From: j...@kill.spam.omsmotion.com Subject: Open-Source Solaris Date: 1999/10/13 Message-ID: <38050ce1.27693421@news.rockynet.com>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 536439382 X-Trace: 13 Oct 1999 16:59:28 -0600, 206.168.216.12 Organization: or the complete lack thereof... Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.security This isn't really a security related post but I'm sure it's of interest to the local dwellers... I just read in Internet Week that Sun will soon be releasing the source for Solaris. Anyone have any thoughts on that? What kind of impact would you expect this would have on the further development of Linux, if any? Would you expect a mass exodus to Solaris from Linux as a result? Is Solaris considered secure and robust enough to be any kind of threat to Linux? Or phrased another way, is there room for another *NIX kid on this block? Would you anticipate enough programmers to shift to Solaris to make a dent in Linux' progress? Or could we expect a lot more cross-platform development? Just curious... this one got me thinking and I just *hate* that ;) Jon
From: ht...@cus.cam.ac.uk (Dr H. T. Leung) Subject: Re: Open-Source Solaris Date: 1999/10/14 Message-ID: <7u42i3$jgg$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 536569121 References: <38050ce1.27693421@news.rockynet.com> To: j...@kill.spam.omsmotion.com Organization: University of Cambridge, England Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.security Originator: ht...@ursa.cus.cam.ac.uk Most probably it will be the other way round - linux people learning from the Solaris source code to improve the linux code. Not copying, but learning from. The real issue is, I believe, SUN still owns the Solaris derived source code (like the Apple public license) and people will be reluntant to work on debugging/improving some code that they might lose access to in the future. GNU public license guarantees that any derived code remains open and accessible in the future, but I doubt Sun (or apple, for that matter) is giving that privilege away. In any case, I haven't read the fine print of either license yet. In article <38050ce1.27693...@news.rockynet.com>, j...@kill.spam.omsmotion.com writes: |> |> This isn't really a security related post but I'm sure it's of |> interest to the local dwellers... |> |> I just read in Internet Week that Sun will soon be releasing the |> source for Solaris. Anyone have any thoughts on that? |> |> What kind of impact would you expect this would have on the further |> development of Linux, if any? |> Would you expect a mass exodus to Solaris from Linux as a result? |> Is Solaris considered secure and robust enough to be any kind of |> threat to Linux? Or phrased another way, is there room for another |> *NIX kid on this block? |> Would you anticipate enough programmers to shift to Solaris to make a |> dent in Linux' progress? Or could we expect a lot more cross-platform |> development? |> |> Just curious... this one got me thinking and I just *hate* that ;) |> |> Jon -- -------------------------------------------------- "What you don't care cannot hurt you." Chap. 7a, AMS-NS
From: Benny Amorsen <bamor...@netvision.dk> Subject: Re: Open-Source Solaris Date: 1999/10/14 Message-ID: <m3iu4a2hf6.fsf@sscnet.com>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 536655906 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sender: amor...@sscnet.com References: <38050ce1.27693421@news.rockynet.com> <7u42i3$jgg$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII X-Trace: news.euroconnect.net 939930207 195.97.190.4 (Thu, 14 Oct 1999 21:43:27 CEST) Organization: Euroconnect Mime-Version: 1.0 NNTP-Posting-Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 21:43:27 CEST Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.security >>>>> "HTL" == H T Leung <ht...@cus.cam.ac.uk> writes: HTL> Most probably it will be the other way round - linux people HTL> learning from the Solaris source code to improve the linux code. HTL> Not copying, but learning from. If you have read Solaris source code and you later work on Linux, you will find it hard to protect yourself from copyright infringement lawsuits from Sun. The same holds for the source for all other products. The FSF has had to deal with this, and their take on it is here: <URL http://www.fsf.org/prep/standards_3.html> Personally I would advise everyone to NOT look at the Solaris source code. Benny
From: v...@weyl.math.psu.edu (Alexander Viro) Subject: Re: Open-Source Solaris Date: 1999/10/14 Message-ID: <7u4nr9$s8s@weyl.math.psu.edu>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 536664805 References: <38050ce1.27693421@news.rockynet.com> <7u42i3$jgg$1@pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk> <m3iu4a2hf6.fsf@sscnet.com> Organization: -ENOENT Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.security In article <m3iu4a2hf6....@sscnet.com>, Benny Amorsen <bamor...@netvision.dk> wrote: >The FSF has had to deal with this, and their take on it is here: > ><URL http://www.fsf.org/prep/standards_3.html> Now, that's _true_ case of cure being worse than disease. Basically they advice to go for featuritis and deliberately write sucking code. Wonderful. NIH at extreme. >Personally I would advise everyone to NOT look at the Solaris source >code. Everyone who can't keep track on where he is taking code from, that is. The problem is not new - many BSD folks had worked on SunOS at different points (that is, aside of the fact that founders of Sun were BSD hackers). And they were able to continue work on BSD. Not to mention the fact that same BSD folks had to be careful with GNU code too - mixing GPLed and BSD-licensed code leads to the whole result being under GPL. Somehow they had survived... -- First off, I'd suggest printing out a copy of the GNU coding standards, and NOT read it. Burn them, it's a great symbolic gesture. Linus in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/CodingStyle