Novell woos Red Hat developers

By Peter Judge, ZDNet UK
Monday, January 28, 2008 08:40 AM

Novell has extended a set of development tools so they can be used to write applications and other software for rival Linux distributions, including Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS.

Novell announced earlier this week that its openSuse Build Service development tool, which already supports Novell's openSuse variations, Ubuntu and Debian, among others, will now support software from Red Hat, Novell's main competitor and the leader in enterprise Linux, and CentOS, a free "clone" of Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL).

OpenSuse Build Services is used by around 4,000 developers, and is evolving into a complete software development and collaboration environment, according to Andreas Jaeger, director of openSuse platforms at Novell. He said Novell "hadn't thought" about whether this would increase the flow of applications to either operating system, to the benefit of either Red Hat or Novell.

"As its name suggests, the openSuse project is committed to choice and opposed to the exclusion of innovation simply because it may have originated in another project," said Michael Loeffler, openSuse product manager at Novell. Novell wants to improve collaboration with all Linux developers and spread ideas quickly through the open-source community, added Loeffler.

OpenSuse is a community project, consisting of a set of tools and Web sites, created by Novell with the intention of promoting the use of Linux, the company has claimed.

Although there is a high degree of compatibility between Linux versions, developers can be hampered by differences that mean packages created for one distribution will not work on other versions.

Novell originally created the Build Services system to help programmers package software for different versions of openSuse, and extended it so programmers could create packages for different Linux versions from the same source code. It uses the system-imaging tool Kiwi.

"We are adding full support for building packages for all popular distributions directly at openSuse.org," said Francis Giannaros, a member of the independent openSuse board. "The addition of RHEL and CentOS as build targets further emphasizes the commitment of the openSuse Build Service to flexibility."

Even Red Hat welcomed the development: "Novell's announcement appears to be a positive step in making it easier for community members to build applications for multiple Linux distributions. Expanding the service to support Fedora, RHEL and CentOS should have obvious value for developers and end users alike," said Brian Stevens, chief technology officer and vice president of engineering at Red Hat.


See also:  Linux
WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 1 comments

I would guess someone has already pointed this out, but openSuse is only a year or two old, while Debian is the oldest active Linux distribution and does not derive from the Suse codebase, and neither does Ubuntu. In fact, there are few Suse/openSuse derived distributions currently being distributed. Please do a little more fact checking before printing such stories.
Posted by anonymous on Monday, January 28 2008 09:06 PM

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Mainsoft: Opening options for Java, .NET developers

Java

Mainsoft provides tools for running .NET code on the Java platform.


Read more »


Tags

  1. adobe
  2. apple
  3. apps
  4. big
  5. by
  6. china
  7. enterprise
  8. google
  9. hat
  10. iso
  11. linux
  12. microsoft
  13. mobile
  14. office
  15. ooxml
  16. open
  17. pc
  18. ready
  19. red
  20. salesforce
  21. software
  22. source
  23. standard
  24. sun
  25. users
  26. vista
  27. vote
  28. windows
  29. xml
  30. xp
 
Increase performance with eco-technology innovations
Simplify your infrastructure and unify management, while lowering power and cooling costs of your datacenter.
» Maximum flexibility with powerful blade technolgy
» Bring new services and applications online faster
» Lower energy use and cost
Oracle SOA Business Software Centre
Many companies are recognizing the need to adopt standards in their efforts to build service-oriented applications.
Secure the "Next-Gen SOA Infrastructure" & "Bringing SOA Value Patterns to Life" whitepapers here

» Visit the Power Center

Up close and personal with a merger

Blog thumbnail

What can you get for 13.9 billion buckaroos? For Hewlett-Packard, US$13.9 billion would allow you to buy your way into becoming the second biggest IT services company in the industry...... by Eileen Yu

Read more »