[this announcement is available online at https://s.apache.org/18vob ]

Open Source universal data interchange implementation of the Data Format 
Description Language (DFDL) standard in use at DARPA, GE Research, Naval 
Postgraduate School, Owl Cyber Defense, Perspecta Labs, and Raytheon BBN 
Technologies, among others.

Wilmington, DE —4 March 2021— The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the 
all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of more than 350 Open Source 
projects and initiatives, announced today Apache® Daffodil™ as a Top-Level 
Project (TLP).

Apache Daffodil is an Open Source implementation of the Data Format Description 
Language 1.0 specification (DFDL; the Open Grid Forum open standard framework 
for describing the attributes of any data format [1]) to enable universal data 
interchange. The project was first created at the University of Illinois 
National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in 2009, and entered the 
Apache Incubator in August 2017.

"We’re extremely excited that Apache Daffodil has achieved this important 
milestone in its development. The Daffodil DFDL implementation is a game 
changer in complex text and binary data interfaces and creates massive 
opportunities for organizations to easily implement highly sophisticated 
processes like data decomposition, inspection, and reassembly," said Michael 
Beckerle, Vice President of Apache Daffodil. "Instead of spending a lot of time 
worrying about how to deal with so many kinds of data that you need to take in, 
from day one you can convert all sorts of data into XML, or JSON, or your 
preferred data structure, and convert back if you need to write data out in its 
original format."

Apache Daffodil is particularly useful in large-scale organizations, such as 
governments and large corporations, where massive amounts of complex and legacy 
data must be exchanged and made accessible every day. Daffodil is also 
particularly useful in cybersecurity, where data must be inspected for 
correctness and sanitized.

Apache Daffodil is in use at major global organizations that include DARPA, GE 
Research, Naval Postgraduate School, Owl Cyber Defense, Perspecta Labs, and 
Raytheon BBN Technologies, among others.

"We are using Daffodil to translate DFDL schema specifications into code for 
our Monitoring & INspection Device (MIND) as part of our work on DARPA’s 
Guaranteed Architecture for Physical Security (GAPS) program," said said Bill 
Smith, Principal Engineer at GE Research. "One of our engineers has joined the 
Apache Daffodil Project Management Committee and is building out the new 
DFDL-to-C backend on a dedicated Daffodil development branch. We are now 
translating DFDL schemas provided by other DARPA GAPS performers to C code 
suitable for the small resource-constrained controllers in our MIND device. 
When complete, Daffodil’s DFDL-to-C backend will give us the ability to 
annotate DFDL schemas with security policies and rapidly reconfigure our MIND 
device for different mission security profiles."

"Apache Daffodil is an important asset to our cross domain solutions technology 
stack, allowing Owl to support our customers by extending our filtering 
capabilities to new data types faster and with less risk," said Ken Walker, CTO 
at Owl Cyber Defense. "It’s directly in line with our company priorities, as 
supporters of the Open Source community, and highly beneficial to our product 
lines to have this high-quality Open Source implementation of DFDL to support 
challenging, sometimes proprietary data formats, such as Link16, VMF, USMTF, 
OSIsoft PI System, and JANAP-128, without the need to develop additional 
software. DFDL enables our Raise-the-Bar compliant cross domain solutions to 
support new data types without additional rounds of lengthy lab-based testing 
and recertification."

"The DFDL open spec and the Apache Daffodil implementation have helped us 
tremendously in parsing and transforming fixed-format data in a variety of 
different R&D projects at BBN," said Michael Atighetchi, Lead Scientist at 
Raytheon BBN Technologies. "Sharing parsers through a vendor-neutral XML 
representation is a game changer that enables a significant speedup in 
developing, maturing, and transitioning advanced capabilities to help war 
fighters."

