March 8, 2019
ColdFusion and Java 8 and Java 11 Updates
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March 8, 2019
ColdFusion and Java 8 and Java 11 Updates
Newbie 12 posts
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As many of you are aware Oracle has changed their licensing for Java 1.8 and making it a pay to play for all commercial purposes. Here’s a link to the licensing announcement. I’m not a lawyer and I’m not going to pretend that I understand these licensing agreements. But Oracle and Adobe (or their lawyers I presume) do understand these and as such there are changes to note. On January 24th Adobe announced that Adobe will maintain support. via a Long-Term Support Agreement with Oracle, for Java 8 and Java 11. Thank you Adobe!

I have questions as I’m sure everyone else does. I’ve been asking representatives at Adobe these questions.

What does this mean for us?
ColdFusion Server runs on Java from Oracle, and as such the new Oracle license affects all of our ColdFusion servers. To this point Adobe has secured licensing from Oracle that allows all ColdFusion Server owners continue running Java. It is very important to note that you now need to download Java from Adobe and NOT Oracle. Get your Adobe Licensed Oracle Java downloads HERE!

Is the Java version from Adobe Different that the same version from Oracle?
Great Question and I asked Adobe about this. Here is the answer “Wil, installers are same but license attached to them are different and this is for both Java 8 and 11”.

What about my existing ColdFusion Servers?
Another great question! There are tens of thousands (or more) ColdFusion servers running and the vast majority of them are running on Java from Oracle. I know that the CF Webtools Operations Group maintains a very large number of servers for a large number of clients. Over time we have been upgrading the Java version on the servers to keep up with the security updates from Oracle. This means that most if not all of these servers are on Oracle Java from Oracle and not from Adobe. What do we have to do to remain compliant? I really hope we do not have to visit all of these servers and replace the Java with the one from Adobe simply because there is a different license agreement attached. I have submitted this question to Adobe and I’m awaiting anxiously for the answer. What I do know is that all servers that we need to update are going to get the Adobe Licensed version of Oracle Java to stay safe.

I received an answer today from Adobe on this.

Wil, to answer your question, if the JDK/JRE were downloaded before Oracle came up with Licensing change, it should not be an issue. Otherwise we recommend using the Adobe provided download as soon as possible, although we don’t see a deadline around this.

This means that all the servers that I have recently updated will need to be re-updated with the Java from Adobe that has a different license agreement.

What about my New ColdFusion Servers?
This question has a simple answer. To install a new ColdFusion Server you need to use the ColdFusion installer from Adobe which comes with an Adobe licensed version of Oracle Java. If you want to use a newer version of Oracle Java then you need to download the Adobe Licensed vision of Oracle Java from Adobe. Download Here!

Do I have to use Oracle Java?
Awesome question and the answer is yes, no, maybe. There is OpenJDK that may work just fine to run ColdFusion servers. There is also a new player in the Java game and that is Amazon. “Amazon Corretto is a no-cost, multiplatform, production-ready distribution of the Open Java Development Kit (OpenJDK).” Currently their version 8 is production ready and they version 11 is in the Release Candidate stage. I have run ColdFusion 11 an dColdFusion 2016 on Amazon Corretto 8 and it ran fine for the very limited testing that I did. For now there isn’t official support from Adobe for these two Java versions.

As I get more information from Adobe I will provide updates above. I’m sure there will be more questions that people will want answered.

CF Webtools Developer Teams are ColdFusion experts and are ready to build your applications. We are also an Amazon Partner. Our Operations Group can build, manage, and maintain your AWS services including ColdFusion servers. We also handle migration of physical servers into AWS Cloud services. If you are looking for professional AWS management our operations group is standing by 24/7 – give us a call at 402-408-3733, or send a note to operations at CF Webtools .

6 Comments
2023-05-31 13:24:52
2023-05-31 13:24:52

Is this still applicable with the January 2023 licensing changes implemented by Oracle?

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2019-03-14 18:56:51
2019-03-14 18:56:51

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2019-03-13 01:08:41
2019-03-13 01:08:41

Question: “license attached to them are different”: different how? Where can we read the license attached to the Java downloads from Adobe?

Unrelated comment:

For Java SE 8, there hasn’t been an update yet under the new licensing terms. The latest update at the moment is Java SE 8 Update 202, released in January 2019, which is still free for commercial use. The JDK downloads available from Adobe for update 202 are binary identical to the ones from Oracle.

As such, you don’t have to reinstall the update on your servers, even if you are up to update 202 at the moment. Future updates you will presumably need to download from Adobe.

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Legorol
's comment
2019-03-13 16:55:53
2019-03-13 16:55:53
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Legorol
's comment

I just installed the updates with the Java from Adobe yesterday on a server. I looked at the ‘license’ files and they all have links back to java.com. I didn’t see anything saying it was licensed by Adobe.

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Legorol
's comment
2019-03-14 18:44:58
2019-03-14 18:44:58
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Legorol
's comment

I have looked for the license in the Adobe version of Java after I installed it. I can’t find anything that says it’s licensed by/through Adobe.

I believe you are correct on Java version 1.8.0_202. But Adobe has that version on their site for download. We’ll see what happens after April which is Oracle’s cut off date.

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2019-03-12 12:02:14
2019-03-12 12:02:14

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