We’re excited to announce Wanaku 0.1.1, a significant milestone that showcases how Apache Camel’s powerful integration capabilities can be seamlessly exposed to AI agents through the Model Context Protocol (MCP). This release introduces Service Catalogs and Service Templates — features that leverage Apache Camel as the integration runtime to bridge the gap between AI and enterprise systems. What is Wanaku? Wanaku is an open-source MCP router and capability management platform that acts as a smart intermediary between AI agents and integration capabilities.
Apache Camel 4.20 has just been released. This release is an expedited security fix release on top of the previous 4.19 release. JDK25 compatibility This is the first release supporting JDK25. However, there are a few 3rd party libraries that does not yet fully support JDK25, see more in CAMEL-22114. Camel JBang You can now easier configure HTTPS for development purposes with self-signed certificates, so you can host services via HTTPS locally in Camel.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.20.0 release with 25 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.7 patch release with 3 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.18.2 LTS release with 26 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.6 patch release with 26 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
, by Claus Ibsen, Federico Mariani, Pasquale Congiusti, Tom Cunningham, Zineb BENDHIBA, Andrea Cosentino
Apache Camel 4.19 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Spring Boot This is our first release that supports Spring Boot v4. Spring Boot v3 is no longer supported. Camel Jackson 3 Components Four new components have been added which provide Jackson 3 support - they are named similarly to the previously existing camel-jackson components.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.19.0 release with 283 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.18.1 LTS release with 51 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
, by Dominik Jelínek, Paloma Vinaches Melguizo, Tomo Igarashi, Ricardo M.
What’s New in Kaoto 2.10? Kaoto 2.10 represents a major leap forward in visual integration design, now powered by Apache Camel 4.18.0. This release bridges the gap between API-first design and integration development with full REST DSL and OpenAPI support, while significantly expanding DataMapper capabilities to handle complex multi-file schemas. Combined with production-ready drag-and-drop functionality, building sophisticated integrations has never been more intuitive. Here are the key highlights of this release: REST DSL Support with OpenAPI Integration Kaoto 2.
, by Claus Ibsen, Andrea Cosentino, Ivo Bek, Federico Mariani, Claudio Miranda, Luigi De Masi
Apache Camel 4.18 LTS has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core Added the possibility to add note(s) to EIPs. This is intended for developer notes or other kind of notes, that is convention to have at the source code. The note has no impaction on the running Camel. Another use case is to build tutorials with half complete code, and have note(s) that describe what to do.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.18.0 LTS release with 174 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.5 patch release with 21 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.10.9 LTS patch release with 7 bug fixes and improvements. Please note that this is the last patch release for the 4.10.x branch. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC,
, by Claus Ibsen, Federico Mariani, Gregor Zurowski
Apache Camel 4.17 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core We have marked up important headers in various EIPs and components for tooling and troubleshooting assistance. If you have the need to trigger only once and are using a timer such as timer:tick?repeatCount=1, then we have added the once component to trigger only once on startup, and made it much easier to pre configure the message body and headers as needed.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.17.0 release with 160 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.4 patch release with 10 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.3 patch release with 29 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.10.8 LTS patch release with 23 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
What’s New in Kaoto 2.8? This release represents a major step forward in DataMapper maturity, with extensive XML Schema support improvements, better visual feedback, and numerous stability fixes. We’ve also enhanced the canvas experience with contextual menus and improved the forms system for better configuration management. Here are the key highlights of this release: DataMapper XML Schema Support Enhancements Kaoto 2.8 brings improvements to XML Schema handling in the DataMapper:
Apache Camel 4.16 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core You can now add note(s) to EIPs in the DSL. The notes have no impact on running Camel, but makes it consistent to include code comments or other notes that are valuable for developers for maintaining. You can of course still use code comments, but note make them available for Camel tooling.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.16.0 release with 123 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.2 patch release with 40 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
, by Claus Ibsen, Tom Cunningham, Pasquale Congiusti
Apache Camel 4.15 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core You can now easier extend Camel via 3d-party dependencies via Java ServiceLoader using the ContextServicePlugin SPI. You can add custom sensitive keys to camel.main.additionalSensitiveKeywords which Camel will mask in logging. Camel JBang camel debug now also supports debugging Camel Quarkus applications, by executing camel debug pom.
