>> this announcement is also available online at http://s.apache.org/FjS


Enterprise-grade Open Source Java framework for object relational mapping 
(ORM), persistence, and caching now easier to configure, with improved 
modularity and performance. 

Forest Hill, MD –30 September 2014– The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the 
all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of more than 200 Open Source 
projects and initiatives, announced today the availability of Apache™ Cayenne™ 
v3.1, the Open Source Java framework for object relational mapping (ORM), 
persistence, and caching. 

"With the launch of version 3.1, Apache Cayenne has continued to evolve its 
mature 12 year-old library by introducing 125 new features," said Andrus 
Adamchik, Vice President of Apache Cayenne. 

Cayenne is an enterprise Java ORM with integrated support for caching, 
three-tier persistence, object lifecycles and workflow, inheritance, paging, on 
demand faulting, auditing and much more. As an object relational mapping 
library, Cayenne integrates applications to any SQL database available today, 
freeing solutions from being locked into one database engine. At the same time 
it improves performance through paging and caching, enforces data integrity and 
makes it dramatically faster for developers to build a reliable application. 

Cayenne has a track record of solid performance in high-volume environments. 
Apache Cayenne is an exceptional choice for persistence services, and is in use 
at ish onCourse, National Hockey League, Nike, Unilever and the Law Library of 
Congress (the world's largest publicly-available legal index) as well as dozens 
of high-demand applications and Websites accessed by millions of users each 
day. 

Apache Cayenne v3.1 is the result of 4 years of development. Notable new 
features and improvements include: 

- easier configuration and embedding in any type of application; 
- highly configurable runtime, enabled by one of the industry's smallest 
built-in Dependency Injection (DI) containers written specifically for Cayenne 
(and that co-exists with other DI/IoC, such as Apache Tapestry). It is also 
very easy to create more than one runtime, which opens interesting 
possibilities like multi-tenancy; 
- nearly all components now pluggable, making it very easy to create more than 
one runtime and easily change or extend internals of the stack declaratively 
--from cache provider to SQL log format to DataSource lookup strategy and much 
more; 
- improved ORM modularity to allow  projects to be included in libraries 
without assumptions about the target use. Different aspects of an application 
can now be modeled in separate mapping projects and combined in runtime as 
needed. As a result Cayenne projects can be included in libraries that make no 
assumptions about the target use; 
- extended persistent events model from simple per-object events to more 
higher-level "workflows" that can be configured with app-specific annotations 
on persistent classes. Cayenne ships with "cayenne-lifecycle" module that 
provides a few common examples of such workflows activated on data changes: 
data modifications audit, precision cache invalidation, etc.; and 
- performance optimizations for improved overall concurrency 

"Developers who are seeking an alternate to EJB/Hibernate might find Cayenne's 
graphical modeler, reverse database engineering, easy to use query API and 
flexible context model a joy to work with," said Aristedes Maniatis, member of 
the Apache Cayenne Project Management Committee and CEO of ish. 

"We use Apache Cayenne as the ORM for a large and complex budgeting project for 
around twenty government organizations," said Daniel Abrams, CEO of MassLight. 
"Cayenne is used to access and persist exhibit data, business validation rules, 
and account information, and has simplified the development process. A single 
Cayenne method call evaluates all changes in the user's context and generates 
all statements required to commit their changes within a single transaction 
without the developer having to write code to track the changes -- Cayenne does 
all the work. Since switching to Cayenne, there haven't been any faulting 
errors that tended to plague the previous version of the application because of 
the complex data model. This was one of the principal reasons for the switch to 
Cayenne and the data model has become significantly more complex now." 

"We use Cayenne in our system to collect, quality control and distribute world 
coverage nautical charts to navies, pilots, inspectors and several thousand 
vessels," said Tore Halset, Development Manager at Electronic Chart Centre and 
PRIMAR. "We have been happy users of Apache Cayenne since 2005 and are now on 
version 3.1." 

"Apache Cayenne is a core service in Avoka Transact, an engagement platform for 
multi-channel sales and service transactions," said Malcolm Edgar, Vice 
President of Engineering at Avoka. "We use Apache Cayenne to support the 
Oracle, MySQL, and SQL Server databases. Cayenne provides the right blend of 
ORM capabilities and low level JDBC access when required. It has been a 
rock-solid technology for us." 

In addition, Apache Cayenne's HTML documentation and tutorials have been 
completely revised and available in PDF for the first time. 

"Our comprehensive documentation and vibrant, helpful user community are just 
what you need when you have questions about the internals of Cayenne or the 
best way to achieve your goals," added Adamchik.

Availability and Oversight 
Cayenne v3.1 is available immediately as a free download from 
http://cayenne.apache.org/download.html. As with all Apache products, Apache 
Cayenne software is released under the Apache License v2.0, and is overseen by 
a self-selected team of active contributors to the project. A Project 
Management Committee (PMC) guides the Project's day-to-day operations, 
including community development and product releases. For documentation and 
ways to become involved with Apache Cayenne, visit http://cayenne.apache.org/ 
and @ApacheCayenne on Twitter. 


About The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) 
Established in 1999, the all-volunteer Foundation oversees more than two 
hundred leading Open Source projects, including Apache HTTP Server --the 
world's most popular Web server software. Through the ASF's meritocratic 
process known as "The Apache Way," more than 450 individual Members and 4,000 
Committers successfully collaborate to develop freely available 
enterprise-grade software, benefiting millions of users worldwide: thousands of 
software solutions are distributed under the Apache License; and the community 
actively participates in ASF mailing lists, mentoring initiatives, and 
ApacheCon, the Foundation's official user conference, trainings, and expo. The 
ASF is a US 501(c)(3) charitable organization, funded by individual donations 
and corporate sponsors including Budget Direct, Citrix, Cloudera, Comcast, 
Facebook, Google, Hortonworks, HP, Huawei, IBM, InMotion Hosting, Matt 
Mullenweg, Microsoft, Pivotal, Produban, WANdisco, and Yahoo. For more
information, visit http://www.apache.org/ or follow @TheASF on Twitter. 


© The Apache Software Foundation. "Apache", "Apache Cayenne", "Cayenne", 
"ApacheCon", and the Apache Cayenne logo are trademarks of The Apache Software 
Foundation. All other brands and trademarks are the property of their 
respective owners. 

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