Sun Microsystems chief executive Jonathan
Schwartz is looking to make peace with the development community behind the
Linux operating system.
A day after Linux creator Linus Torvalds lashed out against the server vendor
over its open source track record, the Schwartz posted an
open
letter on his blog and invited Torvalds to dinner at his home.
Torvalds earlier this week denounced Sun as a dishonest open source player in
a posting on the Linux Kernel Developer mailing list.
Linux developers have been debating the forthcoming third version of the
General Public Licence.
Although Torvalds reiterated his view that there is no
reason for the Linux kernel to switch licences, he added that he might change
his mind if Sun picked GPLv3 for its Solaris operating system.
Torvalds would be especially interested in adopting Sun's ZFS file system,
Torvalds said in an email on Tuesday.
"Maybe ZFS is worthwhile enough that I'm willing to go to the effort of
trying to relicense the kernel,"
Torvalds
wrote.
"But quite frankly, I can almost guarantee that Sun won't release ZFS under
the GPLv3 even if they release other parts. Because if they did, they'd lose the
patent protection."
Schwartz countered in his open letter that the company is "interested in
seeing ZFS everywhere, including Linux, with full patent indemnity".
Torvalds made it clear in Tuesday's email that he has little confidence in
Sun's motives with the open source community and in particalur with Linux.
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