Oracle to Apache: reconsider Java committee departure

Oracle has asked the Apache Software Foundation to reconsider its decision to quit the Java SE/EE Executive Committee, and is also acknowledging the ASF’s importance to Java’s future.

The ASF announced its departure from the committee on Wednesday in a blog post, saying Oracle has too much control over Java. “The commercial concerns of a single entity, Oracle, will continue to seriously interfere with and bias the transparent governance of the ecosystem,” reads the ASF blog.

The foundation was also irked by restrictions Oracle places on the Java Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK), which the ASF uses to test compliance of its own Apache Harmony open-source Java run-time against the Java standard. The restrictions block the open source Harmony’s use on mobile platforms.

In a message released late Thursday, an Oracle executive made conciliatory gestures to Apache.

“Last month Oracle renominated Apache to the Java Executive Committee because we valued their active participation and perspective on Java,” wrote Adam Messinger, vice president of development.

“Oracle has a responsibility to move Java forward and to maintain the uniformity of the Java standard for the millions of Java developers and the majority of Executive Committee members agree. We encourage Apache to reconsider its position and remain a part of the process to move Java forward. ASF and many open source projects within it are an important part of the overall Java ecosystem,” Messinger wrote.

Indeed, the ASF sponsors some 100 open-source projects tied to Java in some manner, among them the Tomcat and Geronimo application servers. Oracle’s olive branch-like response to the foundation could be an indication the company realizes its Java road map would suffer without Apache’s participation.

At least for now, the ASF doesn’t seem eager to rejoin the committee.

“Give us a reason why the ASF should reconsider other than ‘please,'” ASF president Jim Jagielski said in a Twitter post Thursday.

The Java Community Process is “dead,” Jagielski said in a blog post, also on Thursday. “All that remains is a zombie, walking the streets of the Java ecosystem, looking for brains.”

“But maybe, from this death, a new, true community process might arise somewhere, with a different collection of people, one with no entity ‘more equal than others.’ That is something I think the ASF would be quite interested in seeing,” he added.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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