Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Sun Microsystems Operating Systems Software Apache

Open Solaris Community Advisory Board Announced 25

An anonymous reader writes "Sun have announced the OpenSolaris community advisory board, chaired by Roy Felding (co founder and director of the Apache Foundatation), two community appointed people, Rich Teer and Al Hooper (both members of the infamous gang of six that helped to get Sun to restart Solaris x86) and two sun employees - well known open source evangelist Simon Phipps and kernel engineer Casper Dik. No date for the code release as of yet, but it can't be far off now."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Open Solaris Community Advisory Board Announced

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 05, 2005 @09:06PM (#12149789)
    If George Clooney starts dropping his pants at the meetings, I'm never going again.
  • solaris 10 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 05, 2005 @11:19PM (#12150741)
    I got fed up with Red Hat licensing... and made my way over to a free Solaris 10 binary. Gotta love it... now that they've got an insurance policy with OpenSolaris, I'm on my way back. Blow the politics, I want performance (and dTrace with Zones!!).
    • Re:solaris 10 (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SunFan ( 845761 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2005 @11:43PM (#12150893)

      Solaris 10 is really a huge leap. DTrace is useful right out of the box, no configuration needed, and there are lots of sample scripts in /usr/demo and appearing on websites. In practically no time at all (some reading of the manual, plus literally minutes of programming) I had a hacked-together script (based on a demo script) and was able to get a measure of the syscalls consuming the most total time in a program (not just counts of syscalls but the count _times_ the average time spent in each call). If a person gets enough knowledge to examine lots of kernel data directly in real-time, the potential of DTrace is mind-blowing (the *stat tools aren't even close).
      • Are you crazy. You are judging the OS based on one tool "DTrace". Solaris 10 is where it should have been years ago. It's playing catchup to aix, linux, hpux now.

  • Since Sun fucked up the SYS V ABI for PPC, I would assume they should release a fucking version of opensolaris since they have the code. And they fucked up the ABI so bad that almost all people who know about PPC, want to change it now.
    So now where is solaris for PPC.

    All I have to say is luckly Sun had nothing to do with the SYS V (elf) PPC64 ABI.
  • by HighOrbit ( 631451 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2005 @08:27AM (#12152749)
    How soon before Sun identifies all the components of Solaris that will be "open source" versus the components that will remain proprietary because of third-party ownership? Right now I only see DTrace as "open" on their web-site. They also say "Expect to see buildable Solaris code here in Q2 2005." Does "buildable Solaris code" just mean a few tools or does it mean a complete working system with kernel and userland?

    No doubt, if they can get a basic (but otherwise bootable and working) open source Solaris out there, they community will be able to soon (say within a few years) replace the proprietary components.

    A few weeks ago I bought myself a sparc box (netra T1 AC200), and after some initial problems with install media, finally got solaris installed. So far I am favorably impressed.
    • OpenSolaris will be a full, buildable system with as few components as possible (mainly drivers) available only as binary when it launches this quarter. The pilot program is already testing and building the code (Ben Rockwood [cuddletech.com], for example) and has started thinking laterally about new potential distributions like PPC.
  • Sigh (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 4of12 ( 97621 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2005 @10:18AM (#12153618) Homepage Journal
    Meanwhile, like another public figure [com.com], Sun Microsystems President Jon Schwartz says: [com.com]
    "Economies and nations need intellectual property (IP) to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps."
    when all evidence is that developing nations need technology, education, capital as well as respect for a functional legal system. That would include know-how that is gotten by any means, including even using industrial espionage. Consider Samuel Slater "stealing" the intellectual property of British textile manufacturers to establish factories in America - he was applauded by some American Founding Fathers.

    The progress of science has been enabled by open publication of theories and experiments. This same openness allows the best ideas to flourish and for development of technology-based industry wherever conditions permit, including lesser developed nations. The entire concept of "intellectual property" [gnu.org] is not just a brake on the efficient operation of the free market system, but also impedes the progress of science and technology as a whole, progress which has helped improve the lives of millions.

    Some resources are of limited supply and exhaustible; ideas are not such a resource.

    • This is complete and utter nonsense. Yes, pure sciences have, for the most part, been enabled by open publication, but there is quite an enormous step from understand nuclear forces in an atom to creating a nuclear power plant. Its steps like these that don't happen without money. Finally, money is not available without promise of return on money. I just cannot understand how you expect the great of actual product development to happen without IP. Perhaps you are only familiar with the software world,
  • Sun's Idea (Score:1, Troll)

    by turgid ( 580780 )
    Sun hopes that by open-sourcing Solaris they can attract a large community of developers to work on it, and that it will over-take Linux in development pace.

    It will be interesting to see if anyone currently developing Linux jumps ship to Solaris...

    /me ducks.

    • Re:Sun's Idea (Score:3, Insightful)

      by fintanr ( 872859 )
      Actually this isn't the intention, its not, and never has been, about trying to get Linux developers to jump ship to OpenSolaris [opensolaris.org]. There is a very large Solaris community out there already - they tend to be much more active on usenet and mail lists than on webforums, so people don't seem to see notice them as much.

      Innovation in OpenSolaris [opensolaris.org] will drive innovation in Linux, BSD etc, and vice versa. The all round beneficary of all of this is the consumer, be they end users at home, or large datacenters.

It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one.

Working...