The Questions Widget is a legacy application that was primarily maintained to support Liferay Ask. With the recent migration from Ask to Discuss (Liferay's new forum platform), this widget is no longer needed. Therefore, the Questions Widget is being deprecated to reduce technical debt and ongoing maintenance costs.
Release Notes
Search re-indexing has been optimized to deliver shorter re-index windows, especially for Objects-heavy deployments. In testing against production databases and architecture, we observed re-index improvements of 2x or more across the evaluated datasets, with gains reaching up to 10x on specific workloads. The optimizations primarily targeted improvements that scale with the volume and complexity of Object data being indexed.
Key Benefits:
Shorter re-index windows reduce maintenance overhead and downtime risk
Validated on a production-equivalent distributed architecture
Largest impact for Objects-heavy installations
Building on the automated database repair routines introduced in 2025.Q4, Liferay DXP continues to expand the set of repair processes that run during the upgrade. Based on additional research into customer upgrade issues, new repair routines automatically identify and correct further sources of database inconsistencies, orphan references, and invalid data — before they cause upgrade failures or performance bottlenecks. These repair routines remain targeted at known issues with data structures only, keeping your critical data content safe. Details of each repair process continue to be provided for review in the Upgrade Report after the database upgrade completes.
Key Benefits:
Minimize risks for current and future upgrades
Automates data maintenance
When using the Liferay DXP Database Partitioning feature, the system now enforces strict access controls ensuring only the authorized database partition is accessible for any given request. This completes foundational security work and extends proper enforcement to all Liferay entry points, including Headless APIs and Client Extensions.
Key Benefits:
Prevents unauthorized cross-partition data access in multi-tenant environments
Ensures consistent partition access enforcement across all Liferay entry points (Headless, Client Extensions)
This is a major version release that brings important platform updates and security enhancements alongside several necessary breaking changes to ensure the continued delivery and stability of Liferay Developer Studio.
Key Benefits:
Eclipse Platform Update: The underlying platform was updated to Eclipse 2025.12, taking advantage of the latest features and security updates from Eclipse. For more information, please see https://eclipse.dev/eclipse/news/4.38/.
Blade Version Update: The packaged Blade version was updated to 8.0.1-SNAPSHOT.
From now on CK Editor 5 will be the default rich text editor present in Liferay DXP. For those customers with custom plugins or other particularities over CK Editor 4 that don’t want to upgrade yet, they can enable the deprecation Feature Flag (FF-11235) to have CK Editor 4 as default in DXP.
Note: CK Editor 4 still remains the default editor on some of the DXP features, those which are in Maintenance Mode such as Knowledge Base or Blogs, these experiences will not be migrated to CK Editor 5.
From now on CK Editor 5 will be the default rich text editor present in Liferay DXP.
Note: CK Editor 4 still remains the default editor on some of the DXP features, those which are in Maintenance Mode such as Knowledge Base or Blogs, these experiences will not be migrated to CK Editor 5.
This release rounds out the Pages Management APIs with new endpoints, broader page-type coverage, and refinements to how references and scopes are handled. The updates close long-standing gaps — supporting more page types end-to-end, expanding the catalog of page elements and fragments exposed through the API, and hardening the data architecture around scopes and secure references. The result is more reliable imports, exports, and staging across every site component.
Key Benefits:
Broader API coverage: every page type is now supported end-to-end, not just the subset covered before.
Fewer surprises in staging: scope-aware identifiers catch missing references and deleted assets before they break the live site.
Consistent behavior across sites, staged environments, and imported content — the API no longer behaves differently depending on the page type.
We've refined how users discover and install Marketplace fragments from inside the Page Builder. Browsing, previewing, and installing partner and community fragments now feel native to the editing flow—fewer clicks, clearer discovery, and less context switching between the editor and the Marketplace. Native, already-installed, and Marketplace-available fragments now live side by side in the same experience.
Key Benefits:
Faster discovery and installation of Marketplace fragments without breaking the editing flow.
Clearer distinction between native, installed, and Marketplace-available fragments, so builders pick the right one at a glance.
Less context-switching: everything happens inside the Page Builder instead of jumping to the Marketplace and back.
The Style Book Editor has been improved to make managing design tokens simpler and more intuitive, with a clearer approach to editing colours and improved overall usability.
Key Benefits:
Faster updates: Edit colour tokens quickly through a single, clear interaction point.
Easier to use: Fewer competing controls reduce confusion and make the editor more approachable.
Consistent experience: Interaction patterns now align with the Page Editor, improving learnability.
Built for growth: A stronger foundation to support future design token capabilities and enhancements.
Fewer errors: Improved interactions reduce friction and mistakes when updating styles.
Style Book tokens are now aligned with Clay variables, ensuring that design changes apply consistently across UI components and themes.
Key Benefits:
Reliable theming: Changes made in Style Books now correctly reflect across all Clay-based components.
Real consistency: No more gaps where updating a token doesn’t affect parts of the UI (e.g. alerts, buttons).
