Apache Attic

Apache Attic is a project of Apache Software Foundation to provide process and solutions to make it clear when an Apache project has reached its end-of-life. The Attic project was created in November 2008. Also the retired projects can be retained.[1]

Projects may not say in the attic forever: e.g. Apache XMLBeans is now a project of Apache Poi, but was previously in the attic from July 2013 until June 2018.

Sub-Projects

This is a (non-exhaustive) list of Apache Attic projects:

  • Avalon: Apache Avalon was a computer software framework to provide a reusable component framework for container (server) applications.[2]
  • Apex: Apache Apex was a YARN-native platform that unified stream and batch processing.[3]
  • AxKit: Apache AxKit was an XML Apache publishing framework run by the Apache foundation written in Perl.[4]
  • Beehive: Apache Beehive is a Java Application Framework designed to make the development of Java EE based applications quicker and easier.[5]
  • C++ Standard Library: A set of classes and functions, which are written in the core language (code name stdcxx).
  • Click: Apache Click is a page- and component-oriented web application framework for Java EE and is built on top of the Java Servlet API.[6]
  • Crimson: Crimson is a Java XML parser which supports XML 1.0 through Java API for XML Processing (JAXP) 1.1,SAX 2.0, SAX2 Extensions version 1.0 and DOM Level 2 Core Recommendation.[7]
  • Excalibur: Apache Excalibur project produces a set of libraries for component based programming in the Java language.[8]
  • Harmony: Apache Harmony was an open source, free Java implementation.[9]
  • HiveMind: Apache HiveMind was a top level software project, for a framework written in Java. It takes the form of a services and configuration microkernel.[10]
  • iBATIS: iBATIS is a persistence framework which automates the mapping between SQL databases and objects in Java, .NET, and Ruby on Rails.[11]
  • Jakarta: The Jakarta Project created and maintained open source software for the Java platform.
  • Cactus: Cactus was a simple test framework for unit testing server-side Java code (Servlets, EJBs, Tag libs, ...) from the Jakarta Project.
  • ECS: ECS (Element Construction Set) was a Java API for generating elements for any of a variety of markup languages like HTML 4.0 and XML.
  • ORO: ORO was a set of text-processing Java classes that provide Perl5 compatible regular expressions, AWK-like regular expressions, glob expressions, and utility classes for performing substitutions, splits, filtering filenames, etc.
  • Regexp: Regexp was a pure Java Regular Expression package.
  • Slide: Slide is an open-source content management system from the Jakarta project. It is written in Java and implements the WebDAV protocol.
  • Taglibs: Taglibs was a large collection of JSP Tag Libraries.
  • ODE: ODE was a Java-based workflow engine to manage business processes which have been expressed in the Web Services Business Process Execution Language (WS-BPEL).
  • Ojb: Apache ObJectRelationalBridge (OJB) is an Object/Relational mapping tool that allows transparent persistence for Java Objects against relational databases.
  • Quetzalcoatl: Quetzalcoatl was a project charged with the creation and maintenance of open-source software related to mod_python and the Python programming language.
  • Shale: Shale is a web application framework which fundamentally based on JavaServer Faces.
  • Shindig: Shindig is an OpenSocial container. It provides the code to render gadgets, proxy requests, and handle REST and RPC requests.
  • Stratos: Stratos was a highly-extensible Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) framework that helped run Apache Tomcat, PHP, and MySQL applications, and could be extended to support many more environments on all major cloud infrastructures.[12]
  • Xang: Apache Xang was an XML Web Framework that aggregated multiple data sources, made that data URL addressable and defined custom methods to access that data.
  • Xindice: Apache Xindice was a native XML database.
  • Wink: Apache Wink is an open source framework that enables development and consumption of REST style web services.

References

  1. "Processes required to move a project into Attic - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  2. "Apache Avalon - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  3. "Apache Apex - Apache Attic". Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  4. "Apache AxKit - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  5. "Apache Beehive - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  6. "Apache Attic - Apache Attic". Retrieved 17 June 2014.
  7. "Apache Crimson - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  8. "Apache Excalibur - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  9. "Apache Harmony - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  10. "Apache HiveMind - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  11. "Apache iBATIS - Apache Attic". Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  12. "Apache Stratos - Apache Attic". Retrieved 13 February 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.