Once upon a time, Daniel P. Berrangé <berra...@redhat.com> said:
> At its heart the certification is a "sticker" that asserts our
> JDK has passed the TCK test suite. IOW, saying that we don't need
> certification of JDK is effectively saying that we don't need to do
> testing of JDK in Fedora. Comprehensive testing of software is
> something that very much does benefit Fedora and its users, and we
> could do with a whole lot more of it in general. Further elsewhere
> in this thread it has been clearly said that users of JDKs do
> indeed value the certification as a sign of quality. So I don't
> think we can credibly claim that certification is not needed.

In this thread it was claimed (I believe by a packager) that TCK is
important to Java users, but I haven't seen any users say that.

I'm not a Java user... I had never heard of TCK.  I just went searching,
and I don't see anything right off that shows that Fedora's OpenJDK is
certified in any way.  How would I even know?

-- 
Chris Adams <li...@cmadams.net>
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