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[Savannah-hackers] Savannah featured on www.lwn.net
From: |
Mark H. Weaver |
Subject: |
[Savannah-hackers] Savannah featured on www.lwn.net |
Date: |
15 Mar 2001 03:47:50 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.0.97 |
http://www.lwn.net/2001/0315/devel.php3
Development projects
News and Editorials
In past issues of LWN, we have discussed the need for alternatives to
the popular [15]SourceForge site at VA Linux. SourceForge provides an
excellent resource for open-source development, but we firmly believe
in the axiom "Don't put all of your eggs in one basket". Currently,
SourceForge lists over 17,000 projects and over 134,000 users. That's
a lot of eggs.
Some fairly recent entries into the world of open-source project
hosting include [16]BerliOS which currently hosts 85 projects and has
265 registered users, and [17]Savannah [18][Savannah] which claims 85
projects and has 328 registered users. Savannah is based on the
SourceForge 2.0 code, which is freely available.
Savannah seems to be strongly oriented toward GNU projects, leading to
the question of whether non-GNU projects can be hosted there. Not
everybody wants to work within the rules for GNU projects (i.e.
signing copyright over to the FSF, coding standards, etc.). One has to
dig pretty far into the site before finding the following text:
The FSF would like to extend an invitation to any Free Software
project to be hosted for no price and no catch. This is our token
of appreciation to the people who help make the GNU project a
reality.
Thus, it is not necessary to go the full GNU project route, as long as
the software involved has an FSF-approved free license.
The open availability of SourceForge software takes a lot of the work
out of starting a new software hosting site, it seems like the time is
ripe for some new sites to open up.
Surprisingly, there are not very many small, focused-area software
hosting sites. Many areas of focus are available, including among
other things, specific languages, embedded systems, and database and
web applications to name a few.
Whether it is possible to make money with a software hosting site
remains to be seen, but such a site brings a level of community
recognition that money can't buy. One would think that a few of the
larger, well established computing companies such as Sun or IBM would
venture into the software hosting arena. It's probably only a matter
of time before they do.
Meanwhile, the launch of Savannah should provide a much-needed
alternative to SourceForge. (Thanks to Marko Schulz for the pointer to
Savannah).
[...]
References
15. http://sourceforge.net/
16. http://developer.berlios.de/
17. http://savannah.gnu.org/
18. http://savannah.gnu.org/
- [Savannah-hackers] Savannah featured on www.lwn.net,
Mark H. Weaver <=