Azul Vulnerability Detection detects known vulnerabilities in Java applications in production with no performance penalty and eliminates false positives Extends software supply chain security to production with agentless cloud service, delivering observability of vulnerabilities at the actual point of use Addresses increasing risk of attacks on enterprise software supply chains, which are expected to triple by 2025 and are compounded by severe vulnerabilities such as Log4j that continue to arise in production SINGAPORE, Nov. 3, 2022 /PRNewswire/ Azul, the only company 100% focused on Java, today announcedAzul Vulnerability Detection, a new SaaS product that continuously detects known security vulnerabilities that exist in Java applications. By eliminating false positives and with no performance impact, Azul Vulnerability Detection is ideal for in-production use and addresses the rapidly increasing enterprise risk around software supply chain attacks. According to Gartner, "by 20
Quarkus, MicroNaut, SpringBoot, DropWizar, Eclipse MicroProfile are the best Java frameworks you can learn for MIcrosrivces and Cloud-Native Java development
Java 2021: What Frameworks and Trends for This New Year?
Find out what are the trends of the new year in the Java world. Discover the impacts of the new trend of reflectionless frameworks and their impact on architecture. by
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From a technical point of view, the frameworks within the Java world are one of the biggest differentials. It’s challenging to see an application in Java without using any tool, using only the Java SE platform. With the new year, it is natural that questions arise, such as which frameworks are available in new projects, types of frameworks, and trends. The purpose of this post is to talk a little about the most popular frameworks in the Java world and the expectations for next year in one of the most popular languages in the world.
Grails Foundation Established to Advance Adoption of Grails Framework
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Object Computing, Inc. (OCI) has announced the formation of the Grails Foundation, a not-for-profit company established to advance innovation and adoption of the Grails framework. The foundation will oversee software roadmap and development, best practices and processes, repository control, documentation and support, and fundraising related to the open source framework. The foundation will receive initial funding of $200,000 from OCI for development and evangelism.
Originally named Groovy on Rails, Grails was co-founded in 2005 by Graeme Rocher, Guillaume LaForge, Steven Devijver and Dierk König. At the time, Rocher was CTO at the now-defunct G2One, an open-source Groovy/Grails company that provided training, consultancy, support and products around Groovy and Grails.