Better visibility: Token changes are accurately represented in the Style Book editor.
Stronger foundation: Clay now exposes core variables (colours, typography, spacing) as CSS custom properties, making them easier to control.
Future-ready: Sets the groundwork for more advanced theming and design system capabilities.
The Global Menu has been promoted from Beta to GA and is now the default, fully supported navigation experience in Liferay DXP. It provides a single, consistent entry point to access applications and settings, with improved structure, stable behaviour, and integrated search for faster navigation.
We are excited to announce the General Availability (GA) of the OpenSearch 2 Connector v2.0.0 for 2026.Q1 and v2.1.0 for 2026.Q2. This release is an important milestone in our Cloud Native Experience strategy, providing a viable alternative for Liferay DXP users.
This version has undergone additional testing and validation to ensure dependency alignment with the latest OpenSearch 2 clients and field mapping consistency with our Elasticsearch 8 connector.
The new version of the application is will be released on Liferay Marketplace.
Key Benefits:
- Native AWS Integration & Cost Optimization: Connect Liferay DXP with AWS OpenSearch Service. By leveraging managed infrastructure, organizations can reduce operational overhead, streamline their cloud stack, and optimize hosting costs through AWS-native service configurations.
- Flexible Search Architecture Production-ready alternative to Elasticsearch. This connector ensures that Liferay DXP remains flexible, allowing you to choose the search engine that best aligns with your infrastructure requirements and corporate standards.
Note: Liferay supports the connector and its features. While Liferay can provide an example deployment configurations for AWS OpenSearch Service, the management and maintenance of the underlying service remain the responsibility of the infrastructure provider.
Manage site updates with total confidence using the new Maintenance Mode. This feature allows Site Administrators to take a site offline for the public while maintaining full operational access behind the scenes. When enabled, visitors receive a dedicated maintenance page with the correct SEO-friendly status (HTTP 503), while administrators can continue to navigate, edit, and verify site pages to ensure everything is perfect before going live again.
Key Benefits:
Safe Production Verification: Unlike standard deactivation, Maintenance Mode allows admins to view and test the full site experience live, ensuring that deployments are successful before the public ever sees them.
SEO Protection: By serving a proper 503 Service Unavailable status, the system tells search engines that the downtime is temporary, protecting your search rankings during major updates or migrations.
Users can select and reorder categories for a blog’s friendly URL, so they can preview the order of the categories in the friendly URL and determine how the categories will be presented in the friendly URL along with the title.
Users are able to set different values for the asset types separators in the friendly URLs. Also, they are able to reset to default value, so for those asset types that they have clicked on this option, the separator will be the value defined by default for those specific asset types.
This release expands the support of the Timeline History feature to Blogs, Wiki pages, Bookmarks, Forms, Knowledge base, Message boards, and Categories. The feature enhances the publication toolbar with tools to detect and manage collaboration conflicts.
A timeline icon shows recent modifications in the same asset, which may have been done in production or parallel Publications.
The user can view, discard, or move these changes directly from the toolbar.
Warning icons appear to make users aware of current conflicts in the Publication.
Key benefits:
Enhanced context for content editors and managers for a streamlined collaboration.
New capabilities to detect conflicts before publishing time, while users may have more time to decide how to resolve conflicts without the go-live pressure.
This set of improvements aims to simplify the manual work users must do to resolve conflicts when publishing a publication. Now, instead of raising a conflict to be resolved manually by the user, the system will try to overwrite conflicting changes in production with the modifications done in the publication, meaning that the Modification and Modification deletion conflict types won’t be presented for the user anymore.
In the case of a Deletion modification conflict, the system won’t resolve it automatically, but now it makes it easier to keep the modifications made in the publication. In the Conflicting changes screen, we added a button with the option to "Restore in Production" for conflicts in which the asset was deleted from production and is now in the Recycle bin.
Key benefits:
Reduce the amount of manual work by automatically solving most of the conflicts.
Improve user satisfaction and reliability on publications by ensuring that assets supported by Recycle Bin can be quickly restored, avoiding requiring the user to discard needed changes.
Provided an option to turn the “Out-of-date” feature on/off. When turned on (the default behavior before this release), ongoing publications created in previous Liferay versions were labeled as “Out-of-date” after the upgrade and could not be modified or published. This feature is now off by default, and users can publish these publications without Liferay support.
Key benefit:
Increase manageability over publications and the ability to publish any previous modification, including after Liferay upgrades.
This release introduces in-context translation for text-based form fields (Text, Rich Text, and Textarea) directly within the page editor. This empowers content creators to easily create localized form experiences for their users, enabling them to complete forms in their preferred language. Only designated localizable form fields will be translated, ensuring precise control over localized content. |
The two separate option menus currently displayed in the Web Content Display widget have been merged into a single, consolidated dropdown menu for content creators. This new menu will improve the user experience by reducing confusion and unnecessary clicks, ensuring all relevant widget actions (e.g., Hide Widget, Duplicate, Export/Import, etc.) are easily accessible.