ASF Flagship Project is World's Most Popular Web Server, Powering More than 112 
Million Websites 

FOREST HILL, MD, 23 February, 2010 -- The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) -- 
developers, stewards, and incubators of 138 Open Source projects -- today 
announced the 15th anniversary of the Apache HTTP Web Server.

The ASF's first project became the world's most popular Web server software 
within the first six months of its inception. The Apache HTTP Server today 
powers nearly 112 million Websites world-wide.

A triumph for the all-volunteer Foundation, the Apache HTTP Server reliably 
delivers petabytes of data across the world’s most demanding uses, including 
real-time news sources, Fortune 100 enterprise portals, cloud computing 
clusters, financial services platforms, mission-critical military intelligence 
applications, aerospace communications networks, and more. The server software 
can be downloaded, modified and installed by anyone free of charge.


History

The Apache Server started as a fork (an independent development stream)
of the NCSA httpd, a Web server created by Rob McCool at the National Center 
for Supercomputing Applications.  Further development to the server ceased 
after McCool's departure from NCSA in 1994, so an online community of 
individuals was formed to support and enhance its software via email 
collaboration. The founding members of that community (the Apache Group) 
included Brian Behlendorf, Roy Fielding, Rob Hartill, David Robinson, Cliff 
Skolnick, Randy Terbush, Robert Thau, and Andrew Wilson.

Within less than a year of the Apache Group's formation, the Apache server 
surpassed NCSA httpd as the #1 server on the Internet.

In March 1999, members of the Apache Group formed The Apache Software 
Foundation to provide organizational, legal, and financial support for the 
Apache HTTP Server. An additional goal for the Foundation was to serve as a 
neutral, trusted platform for the development of community-driven software.


Growth, the "Apache Way"

Beyond the Apache HTTP Server, dozens of ASF projects – from build tools to Web 
services to cloud computing and more – lead the way in Open Source technology. 

At the ASF, community plays a vital role in the collaborative development of 
consensus-driven, enterprise-grade solutions. The number of projects led by the 
Apache community has grown from the singular Apache HTTP Server at the ASF's 
inception in 1999 to nearly 140 projects today.

The ASF's commitment to fostering a collaborative approach to development has 
long served as a model for producing consistently high quality software and 
helping advance the future of open development. Through its leadership, robust 
community, and meritocratic process known as the "Apache Way", the ASF 
continues to gain recognition as one of the most successful influencers in Open 
Source.

Through the Apache Way, the ASF is able to spearhead new projects that meet the 
demands of the marketplace and help users achieve their business goals. With 
the Apache Incubator mentoring more projects than ever before, the ASF 
continues to meet the growing demand for quality Open Source products.

"Community Over Code": among the Foundation's core tenets is open collaboration 
through respectful, honest, technically-focused interaction. The ASF's success 
is testament to its outstanding community efforts that serve as best practices 
widely embraced by organizations and individuals alike.

"If it didn't happen on-list, it didn't happen": building upon the 
transparency-oriented culture of the Apache Group, whose collaboration took 
place on email lists, millions of messages are archived on Apache 
publicly-accessible mailing lists, documenting the ASF's achievements over the 
past decade.

"Meritocracy in Action": the ASF's tagline reflects an average of 10,000 code 
contributions (commits) made each month. The ASF is responsible for millions of 
lines of code by more than 2,000 ASF Committers and countless contributors 
across the Open Source landscape. Nearly 500 community-driven modules have been 
developed to extend functionality of the Apache HTTP Server alone.


Milestones

February 23, 1994: Individual patch authors around the world are invited to 
join the "new-httpd" mailing list to discuss enhancements and future releases 
of NCSA httpd. The Apache name was chosen for this new effort within the first 
few days of discussion, along with basic rules for email-based collaboration 
and a mission to replace the existing server with a standards-based, open 
source, and extensible software system.

March 15, 1994: Apache-style voting created (+1, 0, -1; with '-1' meaning 'no', 
'0' meaning 'neutral', and '+1' meaning 'yes.')

March 18, 1994: First Apache Group release (Apache 0.2)

Apache server v.1.0 was released in December 1995. Four years later, Apache 
HTTP Server v.1.3.0 was released, and rapidly becoming the most popular Web 
server on the planet.

Apache HTTP Server v.2.0 alpha was released in March 2000, with the first 
general availability release two years later. V.2.0 remained best-of-breed 
sever until the release of v.2.2.0 in December 2005, and is widely deployed 
across the Internet. 

In February 2009, the Apache HTTP Server became the first Web server software 
in history to surpass the 100 million Website milestone.

The most current, best-of-breed, stable version of the Apache HTTP Server is 
v.2.2.14, released September 2009. Developers seeking to test new features and 
preview what will become stable Version 2.4 are able to do so today with the 
development of v.2.3.5.

Earlier this month, after ten years and more than forty revisions, the Apache 
HTTP Server v.1.3.x officially reached end of life status with the release of 
v.1.3.42. Future patches to v.1.3.x will be for critical security updates only.

The Apache HTTP Server remains the world's most beloved Web server, forming the 
backbone of nearly 70% of all sites on the Internet.


Availability

The Apache HTTP Server is available for a variety of operating systems, 
including Unix, Linux, GNU, FreeBSD, Netware, Solaris, Windows, Mac OS X, OS/2, 
TPF, and eCS. In addition, the Apache HTTP Server is redistributed through many 
proprietary software packages such as WebSphere, Oracle RDBMS, Kylix, NetWare, 
and Delphi, as well as numerous Linux distributions.

All ASF projects, including the Apache HTTP Server, are available free of 
charge under the Apache Software License v.2.0. To download, or for more 
information, visit http://httpd.apache.org/


About The Apache Software Foundation (ASF)

Established in 1999, the all-volunteer Foundation oversees more than seventy 
leading Open Source projects, including Apache HTTP Server — the world's most 
popular Web server software. Through The ASF's meritocratic process known as 
"The Apache Way," more than 300 individual Members and 2,000 Committers 
successfully collaborate to develop freely available enterprise-grade software, 
benefiting millions of users worldwide: thousands of software solutions are 
distributed under the Apache License; and the community actively participates 
in ASF mailing lists, mentoring initiatives, and ApacheCon, the Foundation's 
official user conference, trainings, and expo. The ASF is funded by individual 
donations and corporate sponsors including Facebook, Google, HP, Microsoft, 
Progress Software, SpringSource, and Yahoo! For more information, visit 
http://www.apache.org/.

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