'Open source Solaris' to debut this year

Sun Microsystems will create an open-source project around its Solaris 10 operating system by the end of the year, company executives said Monday.

Through the initiative, Sun engineers, partners and other programmers will be able to contribute to the development of the Unix operating system. Sun is testing the program right now with customers and will finalise it by the end of the year, according to Mark McClain, Sun's vice president of software marketing. Sun discussed its open-source plans at a Solaris 10 briefing with press and analysts at the company's Burlington, Massachusetts, offices. The new operating system will be faster and more resilient to hardware and software errors.

The goal of open-sourcing Solaris 10, a major update of Sun's operating system set for completion by the end of the year, is to build interest in Solaris. In particular, the open-source project is aimed at developers and academics who will be able to make modifications to the code, Sun executives said.

The open source project will help Sun improve ties with a developer community outside of Sun, including volunteer programmers and acadamics, McClain said.

"We lost sight of being an innovative leader who is active in the developer community," McClain said.

Sun is now in the process of preparing for the project, which some Solaris engineers call Open Source Solaris in internal blogs.

The work done by Sun engineers will constitute the core operating system. For future versions, Sun will pick from the additions submitted by other project participants while ensuring that Solaris does not split into different, incompatible versions, executives said. Sun will model its open-source project on what Apple is doing with Darwin or Red Hat does with Fedora, said Glen Weinberg, vice president of Sun's operating platforms group.

As part of preparations, the company working out legal concerns, establishing a mechanism to take outside contributions, and discussing the proper governance model for the open-source project, company executives said. Because some portions of Solaris 10, such as device drivers, are the property of other companies, Sun will release source code as well as binaries, in which proprietary code is not accessible, Weinberg said.

One customer at the briefing said that he is eager to have Sun make Solaris 10 open-source. By making the code visible, Sun customers will have an easier time making third-party open source software work well with Solaris, said James Dobson, systems architect at Dartmouth College, who is using Solaris in medical imaging applications.

Adding to 10
Company executives detailed the major new enhancements in the operating system, including a new file system code-named ZFS; a more fine-grained security model for establishing access privileges; "predictive self-healing" software to prevent failures; and a dynamic tracing feature, called DTrace, for automatically diagnosing common problems.

The majority of Solaris applications run on servers built on Sun's own Sparc processor, but the company is aggressively promoting Solaris on x86 servers based on chips from Intel or AMD. Sun will have a minor update to Solaris 10 early in 2005. That upgrade will let the automatic diagnostic tools spot processor, memory, or input/output failures on servers based on x86 processors.

Solaris 10 will also have a feature called N1 Grid Containers, which can isolate several software processes on a single instance of the operating system. The feature will give customers more security and allow them to consolidate many computing jobs onto a single machine.

Sun intends to include a software addition called Janus with Solaris 10, which will enable Linux applications to run on Solaris unchanged. If Janus isn't ready for the Solaris 10 deadline, Sun will release the addition shortly after, Weinberg said.

Dartmouth's Dobson lauded the new features in Solaris 10, such as Janus, as well as Sun's program to promote use of Solaris on low-cost hardware servers. Dobson noted that some customers of Red Hat, which sells services around its version of Linux, have been unhappy with the company's licensing program.

"I won't pay for a Red Hat operating system when they added no other innovation except packaging," Dobson said.

Separately, Sun executives said that a far-reaching agreement with Microsoft to improve interoperability between Sun and Microsoft wares will not affect Solaris 10. However, the two companies have discussed other areas of technical integration, such as the file system in Solaris and Windows.

The two companies plan to make an announcement in October regarding initial collaborative work in Web services and directory interoperability, McClain said.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

  1. Beware of Sun. They can no longer be trusted after bankrolling SCO and entering into an unholy alliance with Microsoft. This attempt to 'open source' Solaris is an attempt to slow the exodus from Solaris/Sparc to Linux/Intel. It will not work. Anonymous -- 14/09/04

    Beware of Sun. They can no longer be trusted after bankrolling SCO and entering into an unholy alliance with Microsoft.

    This attempt to 'open source' Solaris is an attempt to slow the exodus from Solaris/Sparc to Linux/Intel. It will not work. Sun is still in the business of customer lock-in. Linux frees us from the stranglehold of proprietary UNIX.

  2. Solaris 10 will also have a feature called N1 Grid Containers,... translation - we copied FreeBSD Jails. blah blah Linux native blah blah translation - we copied FreeBSD's Linux emulation. Sun tried to bring FreeBSD Anonymous -- 14/09/04

    Solaris 10 will also have a feature called N1 Grid Containers,...

    translation - we copied FreeBSD Jails.

    blah blah Linux native blah blah

    translation - we copied FreeBSD's Linux emulation.

    Sun tried to bring FreeBSD developers on board to help with a Sparc port years ago (97/98 IIRC) - they were told then to go pester the NetBSD people who already had a BSD port. Funny how things are turning out. Maybe in a year or two they might have an x86 version that doesn't take half a day to install, doesn't identify my dual x86 system as a dual Sparc machine, and doesn't spit out the same ATA errors that FreeBSD did 18 months ago.

Add your opinion


Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Alex Serpo Is green IT a marketing fad?
    It seems that green IT has dropped off the radar, with other technology issues moving to the fore. But was green IT ever a real technology movement, or was it just a marketing fad?
  • Array Gutless studios have the wrong target
    I have one word for the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT). Gutless.
  • Array NBN needs workers on board
    Without consensus on labour issues, the eventual winner of the NBN may end up as little more than a lame duck and a cashed-up symbol of the conflict between the desire for progress and the lack of mechanisms to deliver it.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured