Dear OI Developers,
It is with much sadness that I hereby resign as project lead. I may,
if
the situation improves under a new project lead, stick around to
offer
my opinion or occasional assistance, but my resignation is final; I
have
no wish to return to the project in a leadership capacity.
My resignation is primarily driven by a lack of time; I simply cannot
commit the hours necessary to maintain a project of this size. I have
my
life, my health (primarily mental), and my future to think of.
But it is also in part due to frustrations with the difficulty of
making
any progress on the project. OpenSolaris was maintained by a large
corporate entity. We however, are volunteers, contributing our
personal
time to work on a project we believed in. For many of us this was the
first open source project we had ever contributed to, myself
included.
The task at hand was vast, and we were ill equipped to deal with it.
But what really, right from the very beginning, upset me, was the
lack
of interest from the large commercial players benefiting from
Illumos,
and from those who had been paid to work on Solaris at Sun. Instead,
what we got, was grief regarding the name (Project Indiana seemingly
being a sore point for Solaris engineers, something I was completely
unaware of when we chose "OpenIndiana"), hostility towards IPS, and a
total lack of interest, encouragement or friendship from people many
of
us looked up to when we were mere end-users of Solaris under Sun.
Right from the very beginning, Illumos was on life-support. I have no
doubt that Nexenta, Delphix, and Joyent in particular will continue
to
innovate and that SmartOS will be a success, but support for Solaris
from the open-source software community has over the past 2 years
gone
from bad to worse. Only the other day the MongoDB developers
responding
to an issue with it segfaulting on OI stated "OI isn't supported, use
Linux":
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/mongodb-user/45C7M_po1No
I lay the blame of this squarely on the lack of a successful general
purpose distribution of Solaris/Illumos. OpenIndiana was my attempt
at
competing with the Linux distros, but our lack of progress has
torpedoed
it. Nobody in their right mind would use OI - it ships severely out
of
date insecure software, lacks some of the most common 3rd party apps
such as LibreOffice, and so much simple shit that should just work,
such
as "pecl install", "gem install", "pip install" or whatever barfs due
to
nonsense SunStudio flags, to the point you need a background in
computer
science and compiler flags to get it to work. Not fit for purpose.
So what exactly are 3rd party software developers such as the FFMpeg
or
MongoDB developers supposed to use to develop and test their software
on? Buy a SmartDatacenter? Install a storage product? Run it on a
database appliance?
All of you, Joyent, Nexenta, Delphix, are complicit in the increasing
irrelevance of Illumos. OI, even in it's current current state, is by
far the most widely used Illumos distro, so by not supporting it
beyond
contributing to the Illumos core, you've all shot yourselves in the
foot. With a fucking shotgun. What's sad is that you don't even see
it.
It didn't have to be this way. With some assistance we could have
made
large strides forward - we had lots of solid ideas of how to get
things
moving. What we lacked was time, graft, and expertise from those who
worked on this professionally - items easily supplied by those with
deep
pockets and plenty to gain from our success.
Instead we got the Illumian farce from Nexenta, along with their
senior
staff claiming OI is an existential threat to their continued
existence.
And when I asked for help back in November, we got Bryan Cantrill
telling us all "when you want to do something, just do it" - rich
coming
from someone paid to work on all this whilst the OI devs volunteer
their
personal time, often at considerable personal sacrifice, to work on
this
stuff.
With the ZFSOnLinux port becoming increasingly popular (so many of
the
Linux users I know are using it), and
brtfs/dtrace-on-linux/upstart/whatever else slowly brewing away, even
some of the core features of Illumos are becoming less and less
important. Yes, the Linux equivalents suck in one way or another,
some
are completely and fundamentally broken by design, but it doesn't
matter
- what matters is perception and the typical Linux user is happy with
"good enough". When I encourage my Linux-using friends to try OI they
laugh in my face. OI and Illumos to them is a dead platform. Add to
that
our increasingly out of date and poor hardware support due to the
march
of never ending new LAN/SATA/SAS/motherboard/GPU chipsets and you
start
to get the picture.
I hope, I really do hope, that Illumos does not become entirely
irrelevant. But when less and less software works out of the box, and
when heavily used products such as MongoDB, Varnish, etc don't
support
Illumos (regardless of whether they actually work on it or not, what
matters is whether these projects will help end users when they have
problems), and when OI disappears and there's nothing left but a
handful
of fringe distros or niche products, what then? You think Riverbed
are
going to maintain Stingray (Foremly Zeus) LB on Solaris, or any other
commercial software vendor develop for it, when nobody is using it?
Well, I've said my piece. This has been weighing on my chest for some
time and I am glad to have gotten it off. I am not doing this because
I
want to start a flame war, I just had to say it or it would have
bugged
me for the rest of my life.
I would like to thank from the bottom of my heart those of you who
have
volunteered your time to work on OI. For those not mentioned
directly,
you know who you are and it has been a pleasure working with you. I
hope
we can continue to keep in touch.
I would, in particular, like to thank Richard Lowe for his unwavering
support. He is without a shadow of a doubt one of the kindest,
selfless,
helpful and wise people I've had the pleasure of dealing with
throughout
this journey. He was always there to help, and to provide a modicum
of
sanity when all hope seemed lost. Without Rich, OI would likely not
exist, and we all owe him a very large debt of gratitude.
I would like to also thank Alan Coopersmith for his support and
impartial help. His presence on IRC provided much comfort to all of
us,
and his insights were always highly valued.
My thanks go to Garrett D'Amore; without his stellar efforts creating
Illumos things could have been catastrophically worse for us all. I
hold
him in high regard and in no way hold him responsible for the current
situation with OpenIndiana, even if he did help spawn Illumian.
I'd like to thank Jon Tibble for his dedication to OpenIndiana, and
for
his hard work, especially with the pre-stable releases, which was
greatly appreciated. Jon is a first-class citizen of the community
and I
hope he will continue to work on the project even if I'm not at the
helm.
I'd like to thank Andrzej Szeszo for his contributions. His deep
insight
into complex parts of the distribution, along with his persistence
and
capacity for tinkering, have unstuck the project many times. Again,
without his help OI may not have come as far as it did.
I'd like to thank Guido Berhoerster for his hard work on JDS and his
support in getting the project off the ground - again without his
help
we would simply not be here.
I'd like to thank Albert Lee for his help in the beginning of the
project, indeed Albert was responsible for pulling an all-nighter to
get
our first release out. We once again owe him a debt of gratitude.
Lastly, despite their lack of a handle on what's happening with
Unix/Linux distros in the real world beyond kernels, I'd like to
thank
all those who have contributed to Illumos, without which OpenIndiana
would not boot. You are the real heroes. I may have complained
bitterly
about our little distro being ignored by you, but you have my respect
and thanks for your unique talents in developing a truly amazing
kernel
that we all love dearly.
I will continue, through EveryCity, to provide hosting for
OpenIndiana's
infrastructure. I also hope that a new project lead will step forward
to
look after things, and that they can carry the project forward. If no
viable new lead steps forward then I would encourage the OpenIndiana
developers to hand responsibility for it over to the Illumos
Foundation.
Finally, I wish Illumos every success. Ultimately Illumos is what
matters, OI was only ever going to be a vessel for delivering it's
power
to end users. May it go from strength to strength and get the
recognition, attention and user-base it so rightly deserves.
Regards,
Alasdair
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