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Kernel? No. CD? Yes.

Kernel? No. CD? Yes.

Posted Oct 14, 2008 17:59 UTC (Tue) by drag (guest, #31333)
In reply to: Kernel? No. CD? Yes. by paulj
Parent article: Linux Summit will preview new advanced file system (SearchEnterpriseLinux.com)

According to the CDDL license binding it to Linux (which is under the GPL) is illegal.

That's all there really is to it. Even if a Sun developer has a 'promise not to sue' attitude.. Which are you going to beleive?

A) The guy's blog
B) The legally binding copyright licensing included with the source code

?

So it really doesn't fundamentally matter what some guy says or what the company releases in the press release. It doesn't matter if you or I beleive them or any such thing. The CDDL is incompatible by design, that is to say: "on purpose", and if Sun wants to make it legal to have ZFS on Linux then it's up to them to modify the CDDL or dual license it to allow that to happen.

That is how you know they are serious or not. Everything else is just hand waving.

They could say that from now on the sky is going to be green and purple. And unless the sky eventually changes color you know that they are probably full of crap, no matter how much they beleive it themselves.

As far as Linux goes... ZFS is a file system. File systems are very hard to do and get stable. No Linux kernel hacker would be willing to touch ZFS with a ten foot pole (since the original copyright holder has made it obvious through the bundled license that it's not to be used with Linux) and thus it has ZERO chance of being incorporated into Linux unless somebody takes the time to rewrite a ZFS implimentation completely from scratch. And if the File system doesn't get officially incorporated into Linux then it'll end up like ReiserFsv4. Nobody else will care, nobody would use it for anything important if they have half a brain.


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Kernel? No. CD? Yes.

Posted Oct 14, 2008 22:25 UTC (Tue) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (14 responses)

According to the CDDL license binding it to Linux (which is under the GPL) is illegal.

Can you point out the problem clause? That'd be news to a good few people.

You're asking us now to take your opinion on authority, while at the same time arguing against the authority of a well-respected Sun developer. That doesn't make sense.

Next, you argue from an assumption that Sun wants, nay must to donate its code to Linux. This assumption is clearly flawed, disappointing as that may be to you. I won't speculate much here, but I think Bryan Cantrill has commented on LWN articles before about what Sun wanted. I'll just note that Sun ZFS and DTrace is shipping just fine with other OSes (proprietary and free).

The code is out there, it's clearly free to re-use. It's not Suns' job to have to convince one group of people that they should find a way to agree to not sue each other for distributing CDDL code..

NB: I enjoy reading your comments on LWN, and apologise in advance for any possible offence. ;)

Kernel? No. CD? Yes.

Posted Oct 14, 2008 22:37 UTC (Tue) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (1 responses)

Oh, reminder: I work for Sun.

Kernel? No. CD? Yes.

Posted Oct 15, 2008 22:42 UTC (Wed) by drag (guest, #31333) [Link]

> NB: I enjoy reading your comments on LWN, and apologise in advance for any possible offence. ;)

Oh, don't worry about that. I try to get out there and say things so that people challenge me and try to correct my misconceptions. So I am much more worried about offending other people, then worrying about them offending me. Since I depend on them.

> Can you point out the problem clause? That'd be news to a good few people.

I think the biggest one is the explicite patent license stuff in second 6 and mentioned other places on the license. This sort of thing is a extra requirement and thus violates the GPL notions of 'no additional restrictions'

I was hoping that the GPLv3 would be more compatible, but as far as the Linux kernel it's going to be GPLv2 for pretty much the rest of enternity at this point.

The CDDL is a fine license otherwise. Much more well suited for what Sun needs.

It's essentially a cleaned up version of the MPL and the Mozilla stuff has to be tripled license to remain GPL compatible.

Different parts of Sun seem to agree with me. Netbeans, for example, is dual licensed under CDDL and GPLv2+classpath exception. Could be just political theater (which isn't bad), but I donno.

I think that Linux developers are generally not going to touch ZFS unless they get a specific nod from Sun itself, probably in the form of a GPL exception or dual license, for the ZFS stuff.

