All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Sun raises option of GPL for Solaris

by Tom Sanders at Sun Microsystems in Santa Clara, CA

14 Nov 2006

Be the first to comment

  • Tweet this
Sun Microsystems
Sun appears to have changed its views on the value of the GPL

Sun Microsystems has opened the door to adopting the General Public Licence (GPL) for its Solaris operating system. 

Chief executive Jonathan Schwartz raised the idea at a company event marking the release of Java SE and Java ME components under the GPL.

Rich Green, Sun's executive vice president for software, said in response to a question from Schwarz: "Today's event and the feedback that we received casts a very positive light on our choices going forward.

"The familiarity and comfort level with the licence we've chosen for Java is going to drive a lot of the decision making for the existing technologies that we've open sourced."

Solaris was released early last year under Sun's open source Common Development and Distribution Licence (CDDL), prompting a storm of criticism

The CDDL offers a patent grant to all developers and users of CDDL software, but does not extend protection to projects outside the CDDL.

Contrary to the GPL, Sun's open source licence also lacks a provision that requires developers to publish the source code of any adjustments made to the software.

The limited patent protection drew fire from open source advocate Bruce Perens, who referred to Sun as a "spoiler" out to fragment the open source community.

Sun hit back at the CDDL critics, claiming that the GPL is unfair and predatory because it requires developers to publish changes to the source code. 

Schwartz, who was chief operating officer at the time, claimed that the GPL was used unfairly to force developers to share their work because the creators had a hidden agenda of forcing a social model on the world.

Sun now seems to have changed its views on the value of the GPL. When the vendor released its Glassfish application server last year, it did so under the CDDL.

Today it added the GPL as a second licence to the Glassfish code, allowing developers to choose either. A similar scenario could be a likely future for Solaris.

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

IT priorities for 2012

What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?

99%

0%

1%

0%

0%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Accurev

Top 5 software development challenges

This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes

Talend

Rubbish in, rubbish enterprise

Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)

Field/Site Engineering Manager/Leader

Field/Site Engineering Manager/Leader Brief: Polar...

Product Manager, Open Repository (ref:BMC/PMR)

Product Manager, Open Repository (ref:BMC/PMR) End...

Java/JEE Software Developer-Dotcom/eCommerce Software House

Java/J2EE Software Developer/Programmer - Dotcom/ eCommerce...

Field/Site Engineering Manager/Leader

Field/Site Engineering Manager/Leader Brief: Polar...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.