Day, a leading provider of global content management software, today announced that it has made available an implementation of the Content Repository API for Java Technology (JCR) to the Apache Software Foundation in order to further promote industry adoption and collaboration of the JSR 170 standard. Apache has formed a new Incubator project, code-named "Jackrabbit", to accept the donation and guide future development of the software.
Day's CTO, David Nuescheler, has served as specification lead for the JSR 170 initiative since its inception. He, along with several members of Day's software development team, will participate in the Jackrabbit project and use the open source implementation as the basis for Day's official JCR reference implementation. In addition, Roy T. Fielding, Day's chief scientist and former chairman of the Apache Software Foundation, will join the project as a mentor and representative of the Apache Incubator project management committee.
"Apache has traditionally played an important role in the adoption of new standards for Java and the Web," said Roy T. Fielding, co-founder of the first Apache Project and author of the Internet standards for Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI) and the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). "Public collaboration through the Apache HTTP Server Project made it possible to both encourage industry adoption of the HTTP/1.1 standard and identify problems in its specification prior to final publication. I expect JCR to become the central interface between Java application development and future content management infrastructure, just as HTTP/1.1 has become the interface through which everyone uses the World Wide Web."
JSR 170 recently passed the public review stage of the Java Community Process - the process through which all Java language and platform standards are established - and is currently incorporating public comments. Day, as JSR 170 Specification Lead, is responsible for developing an official Reference Implementation and Testing Compatibility Kit for the Content Repository API, and has chosen to do so through the Apache open source community in order to promote open collaboration among the various industry participants and further adoption of the standard by the world- wide community of server-side Java application developers. The JSR 170 expert group includes members from 22 independent companies, representing a broad spectrum of Java infrastructure and application software development, including industry heavyweights such as Apache, BEA, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Novell, SAP, Sun, and Oracle.
www.apache.org
www.day.com

Comments
Post new comment