![]() One of the reasons that have driven the adoption of microservices applications was the reduction in the redeploy time compared to monolith applications, but according to this analysis, 18% of the respondents spend 6-10 minutes per container and 26% more than 10 minutes. Unsurprisingly, Spring Boot is leading the competition (74%) as the favorite framework for microservices. The survey then tracked Architecture Trends with Microservices-based applications being the most widespread at 32%, followed by Monolith at 22% and then Modular Monolith at 13%. It is no surprise that Oracle Java stands out as the leader since large companies are well represented in the demography of the study. When asked which JRE/JDK distribution is in use in their application, respondents replied as shown in the image below: Among the respondents, 37% reported planning to upgrade within the next six months, and others 25% planning to upgrade within the next 6-12 months. ![]() JDK 17 LTS, released in September 2021, is gaining momentum. Kotlin is confirmed to be the most used JVM language outside Java. Java 8 continues to be strong but Java 11 is catching up. The image below shows the results for the most used JDK languages: The first questions of the survey are related to the JDK language in use, the plan to migrate to JDK 17 and the preferred JDK distribution. Large enterprises (1000+ people) and mid-size enterprises (100-1000 people) are the most described at 31% and 27%. Developer and Java Architect are the most common roles with 48% and 22%, respectively, while the most common team size is 3-9 developers (47%) followed by 10-20 developers (22%). The top three countries represented in the survey by location of the respondents’ company headquarters are located in the United States, China and Germany at 177, 128 and 60, respectively. Over 876 Java development professionals responded to the survey that ran from October 2021 to January 2022. Many things have changed in the past 10 years as most of today’s common technologies were not yet invented, for example: Docker, Kubernetes and microservices. I would try looking for *adfm* in the Jar name column, or maybe 12.2 in the "Oracle Version":įilter on one of the important ADF jar files, such as has published the 2022 Java Developer Productivity Report, and this year marks the 10th anniversary of this annual publication about Java trends. Step 3 - filter to find what you're looking for. ![]() Step 2 - from the menu, select ADF -> Versions:įrom the Deployments menu, select ADF and then Versions Start by selecting an ADF application deployment. Step 1 - go to the correct part of the tree in Enterprise Manger: The trick here is to make sure you are in the "Application Deployments" part of the navigation tree, and not the "Weblogic Domain" part of the tree. The Weblogic Console and the EM app change from version to version - these screenshots are from version 12.2.1. I'll use the Enterprise Manager application itself as an example. Third way: look at the deployment in Enterprise Manager This Oracle document 401694.1 has information on release version numbers - see the "42" in Oracle-Version of the first way, and "31" in the second way. ![]() ![]() Second way: use PrintVersion class cd $MW_HOME/oracle_common/modules/ printJarVersions.sh | grep 'adf-share-support.jar' This actually does the same thing, with slightly different output: ![]()
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