Welcome to OpenJDK 11 Updates!
OpenJDK 11 updates are part of the JDK updates project of the OpenJDK. Rob McKenna serves as the Project Lead. The list of Reviewers, Committers, and Authors can be found in the jdk updates section of the OpenJDK Census.
Maintainers
- Andrew Haley (Lead Maintainer)
- Christoph Langer
- Severin Gehwolf
- Goetz Lindenmaier
General Information
OpenJDK 11 updates will be delivered on the same established quarterly cycle used by Oracle i.e. "the Tuesday closest to the 17th day of January, April, July and October."
Development takes place in the jdk11u-dev Git repository and should be the primary place for OpenJDK committers to submit their work.
Code from the development repository is regularly tagged and promoted to the master jdk11u repository, which is used to stabilize and deliver the quarterly releases. Distributors should use this as their primary source for creating OpenJDK builds.
For further process details you might want to continue reading here.
Contributing
New fixes should first be submitted to the development repository for the current version of OpenJDK, jdk/jdk. Most changes submitted to the OpenJDK 11 project will be backports from this repository. Exceptions are made if an issue only applies to 11.
Everybody is encouraged to submit fixes for OpenJDK 11 by creating a pull request to the jdk11u-dev Git repository. Established community members will help new developers without commit access in getting their patch reviewed. For details on the process involved, continue reading here.
Should you not be willing or not be able to drive a fix into JDK 11 updates, you can still suggest changes by dropping a mail to the jdk-updates-dev mailing list. But by only doing that, you are at the grace of the community to pick up your suggestion.
Fix Approvals
In general we follow the common rules for the jdk-updates project.
Please note that these common rules do not allow enhancements to be back-ported, only fixes to bugs. In some cases, for example when there is a gross performance deficit that can be fixed in a safe way, we might make an exception. However, such cases will be very uncommon.
If the backport requires more than just cosmetic changes (file location changes, copyright header updates) to apply to the 11u repository, it should first be submitted for review.
Push approval for a fix is requested by setting the jdk11u-fix-request label on the original JBS bug. The maintainers will either approve by setting jdk11u-fix-yes or reject by setting jdk11u-fix-no. Outstanding approvals can be monitored here. If and only if the fix gets approved, it may be pushed to the jdk11u-dev repository. Approved fixes show up in this JBS filter (login required).
During the later stages of a release cycle, the release enters rampdown. The master jdk11u repository contains the latest version of that release, while the jdk11u-dev repository is used to start work on the next release. If a change needs to be pushed to a release in rampdown, push approval can still be requested using the jdk11u-critical-request label. As the name of this tag suggests, this process is intended for fixes such as major regressions that must make the release. More minor bugs and new features should go in the next release being developed in jdk11u-dev. The maintainers may approve with jdk11u-critical-yes, defer to jdk11u-dev or reject altogether. Outstanding approvals for critical fixes can be monitored here. If, and only if, the fix gets approved with jdk11u-critical-yes, it may be pushed to the jdk11u repository. Approved critical fixes show up in this JBS filter (login required).
At the end of the month prior to the release month, the jdk11u repository is declared frozen so embargoed security fixes can be added in private during the final few weeks. On release day, the final version will be pushed to the jdk11u repository and source bundles made available.
Repositories
jdk11u-dev: Always open repository for development of upcoming JDK 11 Update releases. Pushes after jdk11u-fix-yes approval. Check here for clearance.
jdk11u: Repository used for Rampdown of JDK 11 Update releases. Pushes only during 4-weeks rampdown period after jdk11u-critical-yes approval. Check here for clearance.
Timelines
OpenJDK 11.0.14
- Wednesday, September 1 2021: jdk11u-dev repo open (tag: 11.0.14+0)
- Tuesday, November 2 2021: First merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u (tag: 11.0.14+1)
- Tuesday, November 30 2021: Rampdown; last merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u
- Tuesday, December 28 2021: Last tag before code freeze
- Tuesday, January 18 2022 GA; OpenJDK 11.0.14 released (tag: jdk-11.0.14-ga)
OpenJDK 11.0.15
- Wednesday, December 1 2021: jdk11u-dev repo open (tag: 11.0.15+0)
- Tuesday, February 1st 2022: First merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u (tag: 11.0.15+1)
- Tuesday, March 1st 2022: Rampdown; last merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u
- Tuesday, March 29 2022: Last tag before code freeze
- Tuesday, April 19 2022 GA; OpenJDK 11.0.15 released (tag: jdk-11.0.15-ga)
OpenJDK 11.0.16
- Wednesday, March 2nd 2022: jdk11u-dev repo open (tag: 11.0.16+0)
- Tuesday, May 3 2022: First merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u (tag: 11.0.16+1)
- Tuesday, May 31 2022: Rampdown; last merge from jdk11u-dev to jdk11u
- Tuesday, June 28 2022: Last tag before code freeze
- Tuesday, July 19 2022 GA; OpenJDK 11.0.16 released (tag: jdk-11.0.16-ga)
OpenJDK 11.0.17
- Wednesday, June 1st 2022: jdk11u-dev repo open (tag: 11.0.17+0)
Releases
Latest GA release: 11.0.13
Older releases can be found in the archive.
Downloads
Latest Generally Available (GA) binary releases of the jdk11u stream of the OpenJDK jdk-updates project are available at: https://adoptopenjdk.net/upstream.html?variant=openjdk11&ga=ga
Latest Early Access (EA) binary releases of the jdk11u stream of the OpenJDK jdk-updates project are available at: https://adoptopenjdk.net/upstream.html?variant=openjdk11&ga=ea
JBS Filters
Some filters will only work for users that are logged into JBS.
Standard Fix Requests
[All requests] [Approved requests] [Approved requests without push] [Unapproved requests]
Critical Fix Requests
[All requests] [Approved requests] [Approved requests without push] [Unapproved requests]
Filters for Release 11.0.13
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - 11.0.13 Release Only]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - 11.0.13 Release Only - Without JVMCI/Graal Items]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - All]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - All Without JVMCI/Graal Items]
[Additional commits in OpenJDK vs Oracle]
Filters for Release 11.0.14
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - 11.0.14 Release Only]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - 11.0.14 Release Only - Without JVMCI/Graal Items]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - All]
[Open Downports Oracle -> OpenJDK - All Without JVMCI/Graal Items]
[Additional commits in OpenJDK vs Oracle]
Common jdk11u JBS labels
The above filters exclude issues that are marked with the following labels:
- jdk11u-na Change does not apply to open jdk11u. In general, this is a change done by Oracle for their build or test infrastructure, for their own delivery or in their tests not open sourced. Any other change can also be not of interest to open jdk11u. In the past, we also used label openjdk-na for this purpose.
- jdk11u-jvmci-defer Changes that address jvmci and graal. We, the maintainers, currently do not backport these changes. Feel free to address them!
- jdk11u-solaris-sparc-defer Changes that address the Solaris or sparc ports. We, the maintainers currently do not backport these changes. Feel free to address them!
- jdk11u-nsk-8209611-defer We usually address test fixes, but we deferred the many changes for JDK-8209611 to concentrate on fixes of the JDK. Feel free to address them!