OSGi

OSGi is an open specification and open source project under the Eclipse Foundation.

It is a continuation of the work done by the OSGi Alliance (formerly known as the Open Services Gateway initiative), which was an open standards organization for software founded in March 1999. The foundation originally specified and maintained the OSGi standard. The alliance transferred its work to the Eclipse Foundation at the end of 2020.

The OSGi specification describes a modular system and a service platform for the Java programming language that implements a complete and dynamic component model, something that does not exist in standalone Java or VM environments. It has a service-oriented architecture based on micro services each implemented as an extended Java class file archive (JAR (file format)).

Description
OSGi is built around a service-oriented architecture. Applications or components, come in the form of bundles for deployment, can be remotely installed, started, stopped, updated, and uninstalled without requiring a reboot. Management of Java packages/classes is specified in great detail. Application life cycle management is implemented via APIs that enable remote downloading of management policies. The service registry enables bundles to detect the addition of new services or the removal of services, and adapt accordingly.

The OSGi specifications have evolved beyond the original focus of service gateways, and are now used in applications ranging from mobile phones to the open-source Eclipse IDE. Other application areas include automobiles, industrial automation, building automation, PDAs, grid computing, entertainment, fleet management and application servers.

In October 2020, the OSGi Alliance announced the transition of the standardization effort to the Eclipse Foundation, subsequent to which it would shut down. All artifacts have been transferred to the Eclipse Foundation, where an “OSGi Working Group" continues to maintain and evolve the specification.

Specification process
The OSGi specification is developed by the members in an open process and made available to the public free of charge under the OSGi Specification License. The OSGi Alliance has a compliance program that is open to members only. As of November 2010, there are seven certified OSGi framework implementations. A separate page lists both certified and non-certified OSGi Specification Implementations, which include OSGi frameworks and other OSGi specifications.

Architecture


OSGi is a Java framework for developing and deploying modular software programs and libraries. Each bundle is a tightly coupled, dynamically loadable collection of classes, jars, and configuration files that explicitly declare their external dependencies (if any).

The framework is conceptually divided into the following areas:
 * Bundles:Bundles are normal JAR components with extra manifest headers.
 * Services:The services layer connects bundles in a dynamic way by offering a publish-find-bind model for plain old Java interfaces (POJIs) or plain old Java objects (POJOs).
 * Services Registry:The application programming interface for management services.
 * Life-Cycle:The application programming interface for life cycle management (install, start, stop, update, and uninstall) for bundles.
 * Modules:The layer that defines encapsulation and declaration of dependencies (how a bundle can import and export code).
 * Security:The layer that handles the security aspects by limiting bundle functionality to pre-defined capabilities.
 * Execution Environment:Defines what methods and classes are available in a specific platform. There is no fixed list of execution environments, since it is subject to change as the Java Community Process creates new versions and editions of Java. However, the following set is currently supported by most OSGi implementations:
 * CDC-1.0/Foundation-1.0
 * CDC-1.1/Foundation-1.1
 * OSGi/Minimum-1.0
 * OSGi/Minimum-1.1
 * JRE-1.1
 * From J2SE-1.2 up to J2SE-1.6

Bundles


A bundle is a group of Java classes and additional resources equipped with a detailed manifest  file on all its contents, as well as additional services needed to give the included group of Java classes more sophisticated behaviors, to the extent of deeming the entire aggregate a component.

Below is an example of a typical  file with OSGi Headers: The meaning of the contents in the example is as follows:


 * 1) Bundle-Name: Defines a human-readable name for this bundle, Simply assigns a short name to the bundle.
 * 2) Bundle-SymbolicName: The only required header, this entry specifies a unique identifier for a bundle, based on the reverse domain name convention (used also by the java packages).
 * 3) Bundle-Description: A description of the bundle's functionality.
 * 4) Bundle-ManifestVersion: Indicates the OSGi specification to use for reading this bundle.
 * 5) Bundle-Version: Designates a version number to the bundle.
 * 6) Bundle-Activator: Indicates the class name to be invoked once a bundle is activated.
 * 7) Export-Package: Expresses which Java packages contained in a bundle will be made available to the outside world.
 * 8) Import-Package: Indicates which Java packages will be required from the outside world to fulfill the dependencies needed in a bundle.

Life-cycle
A Life Cycle layer adds bundles that can be dynamically installed, started, stopped, updated and uninstalled. Bundles rely on the module layer for class loading but add an API to manage the modules in run time. The life cycle layer introduces dynamics that are normally not part of an application. Extensive dependency mechanisms are used to assure the correct operation of the environment. Life cycle operations are fully protected with the security architecture.

Below is an example of a typical Java class implementing the  interface:

Standard services
The OSGi Alliance has specified many services. Services are specified by a Java interface. Bundles can implement this interface and register the service with the Service Registry. Clients of the service can find it in the registry, or react to it when it appears or disappears.

The table below shows a description of OSGi System Services: The table below shows a description of OSGi Protocol Services: The table below shows a description of OSGi Miscellaneous Services:

Organization
The OSGi Alliance was founded by Ericsson, IBM, Motorola, Sun Microsystems and others in March 1999. Before incorporating as a nonprofit corporation, it was called the Connected Alliance.

