eventually..
Cen,
Thank you for your feedback. It is very much appreciated.
Just a clarification: the issues for all of the EE4J projects
are kept with the relevant GitHub code repository, not in the
project specific issue trackers at Eclipse. For example,
GlassFish issues are at github.com/eclipse-ee4j/glassfish/issues,
NOT at https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/describecomponents.cgi?product=Glassfish
That said, I will be the first to admit there are plenty of
long-standing issues that are certainly annoyances. I hope, with
the governance structure that Eclipse provides, we can get
greater participation from a broader community -- for the
compatible implementations, as well as for the specification
work.
Cheers,
-- Ed
On 9/23/2019 9:47 AM, cen wrote:
Hi,
After reading a ton of mailing list material and blog posts I'd
like to share some thoughts on JakartaEE.
I use a lot of JavaEE and MP daily and contribute to one of MP
framework implementations.
The javax naming is very unfortunate but won't really be a big
problem for us microservice users since we can update one
service at a time. Other than refactoring costs I don't see
anything problematic, I think application server users will have
much more trouble.
MP was the best thing that happened to JavaEE because it allowed
us to take the stable and mature modules from JavaEE and combine
them with modern approaches that were missing in the spec.
Seeing how successful MP has been so far, I wouldn't merge the
projects but collaboration between projects to make specs more
interop is welcome. Duplicating specs for roughly the same
things would be the major fail.
I have mixed feelings about JakartaEE adding a ton of new
features to attract new users. While some new features would be
welcome, I see the core modules pretty feature complete. I am
not sure people would switch massively to JakartaEE for any
reason but I do know existing developers will probably stay if
platform feels alive which was not the case for the past few
years. As an existing user I am more concerned about the state
of some important reference implementations with long standing
bugs which are an annoyance in day-to-day work. Looking at
bugs.eclipse.org - Eclipselink for example screams of
abandonware although now that all projects are on github
contributing is thankfully much easier. I already had some
positive experience contributing to upstream RI so that's feels
good.
Best regards, cen
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