Blogs
Java 8 was released to the world in March 2014. For the last decade, Liferay has been creating tools for users to build crafted, powerful solutions leveraging the Java 8 ecosystem. Even though we have also supported Java 11 runtime for the last 5+ years, our baseline for Portal/DXP’s development has remained on Java 8.
However, the industry is moving on from Java 8. Many of the technologies that Portal/DXP leverages and integrates are evolving. Hibernate, Elasticsearch, Spring Framework, and Java EE (renamed to Jakarta EE) are some of the familiar technologies to Liferay that have moved on.
The latest Java Long-Term-Support (LTS) release is Java 21. This offers all the latest performance, security, and code improvements. Better performance not only improves user experience, but also reduce cost of deployment on cloud environments. Security is critical, and we want to be using the latest technology to continue to protect our clients.
Liferay is committed to offering the world’s most flexible, fast, and secure DXP, and we are excited to announce that we are moving our product forward with the latest industry technologies from Java. The latest release of Liferay DXP (2024.Q2) and Portal CE (7.4 GA120) are fully certified to run on both Java JDK 17 and 21.
In order to continue this evolution, our previous releases (DXP 2024.Q1 and Portal 7.4 GA112) will be the last version to support Java 8, and the current DXP 2024.Q2 and Portal 7.4 GA120 releases will be the last releases to support Java 11. Making this shift will enable us to migrate all our source code, features, and build tools over to Java 17 (and then 21) to take advantage of the modern Java technologies, performance improvements, and security features/patches.
Java 21
The Java 17 will move Liferay into the modern Java ecosystem, but our ultimate goal is to be an innovative platform. Java 21 delivers advanced code, performance, and security features beyond that of Java 17. We want to be clear that Java 21 is the new target of our platform. Migration to this latest version will equip your Portal/DXP deployment for the future.
Jakarta EE
Alongside the Java JDK, Liferay has leveraged the Java Enterprise Edition (EE) technologies to build tools that serve the needs of the modern enterprise. The Java EE specification has migrated and been renamed to Jakarta EE. Evolving our platform to modern enterprise Java is not just about the newer versions of the Java JDK, it is also migrating our code to Jakarta EE for the latest enterprise features.
Liferay’s next step after fully migrating to Java 17, will be to move to Jakarta EE 10. We expect this will take some time due to the technical complexity. We are announcing this well in advance to give time to prepare for this significant migration.
This is not a simple step for Liferay or for those who have developed on top of Liferay. The latest versions of Jakarta EE contain breaking changes in the API that is no longer backwards compatible with Java EE, so all Portal/DXP code needs to go through a migration process.
Application Servers
This migration to modern Java and Jakarta EE has also been encouraged by the application servers we support for DXP deployments.
The latest versions of Tomcat, Jboss, and Wildfly have all moved to Jakarta EE and newer versions of Java, and Oracle WebLogic stated they are doing the same by end the end of the year.
In in the short term, we have made some changes to the DXP Compatibility Matrix in the 2024.Q2 release that reflect the removal of Java 8 and the deprecation of Java 11.
Removed | Deprecated | Certified | |
IBM Websphere 9.0 |
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Apache Tomcat 9.0.x | |
Wildfly 23.0 | Jboss EAP 7.4 | ||
Jboss EAP 7.3 | Wildfly 26.1 | ||
Weblogic 14c |
In the long term, with the transition to Jakarta EE 10, DXP will need to migrate to new versions of the Application Servers that support this new API. Users can prepare for this by reviewing requirements for Tomcat 10.1 or Jboss EAP 8.0.
Timeline
Over the next 3 years, Liferay’s Java roadmap is planned as follows:
2024.Q1 Release |
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2024.Q2 Release |
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2025 |
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2026 |
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Liferay recognizes that some of these changes will require some potentially painful migrations on existing Portal/DXP implementations. We hope that sharing this roadmap will help with planning for this necessary work to come. We also hope you are as excited as we are about another decade of building a new generation of flexible, fast, and secure solutions with Portal/DXP and Java.