Greetings!

We are starting 2024 with JDK 22 as it has just entered Rampdown Phase 2 [1]. 
And with the initial JDK 22 Release Candidates now less than 2 weeks away (Feb. 
8th) [2], it is time to shift our attention to JDK 23.

After multiple rounds of incubations and preview, the Foreign Function & Memory 
API is becoming standard and permanent in JDK 22. If we put its 'Function' 
angle aside, this API also offers a standard and secure way to access off-heap 
API. And that brings us to the heads-up below 'Deprecate the memory-access 
methods in sun.misc.Unsafe for removal in a future release' as developers still 
using sun.misc.Unsafe for accessing memory are strongly encouraged to start 
preparing their plans to migrate away from those unsafe methods.

[1] https://mail.openjdk.org/pipermail/jdk-dev/2024-January/008675.html
[2] https://openjdk.org/projects/jdk/22/


## Heads-up: Deprecate the Memory-Access Methods in sun.misc.Unsafe for Removal 
in a Future Release

The effort focused on enforcing the integrity of the Java platform [3] 
continues! The next phase in that long but important initiative will most 
likely target the sun.misc.Unsafe API used for accessing memory. Those methods 
alone represent 79 methods out of the 87 sun.misc.Unsafe methods!

This draft JEP [4] outlines the plan to deprecate for removal the 
sun.misc.Unsafe Memory-Access methods, the reasons, and the standard 
alternatives. As the draft plan suggests, the first step will be to deprecate 
all memory-access methods (on-heap, off-heap, and bimodal) for removal. This 
will cause compile-time deprecation warnings for code that refers to the 
methods, alerting library developers to their forthcoming removal. In addition, 
a new command-line option will allow users to receive runtime warnings when 
those methods are used. This command-line will help users to assess if their 
codebase uses those unsafe API to access memory. It should be mentioned that 
other tools such as JFR and jdeprscan can also be used to detect the use of 
those deprecated APIs.

Library developers are strongly encouraged to migrate from sun.misc.Unsafe to 
the supported replacements, so that applications can migrate smoothly to modern 
JDKs. The initial step will be to conduct investigations to understand if, how, 
and where sun.misc.Unsafe methods are used to access memory.

[3] https://openjdk.org/jeps/8305968
[4] https://openjdk.org/jeps/8323072


## Heads-up: Java Array Element Alignment - Weakening of Some Methods 
Guarantees ?

Some methods make promises about Java array element alignment that are too 
strong. There are some ongoing reflexions to change the implementation (and the 
specification) of `MethodHandles::byteArrayViewVarHandle`, 
`MethodHandles::byteBufferViewVarHandle`, `ByteBuffer::alignedSlice`, and 
`ByteBuffer::alignmentOffset` to weaken the guarantees they make about the 
alignment of Java array elements, in order to bring them in line with the 
guarantees made by an arbitrary JVM implementation.

For more details, make sure to check JDK-8320247 [5] and the related PR [6] but 
in a nutshell, the new behaviour would be :
- The `VarHandle` returned by `MethodHandles::byteArrayViewVarHandle` would 
only support `get` and `set` methods, and all other access methods would throw 
an exception.
- The `VarHandle` returned by `MethodHandles::byteBufferViewHandle` would only 
support the `get` and `set` access methods when a heap buffer is used, and all 
other access methods would throw an exception when used with a heap buffer. 
Direct byte buffers will continue to work the same way.
- The `ByteBuffer::alignmentOffset` and `ByteBuffer::alignedSlice` methods 
would throw an exception if the buffer is a heap buffer, and the given 
`unitSize` is greater than 1.

If you have relevant feedback about this potential change, please make sure to 
bring it to the core-libs-dev mailing list [7], or comment on the PR [6].

[5] https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8320247
[6] https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/16681
[7] https://mail.openjdk.org/pipermail/core-libs-dev/


## JDK 22 Early-Access Builds

JDK 22 Early-Access builds 33 are now available [8], and are provided under the 
GNU General Public License v2, with the Classpath Exception. The Release Notes 
[9] and the javadocs [10] are also available.

### Changes in recent JDK 22 builds that may be of interest:

- JDK-8320597: RSA signature verification fails on signed data that does not 
encode params correctly [Reported by Apache POI]
- JDK-8322214: Return value of XMLInputFactory.getProperty() changed from 
boolean to String in JDK 22 early access builds [Reported by Apache POI]
- JDK-8322725: (tz) Update Timezone Data to 2023d
- JDK-8321480: ISO 4217 Amendment 176 Update
- JDK-8314468: Improve Compiler loops
- JDK-8314295: Enhance verification of verifier
- JDK-8316976: Improve signature handling
- JDK-8317547: Enhance TLS connection support
- JDK-8318971: Better Error Handling for Jar Tool When Processing Non-existent 
Files
- JDK-8323659: LinkedTransferQueue add and put methods call overridable offer

Note: A complete list of changes can be found here [11].