"Sun wants"

Posted Oct 15, 2008 10:00 UTC (Wed) by tialaramex (subscriber, #21167) [Link] (11 responses)

“Next, you argue from an assumption that Sun wants, nay must to donate its code to Linux. This assumption is clearly flawed, disappointing as that may be to you. I won't speculate much here, but I think Bryan Cantrill has commented on LWN articles before about what Sun wanted. I'll just note that Sun ZFS and DTrace is shipping just fine with other OSes (proprietary and free).”

There is no such assumption, nor an argument based on it. Sun hasn't been capable of the single-mindedness you're implying for at least a decade. Some elements at Sun still think it is 1995 and are doing the "You can't take Linux seriously" line, which even Microsoft grew out of eventually. Some elements want Sun to repeat its earlier transformation and put Solaris out to pasture in favour of new code with a compatibility layer. It should be no surprise that people paid to maintain Solaris don't like /that/ idea. Some elements want Sun to be a hardware company and jettison most of the software, others think the hardware is just a boat anchor and Sun ought to be hardware-agnostic. Clearly some elements at Sun would be delighted to see ZFS everywhere, while others think (probably wrongly) that it's a secret sauce worth keeping from the "competition" whoever that is today.

We're used to this in Linux. Linux doesn't "want" anything in particular either. But it does seem laughable when individual Sun employees turn up to tell us what "Sun" does or does not want and it just reflects their own personal feelings. I've worked for a tiny company with maybe twelve individual employees, and still you would get a very different idea of what the company's direction was from the CEO than from Sales or Engineering people.

If you want an idea of the Linux experience of individual smart people turning up and making promises about license conditions, go look at the Larry McVoy/ Bitkeeper history. That's what Bryan's word is worth to us. Citing other projects as willing to include ZFS neither answers the issue of its license nor even tells us what Sun's real intentions are.

"Sun wants"

Posted Oct 15, 2008 12:47 UTC (Wed) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link]

There is no such assumption, nor an argument based on it.

I guess I misunderstood drag then, where he wrote:

if Sun wants to make it legal to have ZFS on Linux then it's up to them to.... That is how you know they are serious or not.

As for corporate single-mindedness, few non-trivial corporations are capable of it. That said they most definitely are capable of making single-minded, executive decisions - and Suns' mind in that respect wrt open-sourcing Solaris is very clear. That decision was made based on some weighting of the corporation's collective wisdom. Various weighty Sun people, from executives to notable engineers have given their view, in various places. Their opinions are not Suns' per se, but they are most definately a significant subset..

To go further would be to philosophise way too much about corporate structures, so I'll stop. ;)

As for BitKeeper - When did LMcVoy ever open-source BitKeeper? What data of Linux has Sun locked in a proprietary format?? This seems a very flawed analogy (and please, let's try to avoid arguing too much by analogy).

I'm not asking for LWN readers to start loving Sun (though, a lot of Sun engineering work does go to benefit Unix generally, including Linux). However arguments based around FUD, logical fallacies and false-equivalences seem quite below the normal, high standards of commentators here.

Would grudging respect be too much to ask for? :) (you may assume I'm inclined to make similar arguments at work, if the need arises, not that my opinion carries much of a weighting ;) ).

"Sun wants"

Posted Oct 15, 2008 13:02 UTC (Wed) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (9 responses)

If you want an idea of the Linux experience of individual smart people turning up and making promises about license conditions, go look at the Larry McVoy/ Bitkeeper history. That's what Bryan's word is worth to us.

Ok, I think I see what you're trying to say, and it's already been dealt with in my earlier replies, but lets try again: You don't need Bryan Cantrill's word, cause the code is published under the CDDL. You can just ask your own lawyer.

Where do you get this FUD from btw? I know Jon published an "Beware the evils of Sun!" piece here, but his claims about CDDL/GPL compatibility there were highly specific to GPL projects where contributors mistrust each other so much they are incapable of agreeing not to sue each other for incorporating and distributing 3rd-pary free software.. ;)

Quite succinct description of Linux kernel, yes...

Posted Oct 15, 2008 13:48 UTC (Wed) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link] (8 responses)

Yahoo! Exactly! That's definition of linux kernel!

Fact 1: SCO is kernel contributor.
Fact 2: IBM is kernel contributor.
Fact 3: SCO is currently suing IBM over - details on well-known site.