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.15.0 release with 123 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.1 patch release with 45 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.10.7 LTS patch release with 38 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.8.9 LTS patch release with 14 bug fixes and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
What’s New in Kaoto 2.7? We’re excited to announce the release of Kaoto 2.7, bringing significant enhancements to the visual integration design experience for Apache Camel. This release focuses on expanding DataMapper capabilities, improving developer productivity, and delivering a more intuitive canvas experience. Here are the key highlights of this release DataMapper JSON Support One of the most significant additions in Kaoto 2.7 is comprehensive JSON support for the DataMapper.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Christoph Deppisch
Apache Camel 4.14 LTS has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core Camel consumers will now eagerly setup MDC logging which makes it possible to include details such as routeId in logs while the consumer is being created and started up. The Intercept EIP now includes more details where the message was intercepted (node id and other information).
The Camel community announces the immediate availability of the Camel 4.14.0 release with 107 new features and improvements. The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the release notes. Many thanks to all who made this release possible. On behalf of the Camel PMC, Gregor Zurowski
, by Claus Ibsen, Pasquale Congiusti, Claudio Miranda
Apache Camel 4.13 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core We have made management possible for BackOff, ForegroundTask, and BackgroundTask which are used as internal tasks to perform repetitive tasks, usually related to re-connection or recovery. Some of the Came components uses these features, and other components has native recovery built-in from the underlying library.
, by Claus Ibsen, Pasquale Congiusti, Gregor Zurowski
Apache Camel 4.12 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The camel-xml-io XML DSL now has a generated XSD Schema that is independent of the classic Camel Spring XSD. This allows tooling and end users to use this schema instead and ensure the schema matches exactly the capabilities of the camel-ml-io XML DSL.
, by Claus Ibsen, Pasquale Congiusti, Federico Mariani, Gregor Zurowski
Apache Camel 4.11 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The component verifier extension has been deprecated. This functionality has not been in use for many years, and we will start to deprecate more of these unused features in camel-core going forward. Recipient List, Split and Multicast EIP In parallel processing mode, you can also enable synchronous=true to force these EIPs to process the sub-tasks using the upper bounds of the thread-pool.
Apache Camel 4.10 LTS has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core Added customize to RouteBuilder to make it easier to configure a specific Camel component / dataformat, service in a Java lambda style, such as follows: @Override public void configure() throws Exception { customize(KServeComponent.class, k -> { k.getConfiguration().setTarget("localhost:8888"); }); from("timer:kserve?repeatCount=1") .to("kserve:model/metadata?modelName=myModel") .log("${body}"); } This makes it possible for low-code users that want to have a single Java file with the Camel route and all the Java based configuration done entirely from the same configure method.
Following the Apache Camel 4.9.0 release, we’re happy to announce the release of Kaoto 2.3. What’s New in Kaoto 2.3? We’re thrilled to announce the release of Kaoto 2.3, bringing new features, improvements, and bug fixes to enhance your integration experience. This release also brings the first technical preview of a long awaited feature: the Kaoto DataMapper with the ability to perform data transformations using Camel. Here are the key highlights of this release Kaoto DataMapper technical preview In this release, we are introducing the new Kaoto DataMapper, a graphical way of authoring data mappings inside your routes using Kaoto.
, by Claus Ibsen, Pasquale Congiusti, Tadayoshi Sato
Apache Camel 4.9 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core Added startup condition feature to let Camel perform some checks on startup, before continuing. For example to check if a specific ENV exists, or wait for a specific file to be created etc. The supervised route controller now emits RouteRestartingEvent when routes are attempted to be started again after a previous failure.
Following the Apache Camel 4.8 release, we are happy to announce the release of Kaoto 2.2 with many improvements to enhance the user experience. This time, the theme was to improve the visualizations and the user experience in the Canvas, as well as to provide more flexibility to the users. Read on to discover the key highlights of this release and how they can improve your workflow with Kaoto.
, by Claus Ibsen, Pasquale Congiusti, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Andrea Cosentino
Apache Camel 4.8 LTS has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The simple language has new functions such as a iif (ternary if). The @BindToRegistry now supports init/destroy methods, and can be declared as lazy as well. The log EIP can more easily configure its logger name using dynamic patterns. Add poll EIP as an easier and simpler version of pollEnrich EIP which is also more tooling friendly.
