
This is where to find the software developed by the Apache Cocoon Project.
The latest release of Apache Cocoon is 2.1.11. Most parts, especially the core can be considered as very stable. Some parts exist that must be considered as alpha, especially those blocks which are marked as such. Previous releases of Apache Cocoon 1 and 2 can be found in the archive at http://archive.apache.org/dist/cocoon/.
Important Notes:
Name Last modified Size Description
Parent Directory - XML project
2.2/ 28-Apr-2008 19:30 - XML project
3.0/ 20-Jun-2011 12:40 - XML project
BINARIES/ 05-Feb-2010 09:23 - Old binary distributions archive
KEYS 11-Jun-2011 12:55 57K XML project
SOURCES/ 15-Jan-2008 17:57 - Source distributions archive
cocoon-2.1.11-docs.tar.gz 14-Jan-2008 13:22 4.2M Documentation (Unix)
cocoon-2.1.11-docs.tar.gz.asc 14-Jan-2008 13:24 186 ASC Signature
cocoon-2.1.11-docs.zip 14-Jan-2008 13:23 4.3M Documentation (Win.)
cocoon-2.1.11-docs.zip.asc 14-Jan-2008 13:24 186 ASC Signature
cocoon-2.1.11-src.tar.gz 31-Dec-2007 11:25 46M Cocoon 2.1 distribution (Unix, source only)
cocoon-2.1.11-src.tar.gz.asc 31-Dec-2007 11:25 186 ASC Signature
cocoon-2.1.11-src.zip 31-Dec-2007 11:33 52M Cocoon 2.1 distribution (Win., source only)
cocoon-2.1.11-src.zip.asc 31-Dec-2007 11:33 186 ASC Signature
events/ 05-Apr-2011 04:51 - Materials from events
license.txt 14-Jan-2008 13:37 11K Apache Software License
subprojects/ 16-Jun-2009 23:00 - XML project
NOTE: Starting with 2.1 we only release a source distribution. This issue was discussed on the developer list. Using this source distribution is really easy and avoids most of the common pitfalls of the binary distribution. See further explanation.
NOTE: Cocoon includes all the packages required to run out of the box (included Xerces, Xalan and FOP) so you don't need to download anything else to start.
NOTE: For earlier versions of Cocoon (which did have binary distributions). Due to the incompatibilities between JDK 1.3 and JDK 1.4, you have to choose between a binary version targeted for JDK 1.2/1.3 and a version specially targeted for JDK 1.4 ( Using a build targeted for one JVM on a different JVM may result in runtime errors). Now you see why a source release is easier for everyone.