"Our research on applying Data Format Description Language (DFDL) is exploring 
how to unlock and archive a plethora of diverse data streams from unmanned 
systems," said Don Brutzman, Naval Postgraduate School. "Both the DFDL standard 
and the Apache Daffodil open-source implementation provide a big benefit for 
these potential capabilities. Continuing work at Naval Postgraduate School 
(NPS) Consortium for Robotics and Unmanned Systems Education and Research 
(CRUSER) hopes to make telemetry from field experimentation and simulation 
repeatably tractable for Big Data analytics."

"Graduation to a TLP recognizes that the Apache Daffodil project follows the 
rigorous software development practices that have made so many of ASF projects 
trusted and successful," added Beckerle. "With the increasing interest in Big 
Data, interoperability, and protection from malicious data, we welcome new 
contributors to help us further grow the Apache Daffodil community."


[1] Data Format Description Language (DFDL) v1.0 Specification 
https://www.ogf.org/documents/GFD.240.pdf

Availability and Oversight
Apache Daffodil software is released under the Apache License v2.0 and is 
overseen by a self-selected team of active contributors to the project. A 
Project Management Committee (PMC) guides the Project's day-to-day operations, 
including community development and product releases. For downloads, 
documentation, and ways to become involved with Apache Daffodil, visit 
https://daffodil.apache.org/ and https://twitter.com/ApacheDaffodil 

About the Apache Incubator
The Apache Incubator is the primary entry path for projects and codebases 
wishing to become part of the efforts at The Apache Software Foundation. All 
code donations from external organizations and existing external projects enter 
the ASF through the Incubator to: 1) ensure all donations are in accordance 
with the ASF legal standards; and 2) develop new communities that adhere to our 
guiding principles. Incubation is required of all newly accepted projects until 
a further review indicates that the infrastructure, communications, and 
decision making process have stabilized in a manner consistent with other 
successful ASF projects. While incubation status is not necessarily a 
reflection of the completeness or stability of the code, it does indicate that 
the project has yet to be fully endorsed by the ASF. For more information, 
visit http://incubator.apache.org/ 

About The Apache Software Foundation (ASF)
Established in 1999, The Apache Software Foundation is the world’s largest Open 
Source foundation, stewarding 227M+ lines of code and providing more than $20B+ 
worth of software to the public at 100% no cost. The ASF’s all-volunteer 
community grew from 21 original founders overseeing the Apache HTTP Server to 
813 individual Members and 200 Project Management Committees who successfully 
lead 350+ Apache projects and initiatives in collaboration with nearly 8,100 
Committers through the ASF’s meritocratic process known as "The Apache Way". 
Apache software is integral to nearly every end user computing device, from 
laptops to tablets to mobile devices across enterprises and mission-critical 
applications. Apache projects power most of the Internet, manage exabytes of 
data, execute teraflops of operations, and store billions of objects in 
virtually every industry. The commercially-friendly and permissive Apache 
License v2 is an Open Source industry standard, helping launch billion dollar 
corporations and benefiting countless users worldwide. The ASF is a US 
501(c)(3) not-for-profit charitable organization funded by individual donations 
and corporate sponsors including Aetna, Alibaba Cloud Computing, Amazon Web 
Services, Anonymous, Baidu, Bloomberg, Budget Direct, Capital One, Cloudera, 
Comcast, Confluent, Didi Chuxing, Facebook, Google, Handshake, Huawei, IBM, 
Microsoft, Namebase, Pineapple Fund, Red Hat, Reprise Software, Target, 
Tencent, Union Investment, Verizon Media, and Workday. For more information, 
visit http://apache.org/ and https://twitter.com/TheASF 

© The Apache Software Foundation. "Apache", "Daffodil", "Apache Daffodil", and 
"ApacheCon" are registered trademarks or trademarks of the Apache Software 
Foundation in the United States and/or other countries. All other brands and 
trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

# # #

NOTE: you are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the 
announce@apache.org distribution list. To unsubscribe, send email from the 
recipient account to announce-unsubscr...@apache.org with the word 
"Unsubscribe" in the subject line.

Reply via email to