I have attempted to "beef up" the Target Environments section in our WTP
Plan to say a little more about platforms supported, and especially the
minimum level of Java we assume.

Please check it out, and see if this wording matches everyone's
expectations.

I mostly just want to be explicit and document our project's point of
view ... not trying to constrain anyone or cause more work ... that is,  I
(and WTP PMC) are open to suggestions or improvements.  [To give some
context, in my role on Planning Council, I hope to encourage other projects
to think through and document these types of things better than they have
in the past, and I wanted to use WTP as one example and when I looked, I
realized we did not actually say very much in our plan.]

If we can discuss at Thursday's status meeting, that'd be great.
Suggestions welcome.

Much thanks,

[Here it a paste of the plan's text, for your convenience.]
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Target Environments


WTP will support the same platforms as the Eclipse Platform project. For a
list of platforms supported in Juno, see Eclipse Target Operating
Environments. That is, WTP is pure Java code, no native code, so should
"run anywhere". WTP committers test primarily on Windows, some on Linux,
and a little on Macs. Bugs reproducible only on other platforms will still
be considered valid, but generally will require close adopter involvement
to propose patches and test fixes.


WTP committers use and test on Java 6 and Java 7, but in theory should run
on Java 5, as that is the highest version of Java assumed in the bundle's
manifest.mf files (in the OSGi BREE heading), and, with few exceptions, our
pre-reqs. Where there are exceptions, and Java 6 is required, such as for
some JDT functions, everything else should continue to work fine just with
reduced functionality. (Note, for committer convenience, some of the unit
test bundles do assume Java 6.) Many of the WTP bundles assume only Java 4.
The exact requirements can be determined by looking at the distributed
bundles' BREE levels, but it is pretty much up to adopters to test or
support Java 4 or Java 5 installations, if desired. If there are bugs only
reproducible on Java 4 or Java 5, we will consider them valid, but
generally give them a lower priority than other bugs.

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