Comment by ryao
10 years ago
I wrote enough patches to ZFSOnLinux that I have the distinction of number 2 by commit count. It was a hobby for me at first and quite frankly, I never expected it to make a difference for more than a few hundred people. Now ZoL is on millions of systems through Ubuntu in part because of my work and there are far more places using it than I can count.
Open sourcing those patches rather than keeping them to myself made a difference that was greater than anything I imagined. Similarly, the impact of making ZFS open source far surpassed the expectations of the original team at Sun. I think that making any worthwhile piece of software open source will lead to adoption beyond the scope of what its authors envisioned. All it takes is people looking for something better than what previously existed.
As for closed source being inherently evil (your words, not mine), how do you fix bugs in closed source software that a vendor is not willing to fix? How do you catch things like a hard coded password that gives root privileges? How do you know that the software is really as good as they say? It is far easier with open source software than with closed source software. Closed source software is a bad idea.
I still think you need to look at it from the point of view of an employer. Like me. I'm weird, I really care about my people, our company is more like a cooperative than anything else.
I grew this to a place where I could pay salaries. Doing so was super super hard. I had a lot of scary nights where I thought I couldn't make payroll. Just building up to a place where the next payroll was OK was a big deal for us.
So open source it? When you finally got to the point where you can pay people without worrying all night?
I get that you see that open source is the answer, and it is for some stuff. For me, jumping on that years ago was asking too much.