The Java endpoint is capable of downloading and installing any version of Java in the AdoptOpenJDK API. Use the java search
command to search the API to find what Java versions are available. The endpoint will use the local artifacts cache.
NOTE: If you simply want to start a server with a given version of OpenJDK, you don't need to use this endpoint directly, You can ask CommandBox to use a specific java version and it will handle the installation for you as well as re-using identical Java installs across servers. For example:
The installation ID consists of a series of identifiers separated by underscores that describe the Java version, type, JVM, etc that you want installed.
An example utilizing every option would be
However, everything is optional except the major version. These are also valid installation IDs
Here are the possible options for each section of the ID.
version - openjdk8, openjdk9, openjdk10, etc...
type - jdk, jre
arch - x64, x32, ppc64, s390x, ppc64le, aarch64
os - windows, linux, mac
jvm-implementation - hotspot, openj9
release - latest, jdk8u172, jdk8u172-b00, etc...
For items not specified in the endpoint ID, the endpoint will default as follows:
type - jre
arch - Whatever the current OS arch is
os - Whatever the current OS is
JVM-implementation - hotspot
release - latest
When java is installed as a package endpoint, the name of the folder that it is installed into will mirror the ID you use. This means two different installation IDs that resolve to the exact same Java version may end up in different folders. We do this for a couple reasons. One of which is simplicity, the other is that if you have configuration expecting a specific folder name, Mac users and Windows users may get a different download, but if the id is simple java:openjdk8_jdk
, they would both install into a folder called openjdk8_jdk
.
This endpoint will NOT edit your registry, create any symlinks, or add environment variables. It will simply drop the Java installation into a folder so you can point servers at it. You are free to use one of these Java installations in such a manner, but we don't do this by default so you can install as many java versions as you like and they don't fight with each other.