After the previous 2.0 GA release, we are happy to announce the release of Kaoto 2.1, packed with exciting new features, bug fixes, and various improvements to enhance the user experience. This update introduces the capability to choose your preferred Runtime version among other notable upgrades. Read on to discover the key highlights of this release and how they can improve your workflow with Kaoto. New Features Catalog: Empower users to pick a runtime and specific version to display the right components with their precise configurations.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Tadayoshi Sato
Apache Camel 4.7 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The route template has some fixes and improvements, such as that a full local copy of the template is created when creating routes from the template; this prevents unforeseen side effects when the same template is used later to create new routes.
After previously releasing 3 technical previews, we are thrilled to finally announce the release of Kaoto 2.0, marking the first big release after the project aligned to be much closer to Apache Camel. What is Kaoto? Kaoto, short for Kamel Orchestration Tool, is a low-code and no-code integration designer that allows users to create and edit integrations based on Apache Camel. It is extendable, flexible, and adaptable to various use cases, making it a versatile tool for integration projects.
Apache Camel 4.6 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel JBang We fixed some issues using Camel JBang with Windows, but we would still like more feedback from Windows users. Camel JBang is primary intended to be Camel standalone only. However, we added support for running with Spring Boot or Quarkus directly. You use the --runtime option to specify which platform to use, as shown below:
, by Claus Ibsen, Alexandre Gallice, Gregor Zurowski
Apache Camel 4.5 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core When using Kamelets and/or Rest DSL then Camel will now hide their intermediate routes and only show user routes. The number of routes that Camel logs on startup is thus only the number of user routes. This also avoids cluttering up the list of routes in monitoring and management tools.
There is a new release of VS Code extension Language Support for Apache Camel 0.16.0. Available at Visual Studio Marketplace and Open VSX Registry. This blog post is covering changes made during multiple releases. Latest blog posted changes were for Language Support for Apache Camel v0.9.0. But all listed below is available in latest published v0.16.0 extension release. What’s changed Embedded Language Server for Apache Camel 1.18.0. Updated default Camel Quarkus Catalog from 2.
, by Claus Ibsen, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Ivan Mashtak
Apache Camel 4.4 (LTS) has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The simple language has been improved with hash function, and further improved the embedded functions for jsonpath, jq and xpath making it easier to grab data from JSon or XML within your simple expression or predicates. We have optimized data formats to avoid converting payload to byte[] when unmarshalling, but allowing each data format to unmarshal the payload as-is.
The Hawtio development team is really excited to announce the general availability of Hawtio 3.0.0 to the Apache Camel community! Hawtio is a classic tool for managing Java/JVM applications with a web UI. It has long been a core favourite among Java and Camel engineers as a web GUI management console for Java and Camel applications. However, it was based on stale JavaScript frameworks 1, which made further enhancements and maintenance difficult.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Aurélien Pupier, Andrea Cosentino
Apache Camel 4.3 (non LTS) has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core Added basic support for Java 21 virtual threads. Note this is experimental and there is more work to complete to have full support for virtual threads. More details at threading model. The simple language can now work better with JSon and XML with inlined jq/jsonpath/xpath functions.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Aurélien Pupier
Apache Camel 4.2 (non LTS) has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Java 21 This is the first release that officially supports running on Java 21. Camel Core We continue to fine-tune the new type converter that was introduced on Camel 4.1.0. This version brings a few cleanups to the code, some fixes to the type converter resolution logic, caching improvements and micro optimizations to the type matching algorithm.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Otavio Rodolfo Piske
Apache Camel 4.1 (non LTS) has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core We continue with our performance optimizations in the core. This release brings an optimized type converter, that works around JDK issue 8180450, and can bring improved performance for many scenarios, such as the content-based router and filter. DSL The XML and YAML DSL now have better support for defining bean which can be configured with properties, and references to other beans.
