Jakarta Messaging describes a means for Java applications to create, send, and receive messages via loosely coupled, reliable asynchronous communication services.
This Specification Project’s Plan Review was covered by the Jakarta EE 9 Plan Review.
Please reference that ballot for the official results.
The Release Review Specification Committee Ballot concluded successfully on 2020-11-05 with the following results.
Representative | Representative for: | Vote |
---|---|---|
Kenji Kazumura | Fujitsu | +1 |
Dan Bandera, Kevin Sutter | IBM | +1 |
Ed Bratt, Dmitry Kornilov | Oracle | +1 |
Andrew Pielage, Matt Gill | Payara | +1 |
Scott Stark, Mark Little | Red Hat | +1 |
David Blevins, Jean-Louis Monteiro | Tomitribe | +1 |
Ivar Grimstad | EE4J PMC | +1 |
Marcelo Ancelmo, Martijn Verburg | Participant Members | +1 |
Werner Keil | Committer Members | +1 |
Scott (Congquan) Wang | Enterprise Members | +1 |
Total | 10 |
This ballot was conducted on the public e-mail list jakarta.ee-spec@eclipse.org. This ballot thread begins here.
Click on the specifications below to access the specification document, Javadoc, Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK), and compatible implementation for each release of the specification.
The Jakarta EE Platform and Profile specifications are the umbrella specifications for the individual specifications. The Jakarta EE Platform includes most of the individual specifications, while the Profile specifications include the individual specifications for developing web platforms and microservices architectures.
Each individual specification describes a standardized way of implementing a particular aspect of an enterprise Java application.