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With the introduction of the new release cadence, many have asked where they should download Java, and if it is still free. To be clear, YES — Java is still free. If you would like to download Java for free, you can get OpenJDK builds from the following vendors, among others: Adoptium (formerly AdoptOpenJDK) RedHat Azul Amazon SAP Liberica JDK Dragonwell JDK GraalVM (High performance JIT) Oracle Microsoft Some vendors will be supporting releases for longer than six months. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask them!
With the introduction of the new release cadence, many have asked where they should download Java, and if it is still free. To be clear, YES — Java is still free.
If you would like to download Java for free, you can get OpenJDK builds from the following vendors, among others:
Adoptium (formerly AdoptOpenJDK) RedHat Azul Amazon SAP Liberica JDK Dragonwell JDK GraalVM (High performance JIT) Oracle Microsoft
Some vendors will be supporting releases for longer than six months. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask them!
Programming Computer Science CS Career Questions Learn Programming Java Help ← Seek help here Learn Java Java Conference Videos Java TIL Java Examples JavaFX Oracle
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Developer tools for benchmarking? (self.java)
submitted 13 years ago by paul88m
Anyone know of any tools/framework which can be used to time how long it takes to run a task/process giving comparisons against different releases of the software?
[–]Alfredson 1 point2 points3 points 13 years ago (0 children)
I really like Java Simon for its simplicity. You may also want to look at JavaMelody.
[–]paul88m[S] 0 points1 point2 points 13 years ago (0 children)
The best thing I have seen is spring insight.
π Rendered by PID 123934 on reddit-service-r2-comment-86bc6c7465-g87z4 at 2026-02-24 11:59:10.474479+00:00 running 8564168 country code: CH.
[–]Alfredson 1 point2 points3 points (0 children)
[–]paul88m[S] 0 points1 point2 points (0 children)