Java Community Process: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

The Java Community Process or JCP, established in 1995, is a formalized process which allows interested parties to be involved in the definition of future versions and features of the Java platform.

The JCP process involves the use of Java Specification Requests (JSRs) which are formal documents that describe proposed specifications and technologies to be added to the Java platform. Formal public reviews of JSRs are conducted before the JSR becomes final. A finalized JSR can then proceed to a reference implementation which provides a free implementation of the technology in source code form.

The following JSRs have been defined:

JSR # Specification or Technology
1 Real-Time Specification for Java RTSJ 1.0
3 Java Management Extensions (JMX)
12 Java Data Objects (JDO)
19 Enterprise Java Beans 2.0
40 Java Metadata Interface (JMI)
54 Java Database Connectivity JDBC 3.0
58 Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) 1.3
59 Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition 1.4 (Merlin)
63 Java API for XML Processing (JAXP) 1.1
68 Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME)
80 Java USB API
82 Java APIs for Bluetooth
93 Java API for XML Registries (JAXR) 1.0
127 JavaServer Faces (JSF)
140 Service Location Protocol (SLP) API for Java
141 SDP API
151 Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition 1.4
152 JavaServer Pages 2.0
153 Enterprise Java Beans 2.1
154 Java Servlet 2.4 Specification
168 Java Portlet Specification
176 Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition 1.5 (Tiger)
180 SIP API for J2ME
206 Java API for XML Processing JAXP 1.3
220 Enterprise Java Beans 3.0
221 JDBC 4.0 API Specification
241 The Groovy Programming Language

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