The status for Wicket 1.3.x is: discontinued.
This branch is no longer maintained and will no longer receive any updates.
You should upgrade to Wicket 9.x at your earliest convenience.
This release branch does not follow semantic versioning. Upgrading between minor versions may break binary compatibility.
The most recent release in this branch is: {{site.wicket.version_13}}.
You can get the release using Maven or download it manually.
Use the following Maven dependency to use Wicket in your project:
{% highlight xml %} org.apache.wicket wicket {{site.wicket.version_13}} {% endhighlight xml %}
Add the snippet above to your project's POM in the dependency (management) section.
You can add more Wicket modules to your project by adding more dependencies (copy above snippet and change the artifactId
accordingly).
If you are not a Maven user, you can download the Wicket release manually.
Use the following links to download Wicket manually to build Wicket from source:
Note that the binary packages and the source packages don't contain any dependencies necessary to have your project working out of the box. We strongly urge you to use Maven (or Buildr, or Gradle) as your dependency management system.
The Apache mirroring system only hosts the latest version of each actively supported branch. When you need to download an older release you can find them in the archives.
Go to the Apache archives to find your specific version.
Apache Wicket has few requirements in order to work properly. In this section you‘ll find the minimum requirements for all Wicket modules. Specific modules may need additional libraries, such as file upload, date time APIs, CDI specifications, and more. See the module’s POM for more details on the necessary libraries.
This Wicket version requires at least the following Java version: JDK 1.4.0 or newer.
Not only is a particular version of Java necessary, Wicket also needs access to specific APIs.
This Wicket version requires at least the following Servlet API version: Servlet API 2.3 or newer. This is provided by your container, please see the documentation of your container to see which version of the Servlet specification is supported.
In addition to the Servlet API, Wicket uses SLF4J to let you choose your own implementation of a logging framework.
You cannot mix different Wicket versions in your project. You should always use the artifacts from a particular release. For example it is not possible to use Wicket Extensions 1.3 in a Wicket 1.5 project, or Wicket Spring 1.4.19 in a Wicket 1.5 project. The same goes for 3rd party libraries: make sure you always use a compatible version of your 3rd party library.
If you are migrating an existing application from earlier versions of Wicket you may find our migration guides invaluable: