TIBCO (which acquired Jaspersoft) has removed all iReport links. However, the Internet Archive has preserved the official landing page.

A year later, at the center's second anniversary, a small plaque hung next to Luc's photo: "For those who leave traces in files and in people." Theo placed a printed sheet on the table — the old Top Sellers template, repurposed, header changed to "Top Stories" — and felt the report settle into the room like an honest ledger of what had been done.

Everyone knew the story. Version 4.0.1 was the Excalibur of report designers. It was released in a brief, glorious window in 2012 before Jaspersoft started pushing everyone to the buggy, sluggish “new architecture.” It was lightweight. It never crashed. It understood sub-reports like a mother understands a crying baby. But Jaspersoft, in their corporate wisdom, had scrubbed it from their official site years ago. Downloading it now meant entering the dark web of legacy software.

Version 4.0.1 was a minor release that focused on stability and core library updates. You can still find official archives and community links for this version:

iReport Designer v4.0.1 Release Notes - Jaspersoft Community

When he launched the installer, a retro splash screen flickered. The UI was unchanged: toolbars, inspector panes, a palette of elements stacked like carpentry tools. He opened a sample .jrxml and the layout breathed with a familiar geometry. A report template appeared — "Top Sellers" — preloaded with placeholders and a faded company logo. Beneath the logo, a comment in blocky monospace: "Patch 4.0.1 — fixes CSV parser. — L."

: This specific minor release addressed several critical bugs, such as "Copy and Paste Variables" failures and UI issues on Mac and Linux platforms . Important Notes for Users