Thank you to all our contributors!
JHipster has a lot of contributors, and there are official contributions from popular projects and companies as well. Below is a list of companies and projects contributing to JHipster. We are very thankful for their contributions.
Companies contributing to JHipster
- Ippon Technologies, which provides time and hardware to @juliendubois so he can improve the project.
- XebiaLabs, which provides time and hardware to @deepu105 so he can improve the project.
- Google contributed the Kubernetes sub-generator. It is maintained by Ray Tsang.
- Heroku contributed the Heroku sub-generator. It is maintained by Joe Kutner.
- Boxfuse has added specific support for JHipster. It is maintained by Axel Fontaine.
- Stormpath contributed the Stormpath module. It is maintained by Matt Raible.
- Software AG, which sponsors Ehcache, contributed to greatly improve our Ehcache support.
- Hazelcast contributed to greatly improve our Hazelcast support.
- Datical, the makers of Liquibase, have continuously helped us and corrected bugs for our Liquibase support.
Projects and communities contributing to JHipster
JHipster works closely with other OSS communities, which often contribute to the project. Important contributions have been made by:
- UI Router, the Angular router used by JHipster.
- Webpack, the module bundler that JHipster uses for its Angular 2 support.
Companies helping to develop JHipster
These companies help us to develop JHipster
- JetBrains, which provides us free licenses for the incredible IntelliJ IDEA, ultimate edition. A true hipster would never code with Eclipse :-)
- npms.io which provides the search engine used for our marketplace.
- Pivotal, which gives us free credits on their Pivotal Web Services cloud
- ElephantSQL, which gives us several of their “Pretty Panda” Postgresql databases.
- YourKit, LLC, which gives us free licenses for the YourKit Java profiler.
- EJ Technologies, which gives us free licenses for the JProfiler Java profiler.
And a very special thanks to the development team from Galeries Lafayette, which had the original idea of making Grunt work with Ant, and create a modern Web front-end on top of a more classical Spring MVC application.