A Sun engineer on Linux
Posted Sep 24, 2004 4:07 UTC (Fri) by
cajal (guest, #4167)
In reply to:
A Sun engineer on Linux by hppnq
Parent article:
A Sun engineer on Linux
I'm not saying that disagreement constitunes bashing. But I think the "oh look, they got money
from Microsoft, now they're evil" and the "SPARC sucks, Sun is dying" type comments do
constitute bashing, and I'm seeing more of them on LWN over time.
I disagree with just about everything else you said. The majority of IBM's pSeries machines run
AIX, if for no other reason than Linux hardware support for high-end pSeries has been pretty
incomplete, and it's only recently that IBM has started filling in those holes: It was only a few
months ago that Linux got hipersockets support on pSeries; and most of the p630's failover and
clustering abilities are only available under AIX (just to pull two examples off the top of my
head). Despite many press articles about IBM's love affair with the penguin, IBM is still pushing
their suite of proprietary software: AIX, DB2, WebSphere, z/OS and i5/OS (OS/400); trust me, we
run all of them (except i5/OS) at my University (I work in the central IT dept. there and walk by
the mainframe and racks of pSeries machines daily). While their long-term plan might be to
migrate customers to AIX, it is just that: a *long-term* plan, i.e. on the order of a decade. This
isn't to say that Linux sucks, just that not everyone wants to use it and that there are some
things it just can't do (yet). But I'm getting off-topic....
Re: Sun, I stand by my statement. Sun has decades of experience with Solaris. Why should they
abandon that? Yes, they have to patch Solaris (although I wouldn't use inflammatory words like
"frantically" to describe Sun's patching schedule). Every OS needs regular patches. But Sun has
expertise with Solaris. It makes no sense for them to throw that away and start all over with
Linux. FYI, the patching I was referring to was adding new abilities to Linux to bring it up to par
with Solaris; I didn't mean routine bugfixes and security updates.
As for not grasping the way open source development works, I'm afraid you're mistaken. In fact,
I'm currently being funded by a grant from the Mellon Foundation to develop open source p2p
and security software. Our web site is http://lionshare.its.psu.edu/. We're releasing parts of it
under the GPL and other parts under a modified Apache 1.1 License. I was just in the final
meeting with the University lawyers about the licensing this morning. In fact, we'll be making our
first public release of the source at the Internet2 Fall Members Meeting in Austin next week.
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