
The versions match up in both the CF11U3 fresh install and the test install from JDK from Oracle. The footprint (ACTUAL byte size) from the JDK 1.8.0_25_b18 fresh install are: Not only is the tools.jar footprint different, but so are the other two key files that I spot checked, as follows: It was obtained directly from the Oracle website. So I installed fresh JDK 1.8.0_25_b18 onto a test instance (a clone of my live instance). Without this step your SOAP web service calls may fail”.Ĭall me nervous, obsessive and anal, but I wondered if my CF11 U3’s tools.jar was ALREADY fixed (you would assume it would be, since CF11-U3 was already bundled with 1.8). Then today I get Pete’s reminder (via hackmycf) that “When upgrading CF10 or CF11 servers to Java 8 you will need to copy the tools.jar file from the Java 8 JDK into your /cfusion/lib directory. The footprint (ACTUAL byte size) of some key files after a FRESH CF11-U3 install: Hot fix 1 does not certify ColdFusion 9.0.X with JDK 1.7 on Mac OS X.

ColdFusion 9.0.X does not support Mac OS X 10.7. For example, CF 11 with update 3 or later supports either JDK 7 or 8. (The term JDK is also used, referring to the Java SE Development Kit, the most common form of JVM deployment used with ColdFusion.)Īdobe will support the latest point release within a supported major JVM release, as listed below for each version of ColdFusion.For instance, if JDK 7 is supported, it can be 1.7.0_01 (Java SE Development Kit 7u1) or 1.7.0_72 (Java SE Development Kit 7u72), which was the latest JDK 7 release available at the time of this blog post in November 2014.īy the same token, while this post lists the latest JVM/JDK supported for a given CF release, we continue to support as well the earlier JDKs listed for each CF release.

This post lists the JVM version supported by recent ColdFusion releases, depending on CF updates applied. Oracle Java Virtual Machine (JVM) through ColdFusion updates and hot fix releases.


Adobe ColdFusion sometimes supports newer versions the
