Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sun, 17 Mar 2002 15:27:04 +0300
From:      Hans Reiser <reiser@namesys.com>
To:        Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com>
Cc:        Chris Mason <mason@suse.com>, Josh MacDonald <jmacd@CS.Berkeley.EDU>, Parity Error <bootup@mail.ru>, freebsd-fs@FreeBSD.ORG, reiserfs-dev@namesys.com
Subject:   Re: [reiserfs-dev] Re: metadata update durability ordering/soft updates
Message-ID:  <3C948B98.2080703@namesys.com>
References:  <E16lReK-000C3T-00@f10.mail.ru> <3C910C57.71C2D823@mindspring.com> <20020315065651.02637@helen.CS.Berkeley.EDU> <3C923C91.454D7710@mindspring.com> <1562810000.1016224776@tiny> <3C928D21.404EA11D@mindspring.com> <1714680000.1016298986@tiny> <3C93BBF1.7E8801DF@mindspring.com> <3C946B57.3060403@namesys.com> <3C946B33.888F2281@mindspring.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Terry Lambert wrote:

>Hans Reiser wrote:
>
>>Oh this is crap.  There is nothing that Chris does in our journaling
>>code that wasn't already done in databases for years before this patent
>>was issued.  (Chris, while you implement better than they did, I don't
>>think your architecture is at all new.)
>>
>
>This is irrelevent to the legal system.
>
No, it is called prior art.  It is entirely relevant.

>
>
>>As for your claiming you don't want to discuss it, this is bullshit,
>>
>
>As a Senior Software Engineer for Novell UNIX Systems Group,
>which integrated the former USL in June of 1994, in late 1994,
>during which time my primary job responsibilities included
>developing an attributed FS for UNIX for use in the NetWare
>for UNIX 4.x, I reviewed the DOW patent claims and materials
>prior to the filing by the authors.
>
>This event should be verifiable with Bryan Sparks, Gary
>Tomlinson, Jim Freeman, Darren Davis, and other people
>curently or formerly working for Caldera Systems, in Orem
>Utah, and well known to the Linux community.  Actually, I'm
>pretty sure Jim Freeman reviewec the same documents.
>
>It is my opinion that the ReiserFS management of preserve
>lists probably infringes US Patent 5666532.  It's no secret
>
Preserve lists were removed from the code by Chris Mason years ago.

>
>that I hold this opinion; I have posted consistently on it
>
you mean, you told everyone but me, the author/inventor of preserve lists.

>
>for several years, ever since the 0.2 release of ReiserFS
>included Write Ordering for shifted tree items.  I can give
>you list references back at least a year, or even earlier,
>if I hit my offline mail archives.
>
>It's also no secret that I think it's easy to get around
>this by changing from DOW technology to the Ganger/Patt
>Soft Updates technology, which would make it a non-issue.
>
We use journaling.  Have done so for years.  

>
>
>
>>you are spreading FUD about our product in a potential future
>>market for ReiserFS in a manner that could discourage someone
>>from paying for the port.  This is extremely irresponsible.
>>Don't pretend to be friendly, your actions are quite
>>harmful and irresponsible.
>>
>
>Actually, the ReiserFS-Dev list was added to the Cc: line
>of a thread on the FreeBSD-FS list by Josh McDonald; I
>would just as soon not be quoted in part and out of context
>on a list where the entire thread was not archived.  If
>I had noticed the addition, I would have removed it from
>the "Cc:" list befre replying to his posting.
>
You prefer to say bad things behind people's backs, so that you never 
find out if they are untrue, and sales are lost without my ever knowing why.

>
>
>For FreeBSD, unless you are building a commercial product
>based on FreeBSD and negotiate a seperate license, ReiserFS
>under the GPL is a no-op, since you could not ship a binary
>for FreeBSD that was capable of booting off ReiserFS, due
>to license incompatability with the GPL.  This is the same
>
We would charge for any FreeBSD port, and the license would be a 
limiting (proprietary or GPL) license.  There are probably appliance 
vendors and the like who would find this of interest.

>
>technicality that keeps the FreeBSD community from supporting,
>in a non-fringe way, a port of XFS or JFS to FreeBSD.
>
>FWIW: almost every UNIX vendor to whom you would market the
>code has a license for SVR4.2, which includes a license for
>use of the DOW Patents, so it's a non-issue for most
>potential commerical licensees of the code.
>
>
>If it makes you any happier, SQUID infringes at least 5 IBM
>patents.  When I was employed by IBM, we were forced to remove
>it from an unreleased IBM product (they acquired our company
>prior to releasing the product) to avoid granting royalty free
>licenses to use those patents to anyone who bought a $1500
>product and demanded the sources to the SQUID code from IBM
>under the terms of the GPL.
>
>Just because a company has a patent doesn't mean it will sue;
>if the patent had been transferred from Novell to SCO along
>with USL, the problem would be moot.  As it is, I'm not sure
>whether or not the license is sublicensable (I assume that
>it is), so the shipping ReiserFS on Caldera's OpenLinux
>Workstation 3.1 may in fact destroy the enforcibility of the
>patent by Novell, in any case.  The people to ask on that are
>Caldera; my assumptions are not strong enough for me to take
>the risk, so they shouldn't be strong enough for you.
>
>My opinion of software patents is probably lower than yours,
>but they are a fact of life in this business.
>



To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-fs" in the body of the message




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?3C948B98.2080703>