[8] https://jdk.java.net/22/
[9] https://jdk.java.net/22/release-notes
[10] https://download.java.net/java/early_access/jdk22/docs/api/
[11] https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/compare/jdk-22+27...jdk-22+33


## JDK 23 Early-Access builds

JDK 23 Early-Access builds 7 are available [12] for testing. These EA builds 
are provided under the GNU General Public License v2, with the Classpath 
Exception. The Release Notes [13] are also available.

### Changes in recent JDK 23 builds that may be of interest:

- JDK-8320597: RSA signature verification fails on signed data that does not 
encode params correctly [Reported by Apache POI]
- JDK-8322214: Return value of XMLInputFactory.getProperty() changed from 
boolean to String in JDK 22 early access builds [Reported by Apache POI]
- JDK-8321545: Override toString() for Format subclasses
- JDK-8322366: Add IEEE rounding mode corruption check to JNI checks
- JDK-8322383: G1: Only preserve marks on objects that are actually moved
- JDK-8275338: Add JFR events for notable serialization situations
- JDK-8320458: Improve structural navigation in API documentation
- JDK-8320786: Remove ThreadGroup.stop
- JDK-8320532: Remove Thread/ThreadGroup suspend/resume
- JDK-8312150: Remove -Xnoagent option
- JDK-8322829: Refactor nioBlocker to avoid blocking while holding Thread's 
interrupt lock
- JDK-8322725: (tz) Update Timezone Data to 2023d
- JDK-8321480: ISO 4217 Amendment 176 Update
- JDK-8318971: Better Error Handling for Jar Tool When Processing Non-existent 
Files
- JDK-8321594: NativeThreadSet should use placeholder for virtual threads
- JDK-8321940: Improve CDSHeapVerifier in handling of interned strings
- JDK-8321802: (zipfs) Add validation of incorrect LOC signature in 
ZipFileSystem
- JDK-8322841: Parallel: Remove unused using-declaration in MutableNUMASpace
- JDK-8319626: Override toString() for ZipFile
- JDK-8322878: Including sealing information Class.toGenericString()

Note: A more exhaustive changes list can be found here [14].

[12] https://jdk.java.net/23/
[13] https://jdk.java.net/23/release-notes
[14] https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/compare/jdk-23+1...jdk-23+7


## JavaFX 22 & 23 Early-Access Builds

These are early access builds of the JavaFX 22 Runtime built from openjdk/jfx 
[14]. These builds enable JavaFX application developers to build and test their 
applications with JavaFX 22 on JDK 22. Although JavaFX 22 is designed to work 
with JDK 22, it is also known to work with JDK 17 and later versions.

The latest early access builds of JavaFX 22 Builds 26 (2024/1/20) are available 
[15], under the GNU General Public License, version 2, with the Classpath 
Exception. JavaFX 22 API Javadocs [16] are also available.

The first early access builds (2024/1/19) of JavaFX 23 are now also available 
[17].

[14] https://github.com/openjdk/jfx
[15] https://jdk.java.net/javafx22/
[16] 
https://download.java.net/java/early_access/javafx22/docs/api/overview-summary.html
[17] https://jdk.java.net/javafx23/


## Topics of Interest

- Podcast “The Panama Effect” with Jorn Vernee
https://inside.java/2024/01/08/podcast-032/

- Java's Plans for 2024 - Inside Java Newscast
https://inside.java/2024/01/18/newscast-61/

- Java 22 Unpacking - Inside Java Newscast
https://inside.java/2023/12/07/newscast-59/

- Java Highlights of 2023 - Inside Java Newscast
https://inside.java/2023/12/21/newscast-60/

- JDK 21: The GCs keep getting better
https://kstefanj.github.io/2023/12/13/jdk-21-the-gcs-keep-getting-better.html

- Java SE Security Developer’s Guide
https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/21/security/index.html#Java-Platform%2C-Standard-Edition

- Another VS Code Extension for Java
https://inside.java/2023/12/03/java-vscode-extension/


## January 2024 Critical Patch Update Released

As part of the January 2024 CPU, Oracle released OpenJDK 21.0.2, JDK 21.0.2 
LTS, JDK 17.0.10 LTS, 11.0.22 LTS, 8u401, and 8u401-perf.


~

As usual, let us know if you find any quirks while testing your project(s) with 
the latest JDK early-access builds.

--David

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