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by panick21_
994 days ago
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Omg how after all this time are people still fucking repeating this 'not license-compatible' nonsense. This is one of this myths that at some point has infected the OpenSource community and its so totally wrong and damaging. Its not license incompatible, many, many, many organizations have shipped ZFS as part of the distribution and absolutely nobody ever sued or even threatened sue over the license. Linus didn't want to merge it because of some vague fear of Oracle and how they sued over Java, but that was about API not license. What Linus should have done is to simple upstream it. If some big company (IBM or whoever) wants to not 'risk' ZFS then they should damn well do their own work and remove it. There is no reason that the waste majority of the Linux community should be denied great features (ZFS, DTrace and friends) over some vague fear of Oracle. |
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I don't think fear of Oracle is the issue, more likely just an irrational rejection of everything Sun and Solaris. After all btrfs also originated in Oracle (what's worse, despicable Oracle itself, not via the Sun acquisition).
Perhaps Oracle's unwillingness to relicense is simply that Oracle knows how inferior btrfs and thus doesn't mind giving it away by licensing it GPLv2, but ZFS is much more valuable and they want to keep the rights to it as potential competitive advantage. If Sun hadn't licensed ZFS CDDL before the acquisition, I'm pretty sure Oracle would be happy to keep it closed-source.
I hope bcachefs makes it into the kernel quickly, that distros drop btrfs and that its infiltrators are turfed out of kernel-land, but that's probably too much to hope for. In the meantime, I am happy to keep running ZFS for all my critical data on Illumos, Alpine and Ubuntu.