This blog announce the availability of Camel K Runtime version 3.2.0 which will gives you the possibility to run Camel 4 workloads on Kubernetes with Camel K. Release details Apache Camel K Runtime 3.2.0 Apache Camel Quarkus 3.2.0 Apache Camel 4.0.0 How to run Camel 4 with Camel K If you are on Camel K 2.0, this is quite straightforward. If you recall, one of the major feature of version 2 is the ability to run any Camel K runtime.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Otavio Rodolfo Piske
After 10 months of development, with 3 milestones, and 2 RC releases, we are releasing Apache Camel v4 today as LTS release. The Camel 4.0.x is a LTS release, and we will support it for 1 year. This blog post highlights some noteworthy new features and improvements in Camel v4. The features are based on work since January 2023, which was the time when we switched main branch to be Camel v4 based.
Apache Camel 3.20 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Core The Split EIP has been optimized to perform faster and reduced overhead when splitting by a String literal or a regular expression. When working with EIPs you may want to temporarily disable one or more EIPs. Today you have to comment out code, or remove the EIPs.
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Nicolas Filotto, Andrea Cosentino, Otavio Rodolfo Piske
Apache Camel 3.19 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel JBang (Camel CLI) In this release we continue the expansion of Camel CLI. You can now easily manage local running Camel integrations. For example to list all running Camel processes: camel ps PID NAME READY STATUS AGE 61818 sample.camel.MyCamelApplica… 1/1 Running 26m38s 62506 dude 1/1 Running 4m34s To see a bit more information, you can use camel get.
Apache Camel IDEA Plugin 0.8.13 has just been released. In this release, we mainly focused on improving the Camel Debugger user experience thanks to a set of improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Camel Debugger UX Enable the Camel Debugger seamlessly In this version, in the case of the Standalone/Main and Spring Boot runtimes, it is now possible to enable the Camel Debugger seamlessly when launching a Camel application or a test by using respectively the Java Launcher or the JUnit Launcher as shown below:
, by Claus Ibsen, Gregor Zurowski, Nicolas Filotto, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Alexandre Gallice, Aurélien Pupier, Zheng Feng
Apache Camel 3.17 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Java 17 (runtime) support Camel 3.17 is the first release where we have official support for Java 17, really easy to remember :) That said, the Java 17 support is runtime only, meaning that we do not add special support for new Java 17 language features such as Java records.
, by Claus Ibsen, Otavio Rodolfo Piske, Nicolas Filotto, Andrea Cosentino
Apache Camel 3.16 has just been released. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Resume from Offset This release brings a new API to simplify consuming data at scale: the resume API V2. Please check the blog post we wrote to introduce it to our community. Load properties from valut/secrets cloud services This release brings a new feature: the ability to retrieve properties values from a Vault/Secrets cloud services.
Apache Camel 3.15 has just been released. This release has dropped support for Java 8, and therefore Java 11 is required. Because this is first release where we upgrade from Java 8 to 11, then some effort has been made to migrate various Maven plugins and settings to make this upgrade possible. This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post.
Apache Camel 3.14 has just been released. This is the last LTS release supporting Java 8, and therefore we have extended the support period from 1 to 2 years. This blog post first details the noteworthy changes since the last 3.11 LTS release from 6 months ago. So what’s in this release (6 months of work) This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post.
Apache Camel 3.11 has just been released. This is a LTS release which will be supported for 1 year with regular patch and security releases. This blog post first details the noteworthy changes since the last 3.10 release from last month. For readers that are upgrading from the last 3.7 LTS release then we have added a summary section that highlights all the important new features and changes (3.7 to 3.
Apache Camel 3.10 has just been released. This is a non-LTS release which means we will not provide patch releases. The next planned LTS release is 3.11 scheduled for June/July 2021. So what’s in this release This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Reduced object allocations We have optimized the remainder of the most complex EIPs to avoid excessive object allocations, and also to support exchange pooling.
Apache Camel 3.9 has just been released. This is a non-LTS release which means we will not provide patch releases. The next planned LTS release is 3.11 scheduled for June 2021. So what’s in this release This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Reduced object allocations We have optimized the core by dramatically reducing object allocations - in fact the routing engine will produce ZERO or little objects during routing.
Apache Camel 3.8 has just been released. This is a non-LTS release which means we will not provide patch releases. The next planned LTS release is 3.10 scheduled for June 2021. So what’s in this release This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Startup and Shutdown Logging A noticeable difference is we changed the logging noise during startup and shutdown of Camel.