Among its members are more than 35 companies from quite different business areas, for example Adobe Systems, Deutsche Telekom, Hitachi, IBM, Liferay, Makewave, NEC, NTT, Oracle, Orange SA, ProSyst, Salesforce, Siemens, Software AG and TIBCO Software.

The Alliance has a board of directors that provides the organization's overall governance. OSGi officers have various roles and responsibilities in supporting the alliance. Technical work is conducted within Expert Groups (EGs) chartered by the board of directors, and non-technical work is conducted in various working groups and committees. The technical work conducted within Expert Groups include developing specifications, reference implementations, and compliance tests. These Expert Groups have produced five major releases of the OSGi specifications.

Dedicated Expert Groups exist for the enterprise, mobile, vehicle and the core platform areas.

The Enterprise Expert Group (EEG) is the newest EG and is addressing Enterprise / Server-side applications. In November 2007 the Residential Expert Group (REG) started to work on specifications to remotely manage residential/home-gateways. In October 2003, Nokia, Motorola, IBM, ProSyst and other OSGi members formed a Mobile Expert Group (MEG) that will specify a MIDP-based service platform for the next generation of smart mobile phones, addressing some of the needs that CLDC cannot manage – other than CDC. MEG became part of OSGi as with R4.

Specification versions

 * OSGi Release 1 (R1): May 2000
 * OSGi Release 2 (R2): October 2001
 * OSGi Release 3 (R3): March 2003
 * OSGi Release 4 (R4): October 2005 / September 2006
 * Core Specification (R4 Core): October 2005
 * Mobile Specification (R4 Mobile / JSR-232): September 2006
 * OSGi Release 4.1 (R4.1): May 2007 (AKA JSR-291)
 * OSGi Release 4.2 (R4.2): September 2009
 * Enterprise Specification (R4.2): March 2010
 * OSGi Release 4.3 (R4.3): April 2011
 * Core: April 2011
 * Compendium and Residential: May 2012
 * OSGi Release 5 (R5): June 2012
 * Core and Enterprise: June 2012
 * OSGi Release 6 (R6): June 2015
 * Core: June 2015
 * OSGi Release 7 (R7): April 2018
 * Core and Compendium: April 2018
 * OSGi Release 8 (R8): December 2020

Related standards

 * MHP / OCAP
 * Universal Plug and Play (UPnP)
 * DPWS
 * ITU-T G.hn
 * LonWorks
 * CORBA
 * CEBus
 * EHS (KNX) / CECED CHAIN
 * Java Management Extensions

Projects using OSGi

 * Adobe Experience Manager – an enterprise Content Management System
 * Apache Aries – Blueprint Container implementations and extensions of application-focused specifications defined by OSGi Enterprise Expert Group
 * Apache Sling – OSGi-based applications layer for JCR content repositories
 * Atlassian Confluence and JIRA – the plug-in architecture for this enterprise wiki and issue tracker uses OSGi
 * Business Intelligence and Reporting Tools (BIRT) Project – Open source reporting engine
 * Cytoscape – an open source bioinformatics software platform (as of version 3.0)
 * DataNucleus – open source data services and persistence platform in service-oriented architectures
 * DDF – Distributed Data Framework provides free and open-source data integration
 * Dotcms – open source Web Content Management
 * EasyBeans – open source EJB 3 container
 * Eclipse – open source IDE and rich client platform
 * iDempiere – is an OSGi implementation of the open source ERP Branch GlobalQSS Adempiere361 originally started by Low Heng Sin
 * Eclipse Virgo – open source microkernel-based server constructed of OSGi bundles and supporting OSGi applications
 * GlassFish (v3) – application server for Java EE
 * Fuse ESB – a productized and supported release of ServiceMix 4
 * Integrated Genome Browser – an open source, desktop GUI for visualizing, exploring, and analyzing genome data
 * IntelliJ – Java IDE and rich client platform with free community edition
 * JOnAS 5 – open source Java EE 5 application server
 * JOSSO 2 – Atricore's open source standards-based Identity and Access Management Platform
 * Liferay Dxp – open source and commercial enterprise Portal platform use OSGi from version 7.x
 * Lucee 5 – open source CFML Web Application Server
 * NetBeans – open source IDE and rich client platform
 * Nuxeo – open source ECM Service Platform
 * Open Daylight Project – Project with the goal of accelerating the adoption of software-defined networking
 * OpenEJB – open source OSGi-enabled EJB 3.0 container that can be run both in standalone or embedded mode
 * openHAB – open source home automation software
 * OpenWorm – open source software simulation of C. elegans, via the dedicated Geppetto modular platform
 * Akana – API Gateway, Portal and Analytics server from Akana (formerly SOA Software)
 * Weblogic – Oracle Weblogic Application Server
 * WebSphere – IBM Websphere JEE Application Server
 * WebMethods – SoftwareAG WebMethods
 * WildFly – Red Hat's WildFly Application Server, formerly JBoss
 * WSO2 Carbon – Base platform for WSO2's enterprise-grade Open source middleware stack
 * Pentaho - Business Intelligence (BI) software that provides data integration, OLAP services, reporting, information dashboards, data mining and extract, transform, load (ETL) capabilities.