Sun Microsystems and the OpenPortal community announced a
new open source initiative with Liferay to develop a common Web presentation
platform that incorporates portal and integration technologies from both
companies. Developers will now have access to a new, stable, standards-based
Web presentation platform. The Sun and Liferay products resulting from this
initiative will bring developers simple, lightweight presentation capabilities
for GlassFish, Sun's open source Java Platform Enterprise Edition (Java EE)
application server.
Sun and Liferay also plan to separately market and sell
products and services based on the commonly developed open source platform,
offering customers additional functionality and more choice depending on
features and level of support needed. Sun is also announcing the preview
release of a lightweight platform for simplifying Web site development and
building collaborative work spaces. Sun's new platform also allows Web
developers to incorporate role-based access to content and applications, adding
an extra layer of security and control to their portals.
"The GlassFish community continues to grow and demand
open source, enterprise-class solutions. Our association with Liferay and its
great platform is an example of multiple communities and partners working
together to deliver on the Java software community’s requests," said Mark
Herring, vice president of marketing, Software Infrastructure, Sun
Microsystems. "As Sun's involvement in open source expands, customers and
developers can expect to see new models of collaboration within open source
software communities in an effort to drive adoption of interesting
technologies."
Sun's new platform will provide customers and Web developers
with the following features:
Multi-language support
Widget syndication
Workflow API
Simplification of page development and maintenance in
Web-oriented architectures
Flexibility of licenses
"Liferay is one of the most mature and active open
source communities for portal and Web presentation technologies with more than
50,000 downloads per month and more than 8,000 registered users," said
Brian Chan, creator and chief software architect, Liferay. "While we will
continue to support all major servlet containers, we've seen a big increase in
demand for Liferay Portal running on GlassFish - growing from one to 15 percent
of our downloads -- and we saw this as a great opportunity to work with Sun's
GlassFish and OpenPortal communities to offer enterprises more choices,
flexibility and greater access to the latest technologies."
The Liferay community is leveraging the open source Web
Services for Remote Portlets (WSRP) and Portlet Container (JSR 286 - portlet
specification 2.0) implementations from the Sun sponsored Open Portal
Community. All three products -- Sun's new platform for collaborative Web site
design, Sun Java System Portal Server 7.2 and Liferay Portal 5.0 -- utilize the
same Portlet Container and WSRP implementations. Liferay has added support for
OpenSSO, a Sun-sponsored open source project that enables single sign-on capabilities
and simplifies Portal access for users. Liferay has also certified the Liferay
Portal 5.0 to run on GlassFish, the MySQL database server, the Solaris
Operating System (OS), and Sun hardware, such as the Sun Fire X2100 M2 server.
For more information
on Sun Microsystems contact Cate Hanley,
Cate.Hanley@bitepr.comat Bite Communications.
About Java News Desk JDJ News Desk monitors the world of Java to present IT professionals with updates on technology advances, business trends, new products and standards in the Java and i-technology space.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NEWSLETTERS
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice: