Release Notes -- Apache Jackrabbit -- Version 1.5.7 Introduction ------------ Apache Jackrabbit is a fully conforming implementation of the Content Repository for Java Technology API (JCR). A content repository is a hierarchical content store with support for structured and unstructured content, full text search, versioning, transactions, observation, and more. See the Jackrabbit web site at http://jackrabbit.apache.org/ for more information. Apache Jackrabbit 1.5.7 is a bug fix release that fixes issues reported against previous releases. This release is fully compatible with the earlier 1.5.x releases. See below for a full listing of fixes included in this release. Changes in this release ----------------------- All the fixes in this release are listed below per affected component. The modified components have had their version numbers upgraded to 1.5.7; other components are still at their previous 1.5.x versions. jackrabbit-core Bug fixes [JCR-2082] Query does not work after logging into workspace with no indexes [JCR-2129] Prevent data inconsistencies due to incorrect or missed ... [JCR-2138] Prevent persistence of faulty back-references [JCR-2168] Avoid premature publication of XAItemStateManager [JCR-2169] BundleDbPersistenceManager consistencyFix doesn't fix missing ... Improvements [JCR-2106] SystemSessions created for GarbageCollector are not logged out of jackrabbit-jcr2spi Improvements [JCR-1797] SPI: RepositoryService.getItemInfos should be allowed to ... You can look up individual issues for more details in the Jackrabbit issue tracker at https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JCR. Contributors ------------ The following people have contributed to this release by submitting bug reports or by participating in the issue resolution process. Angela Schreiber Martijn Hendriks Peter Dettman Jukka Zitting Mateusz Juszkiewicz Thomas Mueller Marcel Reutegger Michael Dürig Thank you to everyone involved! Release Contents ---------------- This release consists of a single source archive (jackrabbit-1.5.7-src.jar) that contains all the Apache Jackrabbit components. Use the following commands (or the equivalent in your system) to build the release with Maven 2 and Java 1.4 or higher: jar xf jackrabbit-1.5.7-src.jar cd jackrabbit-1.5.7 mvn install Note that the OCM components require Java 5 or higher, and are not included in the build when using Java 1.4. The source archive is accompanied by SHA1 and MD5 checksums and a PGP signature that you can use to verify the authenticity of your download. The public key used for the PGP signature can be found at https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/jackrabbit/dist/KEYS. The build will result in the following components (with artifactIds in parenthesis) being built and installed in your local Maven repository. Pre-built binary artifacts of these components are also available on the on the central Maven repository. * Jackrabbit Parent POM (jackrabbit-parent) The Maven parent POM for all Jackrabbit components. * Jackrabbit API (jackrabbit-api) Interface extensions that Apache Jackrabbit supports in addition to the standard JCR API. * Jackrabbit JCR Commons (jackrabbit-jcr-commons) General-purpose classes for use with the JCR API. * Jackrabbit JCR Tests (jackrabbit-jcr-tests) Set of JCR API test cases designed for testing the compliance of an implementation. Note that this is not the official JCR TCK! * Jackrabbit JCR Benchmarks (jackrabbit-jcr-benchmark) Framework for JCR performance tests. * Jackrabbit Core (jackrabbit-core) Core of the Apache Jackrabbit content repository implementation. * Jackrabbit Text Extractors (jackrabbit-text-extractors) Text extractor classes that allow Jackrabbit to extract text content from binary properties for full text indexing. * Jackrabbit JCR-RMI (jackrabbit-jcr-rmi) RMI remoting layer for the JCR API. * Jackrabbit WebDAV Library (jackrabbit-webdav) Interfaces and common utility classes used for building a WebDAV server or client. * Jackrabbit JCR Server (jackrabbit-jcr-server) WebDAV servlet implementations based on JCR. * Jackrabbit JCR Servlets (jackrabbit-jcr-servlet) Set of servlets and other classes designed to make it easier to use Jackrabbit and other JCR content repositories in web applications. * Jackrabbit Repository Classloader (jackrabbit-classloader) Java classloader for loading classes from JCR content repositories. * Jackrabbit Web Application (jackrabbit-webapp) Deployable Jackrabbit installation with WebDAV support for JCR. * Jackrabbit JCA Resource Adapter (jackrabbit-jca) J2EE Connector Architecture (JCA) resource adapter for Jackrabbit. * Jackrabbit SPI (jackrabbit-spi) The SPI defines a layer within a JSR-170 implementation that separates the transient space from the persistent layer. * Jackrabbit SPI Commons (jackrabbit-spi-commons) This component contains generic utility classes that might be used to build an SPI implementation. * Jackrabbit SPI2JCR (jackrabbit-spi2jcr) This component contains a SPI implementation wrapping around an implementation of JSR-170. * Jackrabbit JCR2SPI (jackrabbit-jcr2spi) This component contains an implementation of the JSR-170 API and covers the functionality that is not delegated to the SPI implementation. * Jackrabbit Standalone (jackrabbit-standalone) Jackrabbit server in a self-contained runnable jar. * Jackrabbit OCM (jackrabbit-ocm) Object-Content mapping tool for persisting and accessing Java objects in a JCR content repository. * Jackrabbit OCM Node Management (jackrabbit-ocm-nodemanagement) This component simplifies registration of node types and namespaces referenced in OCM mapping descriptors. About Apache Jackrabbit ----------------------- Apache Jackrabbit is a fully conforming implementation of the Content Repository for Java Technology API (JCR). A content repository is a hierarchical content store with support for structured and unstructured content, full text search, versioning, transactions, observation, and more. Typical applications that use content repositories include content management, document management, and records management systems. For more information, visit http://jackrabbit.apache.org/ About The Apache Software Foundation ------------------------------------ Established in 1999, The Apache Software Foundation provides organizational, legal, and financial support for more than 100 freely-available, collaboratively-developed Open Source projects. The pragmatic Apache License enables individual and commercial users to easily deploy Apache software; the Foundation's intellectual property framework limits the legal exposure of its 2,500+ contributors. For more information, visit http://www.apache.org/