By
Stephen Shankland
Monday, February 12 2007 10:02 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,61989205,00.htm
SAN FRANCISCO--When it comes to open-sourcing Solaris and Java, patents
and politics are leading Sun Microsystems toward a change of heart.
The question is which open-source license should govern the building of
projects out of the company's technology crown jewels. The open-source Solaris
project began with a Community
Development and Distribution License (CDDL), and open-source Java employs version
2 of the General Public License (GPL).
Now, though, Sun likes the idea of governing both projects with the upcoming
GPL version 3, Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz said in a speech and an
interview at the company's analyst summit here Tuesday.
"Will we GPL Solaris? We want to ensure we can interact with the GPL
community and the Mozilla community and the BSD community," Schwartz said,
referring to three major open-source licenses. "I don't think we've been as
effective as I'd like to be in going after the GPL community, because there's an
awful lot of really bright people who think that's the license they prefer. That
discussion is incredibly central to recruiting more developers around the
world."
And regarding Java, Schwartz said in an interview: "We did version 2 with
Java because version 3 wasn't out. When we have version 3, Java will likely go
to 3."
Sun is considering the GPLv3 because it wants to appeal to developers who
favor the GPL. Another factor is a patent
protection expected to feature in the new version of the license, Schwartz
added.
The direction marks a new tactical approach for a company trying to find the
best way to engage with members of the open-source programming community, which
is influential but diverse. Specifically, Sun is working with one significant
party--the Free Software Foundation, which
invented the GPL and is overseeing the creation of version 3.
"Sun has now asked for our thoughts on moving the Solaris operating system to
GPLv3 and what they would need to do to engage the free software developer
community. Specifically, they see the advantages of creating a GNU system,
utilizing the kernel of Solaris," FSF Executive Director Peter Brown said in an
interview.
GNU and Solaris
GNU, which stands for Gnu's Not Unix, is the FSF's attempt to create a
nonproprietary clone of Unix. Right now, that effort is based on the Linux
kernel. But Solaris is another possibility for the core part of the GNU
operating system.
"A distribution of GNU utilizing the kernel of Solaris would certainly
receive at least as much support (from the FSF) as GNU with the kernel Linux,"
Brown said. "The fact that Sun are considering using GPLv3 would be of
particular interest to us."
But the release of Solaris under GPLv3 would be unlikely to bridge a
licensing divide that currently separates Solaris from Linux. Linux is covered
by GPLv2, and the operating system's leader Linus
Torvalds and his deputies have spurned GPLv3. Using GPLv3 for Solaris likely
would preclude Linux programmers from using Solaris software, and vice-versa.
That would make it difficult for Solaris to benefit from hardware support built
into Linux, or for Linux to benefit from performance tools built into Solaris.
Illuminata analyst Jonathan Eunice sees "artfulness with a little bit of
jujitsu" in Sun's open-source licensing decisions. When the company chose the
GPL for open-source Java, "it prevented the mining of that asset by IBM. It's
the same thing with Linux--it prevents the Linux community from strip-mining
Solaris capabilities," Eunice said.
For his part, Schwartz said patent protections expected in GPLv3 make it more
appealing than the current GPLv2. It's a "license you can use without fear of a
patent attack," he said.
And he's not concerned with a repeat of the criticisms aimed at Sun when it
picked the CDDL
instead of the one used by Linux. "We're in a different position now. The
community is a lot more comfortable with Sun now," Schwartz said.
A variety of ripple effects could stem from Sun's licensing choices. Done
right, it could invigorate and broaden developer support and consequently
improve the software itself. Done wrong, it could alienate those who already are
involved or scare away potentially interested parties.
Sun has a strong interest in a vibrant open-source community, which the
company believes will lead ultimately to stronger sales of its software and
hardware. Developers were the first to embrace Linux, and Sun believes the same
formula can apply to its own products.
Sun may have more clout than in the past--but licensing influences where
allies can be found. Apache
Harmony, an open-source Java project under the Apache License, is continuing in
parallel with Sun's project rather than joining forces, in part because Sun
chose the GPL for its Java.
Dual-license debate
It's not likely Sun would scrap the current
CDDL for Solaris and move to GPLv3. Instead, the Santa Clara, Calif. company is
considering a dual license--a move that's possible because Sun owns the
copyright to all the code in Solaris.
Stephen Harpster,
director of open-source software at Sun, asked OpenSolaris programmers on a
mailing list last week what they thought of dual CDDL and GPLv3 licenses. "We're
wondering if this would increase participation. There are a lot of GPL bigots
out there. If OpenSolaris were available under GPL, would there be more people
willing to participate who have to date ignored us because we're CDDL only?" he
asked.
The question triggered a long and sometimes emotional discussion.
"It's the latest fad to sell the project to the mad rush of people that are
not joining in and not getting involved," said Dennis Clarke, who operates the
Blastwave repository of Solaris software.
Rich Teer, president of Rite
Online and a member of the OpenSolaris Community
Advisory Board, also cast cold water on the change. "If this is some
misguided attempt to appease the GPL worshippers, I think it is doomed to
failure. Most of the GPLists I've seen are staunch supporters of v2, and are
unlikely to embrace v3. Given that, their attitudes towards OpenSolaris are
unlikely to change," he wrote.
And one Sun Solaris programmer on the list saw no need to look for the
approval of Linux fans.
"This is not the playground, we're not kids any more; we should not need them
to like us," wrote Sun programmer Casper Dik. "We didn't used to be so insecure
at Sun; why has this changed?"
But not all were down on the idea. Erast Benson, one of the
core developers behind a project to build an open-source operating system called
Nexenta, which would be based on OpenSolaris, believes a dual license could
attract more programmers.
"I bet Sun would like to increase outside contribution too. But with CDDL
alone, it is just not possible in the foreseeable future," Benson said. "I
believe if GPLv3 dual-licensing is done right, it will improve this situation
drastically."