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Does your OS systems management got GPL?

Jay Lyman, April 14, 2008 @ 3:26 pm ET

That has emerged as the question, or at least a major factor in determining whether open source software works in the enterprise systems management market.

The three open source players that have managed mid-market and enterprise customer growth — GroundWork Open Source, Hyperic and Zenoss — all base their products, both community and enteprise versions, on software licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL).

The three systems management ventures that have faltered recently — Levanta, Open Country and Qlusters — did not use GPL licensing. Levanta and Open Country did not even offer community or free versions. While Qlusters opened its QRM software in 2006, it did not emphasize its free version, which is now in the hands of the openQRM developer community. Open Country and Qlusters did base their products on open source software that was licensed under the Mozilla Public License with attribution. This is not to say MPL does not work in the enterprise (see systems management project Ziptie, licensed under the MPL). However, when looking at these six companies and considering their differences, the GPL licensing stands out.

Other prominent factors are the functionality focus (monitoring seems to be a gap in current offerings and competition, compared to provisioning, patching and other systems management subcategories) and interoperability with and support of Windows and other proprietary software.

This is not to say GPL licensing + monitoring = enterprise systems management revenue. There are other examples of ventures based on open source software, such as OpenESM, that are both GPL and centered on monitoring, yet never took off. However, when we look at the newest open source systems management ventures — OpenNMS Group, Nagios Enterprises and Paglo — we see that these community-driven commercial plays are sticking with what works: the GPL.

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6 Comments»

Collapse Pingback by Does your OS systems management got GPL? | Management, April 14, 2008 7:38 pm

[...] unknown wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptThe three systems management ventures that have faltered recently — Levanta, Open Country and Qlusters — did not use GPL licensing. Levanta and Open Country did not even offer community or free versions. While Qlusters opened its QRM … [...]

 
Collapse Comment by Kris Buytaert, April 15, 2008 2:25 am

Actually the community openQRM site is at http://openqrm.sourceforge.net/

http://openqrm.org is still owned by Qlusters

Collapse Comment by Jay Lyman, April 15, 2008 2:31 am

Thanks for the clarification, Kris. I updated the link in the story to go to the openQRM SF site.

JL

 
 
Collapse Comment by David Hustace, April 15, 2008 12:04 pm

Cleaver article…

A business plan that is based on spending less than you earn just might catch on just like the idea of open source systems management… nah! OpenNMS as a venture (OpenNMS.com) is about 4 years old (actually more like 7 if you count each evolutionary step of the company from sole proprietor to C corp )… just a little clarification. So it’s not exactly one of the “newest”. It was open source before open source was “cool”.

Collapse Comment by Jay Lyman, April 15, 2008 12:19 pm

Thanks, David. Fair enough on OpenNMS Group - it is not necessarily one of the ‘newest.’ However, it is still alive and kickin,’ gaining enterprise inroads (Hyperic partnership was big) and of course, is GPL. Good point that it is bootstrapped, which I doubt would be possible here without open source. Thanks again for posting.

JL

 
 

[...] Does your OS systems management got GPL? [...]

 

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