OW2
Formation1 January 2007; 19 years ago (2007-01-01)
TypeConsortium
Legal statusNon-Profit
PurposeOpen Source Software Development
HeadquartersParis
MembersAround 6000
CEO
Cédric Thomas
Staff8 employees
Websitewww.ow2.org Edit this at Wikidata

OW2 is an independent non-profit international consortium dedicated to developing open-source software code infrastructure for middleware information systems. OW2 federates IT vendors and users, universities, and research centers from Europe, Asia, and the Americas, representing IT professionals.

History

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OW2 was founded in 2007 as an independent organization to foster the ObjectWeb code base of open source middleware. ObjectWeb was a joint project launched in 2002 by INRIA, Bull, and France Telecom; in 2005 INRIA signed an agreement with OrientWare, a joint project between Peking University, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics (now Beihang University), National University of Defense Technology, CVIC Software Engineering Co., Ltd, and the Institute of Software at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. All became founding members of OW2 along with Engineering, Red Hat, and Thales Group.

Activities

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Projects

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OW2 hosts circa 100 open-source projects.[1] Projects make up the OW2 code base and are foundation of all OW2 activities. Projects can be submitted into the OW2 code base after meeting some minimum requirements and applying. At this point, a Project is considered to be in "Incubation," the first of OW2's defined lifecycle stages. Upon gaining code contributors, growing, and meeting rigorous requirements, a project can apply for "mature" status. The application is then reviewed by the OW2 Technology Council and granted mature status or kept in incubation. If a project stops evolving and updating, it can then be moved to the third lifecycle stage, "Archive," where it is no longer active but can use OW2's infrastructure services.

Hosting

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In 2008, only a year after its founding, OW2 began hosting its projects via Concurrent Versions System (CVS) and Apache Subversion (SVN) using GForge.[2] Later, support for CVS was disabled and hosting via Git using Gitorious began.[3] In 2018, only a decade after it had begun using it, OW2 decommissioned its use of GForge and SVN in lieu of Git, after having migrated to using GitLab.[4][2]

OW2con

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OW2con is an annual conference for the OW2 community, organized since 2009.

References

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  1. ^ "OW2 Projects - OW2 Project Marketplace (wiki.WebHome)". projects.ow2.org.
  2. ^ a b "Gforge decommission". OW2 Technology Council. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Which version control system can I use? Do you support SVN? Do you support GIT?". FAQ. ow2.org. Archived from the original on 2 September 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
  4. ^ "GForge has been discontinued". IT Infrastructure. ow2.org. Retrieved 5 May 2022.

Further reading

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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

ObjectWeb ASM

"11 June 2009: ASM 3.2 (cvs-tag: ASM_3_2)". ObjectWeb. 2009-06-11. Retrieved 2009-11-14. "Versions". ObjectWeb. Retrieved 2020-06-06. Official website OW2

Java (programming language)

JFreeChart JProfiler JSoup JUNG JUnit LibGDX LiquiBase LWJGL Netty Neuroph ObjectWeb ASM Oracle WebLogic OrientDB ORMLite Parallel Colt Quartz Selenium SLF4J

Middleware

and similar tools that support application development and delivery. ObjectWeb defines middleware as: "The software layer that lies between the operating

Apache Felix

specification. The initial codebase was donated from the Oscar project at ObjectWeb. The developers worked on Felix for a full year and have made various

Fractal component model

the ObjectWeb Fractal project, there are several other implementations of the Fractal component model in other projects, including non ObjectWeb projects:

Middleware (distributed applications)

architecture Enterprise Service Bus Event-driven SOA ObjectWeb Krakowiak, Sacha. "What's middleware?". ObjectWeb.org. Archived from the original on 2005-05-07

Apache CXF

service frameworks "Celtix: The Open Source Java Enterprise Service Bus". ObjectWeb. May 1, 2008. Archived from the original on April 9, 2009. Retrieved August

List of JVM languages

JFreeChart JProfiler JSoup JUNG JUnit LibGDX LiquiBase LWJGL Netty Neuroph ObjectWeb ASM Oracle WebLogic OrientDB ORMLite Parallel Colt Quartz Selenium SLF4J