On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 4:51 PM, Mario Torre <neugens.limasoftw...@gmail.com> wrote: > 2013/10/17 Dalibor Topic <dalibor.to...@oracle.com>: >> On 10/17/13 4:29 PM, Andrew wrote: >>> ----- Original Message ----- >>>> On 10/15/13 8:50 PM, Andrew Hughes wrote: >>>>> What is the benefit to "OpenJDK 7u Authors, Committers and Reviewers" of >>>>> using our valuable time >>>>> to do this? >>>> >>>> "inclusion into a CPU release before 7u60" "for" "critical fixes" "approved >>>> by the Oracle JDK 7u CPU Release Team". >>>> >>> >>> But you've just said there still isn't going to be OpenJDK CPU releases... >>> >> The Oracle JDK 7u CPU Release Team approves (or rejects) fixes for Oracle >> JDK 7u >> CPU Releases. > > I'm not sure I understand why this is relevant for OpenJDK at all then. > >> Applicable changes are bulk integrated into OpenJDK 7u once an Oracle JDK 7u >> CPU >> has been released, as was the case two days ago for 7u45. > > If people want to commit a [security related] patch they can already > do so in OpenJDK (following the usual standard procedure). > > So what exactly changed? Just an easier way for people to send patches > to Oracle for inclusion into the closed JDK? >
Yes, I think it's exactly that. That indeed sounds a little weird at first glance. But imagine somebody using the Oracle JDK (e.g. because he's on Windows or Mac where there are no OpenJDK binaries). And this somebody has a fix which he desperately needs in the Oracle JDK and this somebody doesn't have an Oracle support contract. This real poor guy can then fix the bug in OpenJDK 7u, label it with "CPU-critical-request" and hope for the best. That may make indeed sense for him. Regards, Volker > Cheers, > Mario > -- > pgp key: http://subkeys.pgp.net/ PGP Key ID: 80F240CF > Fingerprint: BA39 9666 94EC 8B73 27FA FC7C 4086 63E3 80F2 40CF > > IcedRobot: www.icedrobot.org > Proud GNU Classpath developer: http://www.classpath.org/ > Read About us at: http://planet.classpath.org > OpenJDK: http://openjdk.java.net/projects/caciocavallo/ > > Please, support open standards: > http://endsoftpatents.org/