James,
On 2/25/25 11:59 AM, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
On 2/25/25 8:26 AM, Chuck Caldarale wrote:
Jakarta EE - all the related javax classes have been renamed to jakarta.
https://tomcat.apache.org/whichversion.html
Thanks. I've just asked the Java list over at Midrange.com about how
this a
> On 2025 Feb 25, at 11:31, Chuck Caldarale wrote:
>
>
>> On 2025 Feb 25, at 10:59, James H. H. Lampert
>> wrote:
>>
>> On 2/25/25 8:26 AM, Chuck Caldarale wrote:
>>
>>> Jakarta EE - all the related javax classes have been renamed to jakarta.
>>> https://tomcat.apache.org/whichversion.html
> On 2025 Feb 25, at 10:59, James H. H. Lampert
> wrote:
>
> On 2/25/25 8:26 AM, Chuck Caldarale wrote:
>
>> Jakarta EE - all the related javax classes have been renamed to jakarta.
>> https://tomcat.apache.org/whichversion.html
>
> Thanks. I've just asked the Java list over at Midrange.com a
On 2/25/25 8:26 AM, Chuck Caldarale wrote:
Jakarta EE - all the related javax classes have been renamed to jakarta.
https://tomcat.apache.org/whichversion.html
Thanks. I've just asked the Java list over at Midrange.com about how
this affects running Tomcat 10 on an IBM Midrange box.
What e
> On 2025 Feb 25, at 10:19, James H. H. Lampert
> wrote:
>
> On 2/25/25 2:45 AM, Mark Thomas wrote:
>> Tomcat 9 is the last major Tomcat version supporting Java EE.
>
> What does 10 use instead?
Jakarta EE - all the related javax classes have been renamed to jakarta.
https://tomcat.apache.o
On Tue, Feb 25, 2025 at 04:19:34PM +, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
> On 2/25/25 2:45 AM, Mark Thomas wrote:
> > Tomcat 9 is the last major Tomcat version supporting Java EE.
>
> What does 10 use instead?
https://jakarta.ee/
--
Mark H. Wood
Lead Technology Analyst
University Library
Indiana U
On 2/25/25 2:45 AM, Mark Thomas wrote:
Tomcat 9 is the last major Tomcat version supporting Java EE.
What does 10 use instead?
--
JHHL
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Hi ,
Any expected time horizon from now to support the Java EE with 9.x.x ? Any
possibility on how many years from now , it would be supported?
Dinesh
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
On Tuesday, February 25, 2025, 5:06 PM, Michael Osipov
wrote:
On 2025/02/25 10:45:53 Mark Thomas wrote:
>
On 2025/02/25 10:45:53 Mark Thomas wrote:
> All,
>
> Tomcat 9 is the last major Tomcat version supporting Java EE. Therefore,
> the Tomcat community intends to provide support for Tomcat 9 beyond the
> 10 years for which major Tomcat versions are typically supported.
>
> Extended support will b
All,
Tomcat 9 is the last major Tomcat version supporting Java EE. Therefore,
the Tomcat community intends to provide support for Tomcat 9 beyond the
10 years for which major Tomcat versions are typically supported.
Extended support will be provided via a new 9.1.x branch that will be
starte
omcat Users|
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|Subject: the future of Tomcat... (JEE 5 and Tomcat 6)
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|Distribute:
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Thanks Tim,
I have subscribed to the dev list to stay informed... this Alpha release
would be very welcome at this moment!
-Mensagem original-
De: Tim Funk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Enviada em: terça-feira, 3 de outubro de 2006 08:39
Para: Tomcat Users List
Assunto: Re: the future of
Tomcat 6.0 is getting polish with respect to the docs at the moment and
there are other technical discussions as can be found on the dev list.
Tomcat will support JSP2.1. Personally - I'm not on top of the JSF spec
but if all it requires is a JSP2.1 container - then you should be good
to go.
Hi!
We're heavy TC 5.x users with lots of sucessfull production cases in Brazil
using Hibernate, Struts and others OSS (after bad EJB 2.x experiences like
many companies)...
But now with EJB 3.0 and JSF 1.2 - and lots of improvements in the JEE
specification - we'll have to migrate to a JEE 5 env
ript"!! *shakes fist*
Now ECMAScript THAT'S a different story...
=P
-Original Message-
From: Roel De Nijs [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday,
February 02, 2006 10:52 AM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: Betr.: Re: The Future of Tomcat
or they think coffee and
and often difficult to use
"javascript"!! *shakes fist*
Now ECMAScript THAT'S a different story...
=P
-Original Message-
From: Roel De Nijs [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 10:52 AM
To: users@tomcat.apache.org
Subject: Betr.: Re: The Future
mcat.apache.org
Subject: Betr.: Re: The Future of Tomcat
or they think coffee and/or island :-)
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2/02/2006 16:50:03 >>>
> True, but the HTTP server is still what most people think of when they
> hear the name "Apache".
Probably same people, that
Roel De Nijs wrote:
or they think coffee and/or island :-)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 2/02/2006 16:50:03 >>>
True, but the HTTP server is still what most people think of when they
hear the name "Apache".
Probably same people, that think of Applets or Javascript when they
hear the wo
or they think coffee and/or island :-)
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2/02/2006 16:50:03 >>>
> True, but the HTTP server is still what most people think of when they
> hear the name "Apache".
Probably same people, that think of Applets or Javascript when they
hear the word "Java"?
>
> Dave
Leon :-)
---
> True, but the HTTP server is still what most people think of when they
> hear the name "Apache".
Probably same people, that think of Applets or Javascript when they
hear the word "Java"?
>
> Dave
Leon :-)
-
To unsubscribe, e-
Tim Funk wrote:
Apache is a legal entity which is composed of many developers who work
on a variety of software projects in a variety of programming
languages. Some projects are related to one another, others are not.
Apache != httpd. httpd was the first Apache project.
True, but the HTTP s
Apache is a legal entity which is composed of many developers who work on a
variety of software projects in a variety of programming languages. Some
projects are related to one another, others are not.
Apache != httpd. httpd was the first Apache project.
-Tim
David Kerber wrote:
Apache and T
Tim Funk wrote:
Sweet sweet flame fodder. Tomcat is as alive as the community of
developers that are willing to work on it (like any open source project).
I guess you could consider it flame fuel, but it's also a legitimate
question, IMO. Your answer below looks good to me.
Tomcat did t
Not to mention the fact that JBoss uses Tomcat as its JSP engine. Tomcat is not
going away any time soon.
Earnie!
-Original Message-
From: David Kerber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 8:10 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: The Future of Tomcat
Roel De
Roel De Nijs wrote:
Hi,
I heard that resources, updates, development and support of tomcat are slightly
disappearing. MAny people are looking for alternatives (e.g. JBoss). Even
Microsoft and HP are cooperating with JBoss very closely. As far as i know
Tomcat is the most used app server, so
Sweet sweet flame fodder. Tomcat is as alive as the community of developers
that are willing to work on it (like any open source project).
Tomcat did take a hit with respect to Sun moving resources to Glassfish. But
in general, servlet containers are fairly "mature" and boring and somewhat
sta
Hi,
I heard that resources, updates, development and support of tomcat are slightly
disappearing. MAny people are looking for alternatives (e.g. JBoss). Even
Microsoft and HP are cooperating with JBoss very closely. As far as i know
Tomcat is the most used app server, so it will take lots of t
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