Do you STILL want to say that linux is not an

GPL project where contributors mistrust each other so much they are incapable of agreeing not to sue each other for incorporating and distributing 3rd-pary free software.. ;)

Fact is: when you include "big boyz" of software world (and list of kernel contributors read like "who is who in the world of IT" - only Microsoft and Rambus are not included... yet) in a single project... litigation is not out of the question. And how the hell can you even think what you wrote when SCO is not yet liquidated... it's frankly beyond my understanding...

Quite succinct description of Linux kernel, yes...

Posted Oct 15, 2008 14:02 UTC (Wed) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (7 responses)

I am responding specifically to the accusation that Sun-copyrighted CDDL code being incorporated with GPLed code could lead to those involved in the GPLed code being sued by Sun.

That's FUD..

So your reply seems misdirected.

That's not ACCUSATION, that's POSSIBILITY...

Posted Oct 15, 2008 14:26 UTC (Wed) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link] (6 responses)

I am responding specifically to the accusation that Sun- copyrighted CDDL code being incorporated with GPLed code could lead to those involved in the GPLed code being sued by Sun.

What kind of response is this? Could Sun sue these people? Absolutely: Sun is contributor to Linux Kernel and so will have the right to sue. Will Sun sue such contributors? Who knows? When Caldera sponsored SMP patches to Linux is was also "quote obvious" it'll not sue other contributors... and it turned out to be not true.

Corporations are not people - you can not trust them! CEO come and go, shareholders can overturn CEO decisions, etc. Only written binding contracts can be trusted.

That's FUD..

Yes, it's FUD, but it's not groundless FUD. This scenario is quite real - no matter how unlikely it looks today. ZFS adoption can affect millions (perhaps billions) of people. To base their wellfare on faith in future Sun's decitions... looks reckless.

It all comes down to the question: do you trust FSF lawers more then you trust Sun's developers where licensing schemes are concerned? And sure as hell I'll trust FSF's lawers more then Sun's developers. And not because I don't trust Sun's developers.

That's not ACCUSATION, that's POSSIBILITY...

Posted Oct 15, 2008 15:19 UTC (Wed) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (5 responses)

So Sun would be the one sueing, but not using the CDDL, but for GPL infringement? Even where the GPL copyright holders have agreed to allow CDDL code? I have to say I havn't thought about that one, and I presume the judge won't much either before throwing out such a suit...

Whether its practical for Linux copyright holders to reach such an agreement, I've no idea. However, for many other projects (GPL, BSD or otherwise), such agreement is easily achievable - and on that count at least some of the CDDL/GPL "Sun could sue you!" claims are just pure FUD.

Anyway.. Let's call it a day now.

Exception for CDDL? Possible yet unlikely...

Posted Oct 15, 2008 17:16 UTC (Wed) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link] (4 responses)

So Sun would be the one sueing, but not using the CDDL, but for GPL infringement?

In a word - yes.

I have to say I havn't thought about that one, and I presume the judge won't much either before throwing out such a suit...

Why not? It's well-known fact that GPL and CDDL are like oil and water. And it's also well-known fact that Linux kernel is licensed in such a way that any "exceptions" are not easy to add (on purpose BTW). So it does not look like a stretch that Sun have chosen CDDL for ZFS to keep it out of Linux kernel - making both free, but separate pieces of code. If this was design all along (and it certainly looks like this from outside) then why do you think Sun will not sue the trespassers? Especially if it has the right to do so?

Even where the GPL copyright holders have agreed to allow CDDL code?

Sun is one of these holders, you know. Sun, too, will be forced to sign the paper which says "as special exception you can, blah, blah, blah". Along with Broadcom, Dell, IBM, Intel and countless others. And if Sun wanted such an outcome it always had other option: just dual-license the thing under CDDL and GPL (like Mozilla did). Because Sun does not do what is simple (GPL already has some kind of approval from Sun's lawers - it's license of OpenOffice.org, after all) and instead preaches strange legal theories on blogs and forums the general consensus is: "either Sun's management does not want to have ZFS in Linux at all or it wants to use it as a trap". What Sun's developers think is not very relevant here. Neither choice very appealing but most people thing that first opinion is closer to the truth (because second is much uglier).

Whether its practical for Linux copyright holders to reach such an agreement, I've no idea.

