Jeff Spaleta wrote: > On 11/13/06, Otto Rey <otto_rey@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> +1 Include Sun JDK in Fedora >> +1 Move Gcj to Extras >> >> >> From: Warren Togami <wtogami@xxxxxxxxxx> >> Keep in mind that bits don't land until March 2007. > > Keep in mind that any such actions will have to be in a post fc7 > timeframe if Warren's statement is correct and the re-licensed code > isn't publically available until March 2007. A detailed discussion as > to what to do is a bit premature until we have the re-licensed code in > hand. I really think it would be a bad idea to rely on a promise to > re-license, to make technical decisions which could impact the fc7 > release. Its enough to know everyone is aware about it and the > timescales involved. Work on gcj can't stop if Sun's relicensed > release isn't available soon enough for the fc7 testing timeframe. > > -jef"Dates slip...even if Sun is serious this time about open sourcing > java...you can't count on them holding to a specific date of > availability this far out in the process"spaleta > Agreed, what is however very interesting is one of the parts released under the GPL NOW, the hotspot vm, which according to SUN's FAQ: "Q: What is the Java HotSpot virtual machine? What can developers do with this component? A: Java HotSpot is Sun's implementation of the Java virtual machine. The Java HotSpot VM includes the core execution engine for the Java platform, including: * dynamic compilers that convert Java bytecodes into optimized native machine code on supported hardware platforms * memory management and garbage collection subsystems * threads and synchronization * monitoring, debugging, and profiling telemetry * parts of the Java security architecture including the bytecode verifier" I'm especially hoping that the "parts of the Java security architecture including the bytecode verifier" will help us get a gcj-web-plugin for FC-7. Regards, Hans -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list