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by beanjuiceII 987 days ago
why is a canonical-less fork needed again?
3 comments

LXD was run as part of Linux Containers with maintainers from a few different companies and hundreds of external contributors over the years.

Then Canonical, who owned the trademark on it told the team that it wanted it moved in house and rebranded Canonical LXD.

Shortly after, Stephane Graber, the project leader left Canonical.

A few weeks later, Incus started as a community fork with all the original LXD maintainers joining in and the fork moving to Linux Containers.

Incus feels like a more open protect, no focus on one distro or company, no shoving of a snap package down everyone's throat.

Will see how things go.

There are a few different variants of LXD and they wanted to create a canonical version.

I'll get my coat.

I see what you did there. :-D
I would presume it's to keep it from being locked into Ubuntu?