Possible but impractical. It's more-or-less the same process as a switch to GPLv3 and it was investigated quite thoroughly. If Linux deverloper wanted ZFS really badly they can always start adding such exception, ask Sun to sign it too (and get approval or rejection in which case they'll be forced to rewrite parts of kernel), etc. I'm afraid it takes at least few years and by then btrfs will be ready to do what ZFS does now. Yes, ZFS is great but it's not THAT great...

However, for many other projects (GPL, BSD or otherwise), such agreement is easily achievable - and on that count at least some of the CDDL/GPL "Sun could sue you!" claims are just pure FUD.

What other GPLed kernel are out there to use ZFS? Other CDDL projects can be usable (and will be usable, I'm sure). Just not ZFS. I think dtrace can be usable, for example (you need hooks in kernel, true - but these must be rewritten anyway and userspace<->kernelspace barrier was always considered as GPL barrier so CDDLed userspace tools can be used).

Exception for CDDL? Possible yet unlikely...

Posted Oct 16, 2008 8:31 UTC (Thu) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (3 responses)

And if Sun wanted such an outcome it always had other option: just dual-license the thing under CDDL and GPL (like Mozilla did).

This makes sense only if you ignore the various, quite sensible reasons given by several Sun notables as to why the GPL and/or dual-licensing would not have worked for Solaris.

Dual-licensing: I'm reasonably sure at least one very well-respected engineer would have argued strongly against dual-licensing. It can lead to licence-forks. I.e. dual-licensing is worse than choosing the inferior of the two (incompatible) licences.

GPL: Is very incompatible with other licences (as we know from this thread). I.e. it would have made it difficult for Sun and others particularly to ship things like non-GPL (e.g. proprietary) drivers, filesystems and volume-managers with Solaris. Further, the GPLv2 does not really address patent issues, and Sun is a regular target for patent suits.

So yes, Sun could have chosen the GPL, but instead chose the CDDL simply to frustrate Linux users - this makes perfect sense if you just block out all the other, practical reasons that relate to Sun and its needs for Solaris.

Really, the problem here is that Linux contributors don't sign contributors agreements. Rather than figure out how to fix that and regain some kind of collectively-empowered, executive control, you instead direct your ire at Sun...

And these people are talking about FUD?

Posted Oct 16, 2008 13:55 UTC (Thu) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link] (1 responses)

This makes sense only if you ignore the various, quite sensible reasons given by several Sun notables as to why the GPL and/or dual- licensing would not have worked for Solaris.

I'm yet to see sensible reasons.

Dual-licensing: I'm reasonably sure at least one very well- respected engineer would have argued strongly against dual-licensing. It can lead to licence-forks. I.e. dual-licensing is worse than choosing the inferior of the two (incompatible) licences.

Now we have interesting dilemma: position of at least one very well- respected engineer (in Sun, I presume?) vs position of thousands of Linux developers. Hmm... Who to choose. Sorry, Sun's engeeners are revered - but not to this degree.

How many projects can you name where dual-licensing actually led to fork? There are hundreds, may be thousands dual-licensed projects (if you count not just huge projects like Firefox but smaller ones like bunch of CPAN addons). I never seen situation where addition of the license option led to fork. Removal? Sure, it can produce forks. XFree86 (changes made it incompatible with GPL, XFree86 is history now), Firefox (in addition to GPL or MPL license you must agree to the logo license and many developers find it quite onerous => we have IceCat and Iceweasel). Addition or options? Never heard of this. How often this happen, really? Can you name at least one sample?

Conclusion: FUD.

GPL: Is very incompatible with other licences (as we know from this thread).

Number of licenses does not matter. I can generate million GPL- compatible and CDDL-incompatible licenses with a simple script in five minutes. Most projects out there are GPL-compatible. Most projects out there are CDDL-incompatible. It was discussed to death.

Conclusion: FUD.

I.e. it would have made it difficult for Sun and others particularly to ship things like non-GPL (e.g. proprietary) drivers, filesystems and volume-managers with Solaris.

Somehow this is not a problem for Java or OpenOffice.org but problem for Solaris?

Conclusion: FUD.

Further, the GPLv2 does not really address patent issues, and Sun is a regular target for patent suits.

