Oracle ups involvement in Eclipse, open sources TopLink
By China Martens
,
IDG News Service
, 03/06/2007
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Oracle is making the whole of its TopLink Java persistence framework freely available as part of the vendor's increased involvement
in the open-source development tools Eclipse Foundation community, the company announced Tuesday.
The database, middleware and applications vendor also proposed a new Eclipse project dubbed "EclipseLink" aimed at providing a set of persistence services to be used
in Java and Open Services Gateway initiative development environments. The starting point for the EclipseLink persistence
platform project will be the existing code base of TopLink.
Oracle made the announcements Tuesday at the EclipseCon conference in Santa Clara, Calif.. The vendor has also boosted the
level of its membership in the open source organization, becoming an Eclipse Foundation board member and a strategic developer,
according to Rick Schultz, vice president of Oracle's Fusion middleware.
"This is a continued evolution of our Eclipse strategy," he said. "EclipseLink will be the first Oracle-led Eclipse run-time
project."
A member of the Eclipse Foundation since 2002, Oracle already leads three Eclipse tooling projects around JavaServer Faces,
Dali Java Persistence API (JPA) and BPEL (business process execution language).
TopLink first appeared as a commercial product in 1994 from The Object People, which was later acquired by WebGain. In 2002,
Oracle acquired the TopLink technology from WebGain. TopLink's persistence architecture includes object-to-relational, object-to-XML
and enterprise information system data access through standards such as JPA, Java API for XML Binding, Service Data Objects
and the Java Connector Architecture.
Oracle had already open sourced part of TopLink, the object-to-relational mapping component, as TopLink Essentials. After
that move received "a really positive response" from the developer community, the vendor decided to take the next step and
make all of the software's source code freely available, Schultz said.
In terms of competition for TopLink and the proposed EclipseLink project, he pointed to two Apache Software Foundation open
source projects -- Hibernate and OpenJPA. Schultz said TopLink has a wider breadth than the Apache projects, which he positioned
as more specific to object-to-relational mapping.
Oracle will continue to offer TopLink as a commercial product with the Eclipse project providing the basis for that in the
future, according to Steve Harris, vice president of Oracle's Java Platform Group.
As well as working with the Eclipse Foundation, Oracle also positions its JDeveloper development tool as an alternative to
the organization's Eclipse rival offering. "We let developers choose JDeveloper or the Eclipse environment," Schultz said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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