Thursday, July 23, 2009 7:08 PM
Fawzi
Microsoft stuns Linux world, submits source code for kernel
Network World -
In an historic move, Microsoft on Monday submitted driver source code for inclusion in the Linux kernel
under a GPLv2 license.The code consists of four drivers that are part
of a technology called Linux Device Driver for Virtualization. The
drivers, once added to the Linux kernel, will provide the hooks for any
distribution of Linux to run on Windows Server 2008 and its Hyper-V
hypervisor technology. Microsoft will provide ongoing maintenance of
the code.
Linux backers hailed the submission as validation of the Linux development model and the Linux GPLv2 licensing.
Virtualization, cloud underlie Microsoft's Linux kernel submissionMicrosoft's Linux kernel submission raises virtualization questions
Microsoft
said the move will foster more open source on Windows and help the
vendor offer a consistent set of virtualization, management and
administrative tools to support mixed virtualized infrastructure.
"Obviously
we are tickled about it," said Jim Zemlin, executive director of the
Linux Foundation. "Hell has frozen over, the seas have parted," he said
with a chuckle.
Microsoft made the announcement at the annual
OSCON open source conference that opened Monday in San Jose.Greg
Kroah-Hartman, the Linux driver project lead and a Novell fellow, said
he accepted 22,000 lines of Microsoft's code at 9 a.m. PT Monday.
Kroah-Hartman said the Microsoft code will be available as part of the
next Linux public tree release in the next 24 hours. The code will
become part of the 2.6.30.1 stable release.
"Then the whole world will be able to look at the code," he said.
The
stable release is an interim build between each main release, which
come in three-month cycles. The first main kernel release to include
the open source driver technology will come in December as part of the
2.6.32 release, Kroah-Hartman said.The drivers will initially be part
of the Linux kernel's staging tree, a place where code is stored and
polished before it is moved into the main tree. The code of every
first-time kernel submitter begins life in the staging tree.
Kroah-Hartman
said Microsoft's submission was routine. "They abided by every single
rule and letter of what we require to submit code. If I was to refuse
this code it would be wrong," he said.
Microsoft's most important open source act
Sam
Ramji, who runs the Open Source Software Lab for Microsoft and is the
company's director of open source technology strategy, called the Linux
kernel submission the company's most important Linux/open source
commitment ever.
"It is a significant piece of technology. It is
a strategic technology and it is under the GPLv2 license that the Linux
kernel uses, and which the community is organized around."
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