Apache Camel Kafka Connector 0.7.0 has just been released. This is based on the LTS release of Apache Camel 3.7.0, this means we will provide patch releases, as Camel 3.7.x is an LTS release. So what’s in this release? This release introduce bug fixes, improvements, new features and new connectors obviously New connectors The new connectors introduced in this release are the following: AtlasMap: Transforms the message using an AtlasMap transformation Kubernetes Custom Resources: Perform operations on Kubernetes Custom Resources and get notified on Deployment changes Vert.
In the next Camel Kafka connector release (0.7.0, on vote soon) there will be a new feature: the idempotency support on both source and sink connectors. The aim of this post is giving some hints on how and when to use the idempotency feature. What is Idempotency? The Idempotent Consumer from the EIP patterns is used to filter out duplicate messages: it essentially acts like a Message Filter to filter out duplicates, as reported in the Camel documentation
Apache Camel 3.7 LTS has just been released. This is a LTS release which means we will provide patch releases for one year. The next planned LTS release is 3.10 scheduled towards summer 2021. So what’s in this release This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Pre compiled languages We continued our avenue of making Camel faster and smaller.
Apache Camel 3.6 has just been released. This is a non-LTS release which means we will not provide patch releases but use the release as-is. The next planned LTS release is 3.7 scheduled towards the end of the year. So what’s in this release? This release introduces a set of new features and noticeable improvements that we will cover in this blog post. Spring Boot We have upgraded to the latest release at this time which is Spring Boot 2.
Apache Camel Kafka Connector 0.5.0 has just been released. This is based on the non-LTS release of Apache Camel 3.5.0, this means we will not provide patch releases, but use the release as-is. So what’s in this release? This release introduce bug fixes, improvements and new connectors obviously New connectors The new connectors introduced in this release are the following: ArangoDB: Perform operations on ArangoDb when used as a Document Database, or as a Graph Database.
Apache Camel 3.5 has just been released. This is a non-LTS release which means we will not provide patch releases, but use the release as-is. The next planned LTS release is 3.7 scheduled towards end of the year. So what’s in this release? This release introduces new set of features and noticeable improvements that will we cover in this blog post. Java 14 This is the first release that supports Java 14.
We recently released camel-kafka-connector 0.4.0. This is the first release of the latest project in the Camel’s ecosystem, based on an LTS camel release. The main features of this release are: Introduction of aggregation support Introduction of marshalling and unmarshalling support on both sink and source connectors Upgrade to the latest Apache Camel release 3.4.2 Addition of new examples in the camel-kafka-connector-examples repository Integration tests added for HDFS (sink), Cassandra/CQL (source), Slack (Source), JDBC (sink) and MongoDB (sink/source).
Apache Camel 3.4 is the first LTS (Long Term Support) release of Camel 3. This release will be actively supported with regular patch releases containing important bug and security fixes for 1-year. For more details about LTS vs non-LTS releases see this blog post. So what’s in this release? This release is mostly about robustness and bug fixes. We have also continued the work to make Camel more modular and lighter.
A few days ago Apache Camel 3.3 was released. This is a continuation of the work we are doing on Camel leading up to the first long term support release (LTS) that will be the next release v3.4. In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see this blog post. What this means is that we will not do patch releases for Camel 3.
The Apache Camel community is pleased to announce the first release (0.1.0) of Camel-Kafka-connector project. This release is an early opportunity for the community to try the project and share feedback about usage of the autogenerated connectors as well as features ideas and use cases for the next development iterations. The project provides a tiny integration layer between camel and kafka connect frameworks and generate one kafka connector for each existing camel component.
A few days ago Apache Camel 3.2 was released. This is a continuation of the work we are doing on Camel leading up to the first long term support release (LTS) that would be either Camel 3.3 or 3.4. In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see this blog post.
Apache Camel 3 was released last thursday November 28th 2019, which also happens to be the day of the US Thanksgiving. This was not intentionally but we can say its a big thanks from us to the community with a brand new major version of Camel - this does not come often by. In fact, its 10 years since Camel 2 hit the streets. So this 3rd generation is long overdue.