Although Oracle Corp. has no plans to continue supporting the OpenSolaris project, the founder of a recently formed Solaris derivative believes all hope is not lost.
Illumos, which was launched on Aug. 3, is a โchildโ of OS/Net (ON), the core OS and networkingaspects of Solaris, which Oracle gained via the acquisition of Sun Microsystems. It arrived as speculation swirled about Oracleโs intentions for OpenSolaris, an open-source version of the OS.
An internalย Oracle memoย posted to the OpenSolaris mailing list on Friday stated that the company plans to concentrate its energies on the commercial version of Solaris. โAll of Oracleโs efforts on binary distributions of Solaris technology will be focused on Solaris 11. We will not release any other binary distributions, such as nightly or bi-weekly builds of Solaris binaries, or an OpenSolaris 2010.05 or later distribution.โ
Oracle instead plans to roll out Solaris 11 Express, a developer version of the OS. It will offer a support plan for Solaris 11 Express, along with a โcost-effective meansโ by which OpenSolaris users can migrate to it, according to the memo.ย
While unfortunate, Oracleโs decision is far from the end of the world, according to the Illumos projectโs founder, Garrett DโAmore.
The original goal was to โtrack Oracleโs code base as much as possible, to have a more collaborative relationship,โ he said in an interview on Monday. โThat was my desire.โ
But the memo indicates that โOracle doesnโt believe thereโs any value in this type of collaboration,โ said DโAmore, a former Sun engineer and prominent contributor to OpenSolaris. As a result, Illumos may have to become more of a full-blown fork of the Solaris codebase, he said. โWeโll be forced to evolve, and the code diverges as a result.โ
The Illumos project will need corporate backing in order to be successful. So far, it has gained early support from a number of companies, including DโAmoreโs employer, storage vendor Nexenta Systems.
In aย blog postย Friday, DโAmore indicated that some โvery surprisingโ names have privately committed to help the project: โThese are people that are big-name contributors; folks who have made very large numbers of code commits to Solaris โ some of the deepest and โmost challengingโ parts of Solaris, too.โ
On balance, Illumos looks to be on solid footing, he said Monday.
โIf they want a relationship based on competition instead of collaboration. โฆ I actually think weโre in good shape in spite of the vast economic resources that Oracle has,โ he said.
An Oracle spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment Monday.
Chris Kanaracus covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news forย The IDG News Service. Chrisโs e-mail address isย [emailย protected]