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by bcantrill
410 days ago
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No, the ZFS team did not "literally reference NetApp and WAFL" in their presentations and no, Sun did not "start it" -- NetApp initiated the litigation (though Sun absolutely countersued), and NetApp were well on their way to losing not only their case but also their WAFL patents when Oracle acquired Sun. Despite having inherited a winning case, Oracle chose to allow the suit to be dismissed[0]; terms of the settlement were undisclosed. [0] https://www.theregister.com/2010/09/09/oracle_netapp_zfs_dis... |
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Your own link states that Sun approached NetApp about patents 18 months prior to the lawsuit being filed (to be clear that was Storagetek before Sun acquired them):
>The suit was filed in September 2007, in Texas, three years ago, but the spat between the two started 18 months before that, according to NetApp, when Sun's lawyers contacted NetApp saying its products violated Sun patents, and requesting licensing agreements and royalties for the technologies concerned.
And there was a copy of the original email from the lawyer which I sadly did not save a copy of, as referenced here:
https://ntptest.typepad.com/dave/2007/09/sun-patent-team.htm...
As for the presentation, I can't find it at the moment but will keep looking because I do remember it. That being said, a blog post from Val at the time specifically mentions NetApp, WAFL, how the team thought it was cool and decided to build your own:
https://web.archive.org/web/20051231160415/http://blogs.sun....
And the original paper on ZFS that appears to have been scrubbed from the internet mentions WAFL repeatedly (and you were a co-author so I'm not sure why you're saying you didn't reference NetApp or WAFL):
https://ntptest.typepad.com/dave/2007/09/netapp-sues-sun.htm...
https://www.academia.edu/20291242/Zfs_overview
>The file system that has come closest to our design principles, other than ZFS itself,is WAFL[8],the file system used internally by Network Appliance’s NFS server appliances.