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Re: Interest from the FreeBSD camp

To: james rich <james.rich@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Interest from the FreeBSD camp
From: "Nathan J. Mehl" <memory@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2001 18:15:36 -0400
Cc: Russell Cattelan <cattelan@xxxxxxxxxxx>, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@xxxxxxx>, Juha Saarinen <juha@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx
In-reply-to: <Pine.GSO.4.05.10106131114130.26115-100000@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; from james.rich@xxxxxxxxxxxxx on Wed, Jun 13, 2001 at 11:19:53AM -0600
References: <20010613024149.Z8330@xxxxxxxxx> <Pine.GSO.4.05.10106131114130.26115-100000@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sender: owner-linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx
User-agent: Mutt/1.2.5i
In the immortal words of james rich (james.rich@xxxxxxxxxxxxx):
> 
> > expect that if Sun thought they could gain some sort of competetive
> > advantage from shipping Solaris 9 with XFS, they'd simply go ahead and
> > do so with the existing GPL code.
> 
> Since XFS integrates with the OS they would have to GPL Solaris (I think)
> - not likely.  

Why on earth do you make this assertion?  Solaris supports loadable
independent kernel modules just as linux does -- implementing xfs on
solaris in a way that didn't "contaminate" the kernel with the GPL
would be a pretty straightforward exercise.  (Well, at least, it would
probably not add significantly to the effort involved in a Solaris
port to begin with, which might be high.)

> With a BSD compatible license (such as would be required to
> make it into the *BSDs) Sun (or anyone else) could take the XFS code,
> modify it to work for them (and potentially not work for you - see
> MicroSoft and kerberos) and then sell the result *without helping SGI in
> any way*.  So SGI loses contributors to it's code and gains a competitor
> using its own filesystem!

I think we're all in agreement that a BSD-style license doesn't get
SGI anything but goodwill from the xBSD camp.  I just think the
paranoia about Sun is probably unjustified: as I've pointed out
elsewhere, they gain little and potentially lose a lot by adopting
XFS into Solaris's base distribution.

-n

------------------------------------------------------------<memory@xxxxxxxxx>
As someone who used to work for both the Soviet Union and an (unnamed here, 
but well-known otherwise) American phone company I can only confirm the rather
conspicious similarity.                                      (--Vadim Antonov)
<http://blank.org/memory/>----------------------------------------------------

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