OpenSolaris is an open source project created by Sun Microsystems to build a developer community around the Solaris Operating System technology. The project is aimed at developers, system administrators, and users who want to develop and improve operating systems. Over 12,000 community members are registered on OpenSolaris.org, of whom over 11,000 are not Sun employees. An active OpenSolaris User Group community is now growing worldwide, and dozens of OpenSolaris technology communities and projects are being formed on opensolaris.org.
The opening of the Solaris source code has been an incremental process. The first portion of the Solaris codebase to be open sourced was the Solaris Dynamic Tracing Toolkit (commonly known as DTrace), a tracing tool for administrators and developers that aids in tuning a system for optimum performance and utilisation. DTrace was released on January 25, 2005. At that time Sun also released the first phase of the opensolaris.org web site, announced that the OpenSolaris code base would be released under the CDDL (Common Development and Distribution License), and announced the intention to form a Community Advisory Board (CAB). The Opening Day launch, in which the bulk of the Solaris system code was released, occurred on June 14, 2005. There remains some system code that is not open sourced and is only available as binary files. The OpenSolaris source code represents the code in the most recent development build of Solaris.
The five CAB members were announced on April 4, 2005: two were elected by the pilot community, two were appointed by Sun, and one was appointed from the broader open source community by Sun. The 2005/2006 OpenSolaris Community Advisory Board members were Roy Fielding, Al Hopper, Rich Teer, Casper Dik, and Simon Phipps. On February 10, 2006 Sun signed the OpenSolaris Charter, turning the OpenSolaris community into an independent group under the leadership of the OpenSolaris Governing Board (OGB) *. The former CAB became the first OGB, with the task of creating and confirming the governance of the OpenSolaris Community no later than June 30, 2006. The work of creating the governance document or "Constitution" is now in progress, led by a Governance Working Group comprising the OGB and three invited members, Stephen Hahn and Keith Wesolowski (developers in Sun's Solaris organization) and Ben Rockwood (a prominent OpenSolaris community member).
It should be noted that, just as with the MPL, the FSF also states: "... So, a module covered by the GPL and a module covered by the CDDL cannot legally be linked together. We urge you not to use the CDDL for this reason." *
The Mozilla Application Suite and Mozilla Firefox have changed their license to a tri-license: you can choose between the MPL, LGPL and GPL.
Torvalds has since softened his position, commenting in February 2005 at the Enterprise Linux Summit * that the project's licensing terms were promising: …CDDL is different. Everything is in place for it to work well, adding (tongue-in-cheek) A lot of people still like Solaris, but I'm in active competition with them, and so I hope they die.
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