Hi, > So i've asked some OSGi board members about that. > Ops4j has no legal existence, so it's not possible that the OSGi > alliance gives the TCK. > I, as a Progress employee, can however test ops4j with the TCK and > verify the compliance and publicly announce if it's compliant or not > (being certified costs some money, so I don't think we want to do > that). The project itself would not be able to do that, as only OSGi > members have access to the TCK (with some exceptions for the ASF, but > the ASF has is a legal entity).
What are the costs ? What would a company need to do to host ops4j to make it "legal" and therefore available for the TCK? =David _______________________________________________ general mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ops4j.org/mailman/listinfo/general