This is at least valid reason. But why this is not a problem for Java, then? Java is not important for Java company? don't make me laugh.

Conclusion: FUD.

So yes, Sun could have chosen the GPL, but instead chose the CDDL simply to frustrate Linux users - this makes perfect sense if you just block out all the other, practical reasons that relate to Sun and its needs for Solaris.

No it makes perfect sense if you know for the fact that Sun released other stategically important projects under GPL before releasing Solaris under CDDL. What exactly is different with Solaris and how it's needs differ from Java and OpenOffice.org? I never heard a plausible explanation. Binary extensions, patents, etc, etc - all these problems are equally applicable to Java, OpenOffice.org, and Solaris. I know if one plausible reason and one plausible reason ONLY: CDDL makes it impossible to implaint Solaris's goodies in Linux and so Solaris gets much needed baubles to preach which can not be just included in Linux. Because Sun's JDK and OpenOffice.org are top dogs in relavant markets and Open Solaris is underdog. Quite valid reason and I'm ready to agree that it works just fine - but why all the pusturing and empty screams "you just don't know about Solaris needs! this mythical secret needs are served so much better by CDDL then GPL - but we'll never disclose them! this is not about Linux! really! believe us!". It just does not look convincing.

Really, the problem here is that Linux contributors don't sign contributors agreements. Rather than figure out how to fix that and regain some kind of collectively-empowered, executive control, you instead direct your ire at Sun...

No, the problem here is position of Sun who puts itself above ALL OTHER Linux contributors. Basically it says: oh, sure you can use ZFS - but only of YOU ALL (Dell, IBM, Intel, etc) agree to our terms. This is called ultimatum: the rules which serve hundreds of companies and thousands of people should be changed just for Sun or else... you can not use ZFS. Linux community considered this ultimatum and more-or-less unanimously decided: ZFS is great but... it's just not worth it.

The ire mostly goes not against Sun's ultimatum. It's Sun's right and there are nothing Linux community can do about it (except accept or reject - it rejected it). Sun does not want to see ZFS included in Linux? Fine - we'll not do this. We respect Sun's wish. It's his filesystem Sun and only Sun can decide if he wants to see it in Linux or not. Ire goes against vain tries of Sun engineers to say that it's not an ultimatum and it's goal is not to keep ZFS out of Linux reach. If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, looks like a duck... you can be reasonably sure it is a duck.

I'm not sure what game Sun is playing here but to say that everyone else must abandon GPL for unknown reason and claim that "it's not an attack" is just dishonest.

Ok, there are another explanation: Sun honestly believe that it's more important then ALL OTHER companies involved in Linux. Dell, IBM, Intel, Novell, RedHad... all their combined voices weight less then voice of at least one very well-respected engineer. If that's so then honestly I don't even know a psychiatrist who can even hope to cure such an acute megalomania...

And these people are talking about FUD?

Posted Oct 16, 2008 16:51 UTC (Thu) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link]

Whether you agree with the engineers opinion or not on dual-licensing is mostly irrelevant - I'm telling you what the perceived wisdom is among some very senior engineers. You don't have to take their view on dual-licensing on authority at all, you just have to understand that that person is well-respected inside the group responsible for Solaris - that's the cultural background. The point being it has nothing to do with Linux.

As for different Sun software being licensed under different licences, a reasonable person might infer that these licensing decisions are taken in close consultation with, if not by, the groups responsible for the software concerned, and that different groups have different needs and even views. I have absolutely no idea why Java or OpenOffice or whatever are licensed the way they are. My perspective is from the Solaris group..

Anyway, you have your view. I've given mine.

Yet another possibility...

Posted Oct 16, 2008 14:02 UTC (Thu) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link]

Oh, it's possible that real reason is even more subtle: since currently change of Linux's license is very-very hard and there are no entity to sue all this fine arsenal of Microsoft's patents is not really usable. It can sue some distributors and produce ire or EU, but it can not change the license. If there was single entity which can relicense Linux then this entity becomes target of Microsoft's attack with non-zero chance of success.

While phrase the problem here is that Linux contributors don't sign contributors agreements points in this direction I just don't believe Microsoft will be sooo deep. It's not above dirty tricks but it's not so subtle... It looks more like scenario of RPG...


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