Skip to main content

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [List Home]
Re: [paho-dev] Contribution of MQTT Servers (Mosquitto and RSMB)


That makes sense to me. 

Mike Milinkovich
mike.milinkovich@xxxxxxxxxxx
+1.613.220.3223
From: Ian Craggs
Sent: Monday, August 12, 2013 2:31 PM
To: mike.milinkovich@xxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: 'Ian Skerrett'; 'General development discussions for paho project'; 'Roger Light'; 'Eclipse Management Organization'
Subject: Re: [paho-dev] Contribution of MQTT Servers (Mosquitto and RSMB)

Ian, Mike,

to answer the question of how Mosquitto and RSMB code bases will be merged.

My view is that this proposal is as much as a "declaration of intent"
from IBM, as much as a contribution of code. It will signal that the
future of RSMB is in open source, here in Eclipse. That signal is for
people inside IBM as well as in the open source community. Whether RSMB
code is actually used in a final Mosquitto product is secondary - there
will be no forced merging.

IBM will have already contributed to the project: the design of MQTT and
much of the external behaviour of Mosquitto itself, which was originally
derived from RSMB. The design of RSMB, though it looks simple, was
influenced by my years of experience with MQTT servers, and with the
collaboration of a number of other IBM folk, like Andy Stanford-Clark,
Dave Conway-Jones, Nick O'Leary and Dave Locke.

There a few functions that exist in RSMB that do not currently in
Mosquitto - some serviceability aids in RSMB were required by IBM to
build a supported product for instance. Both RSMB and the existing
Mosquitto projects use conditional compilation to allow smaller, less
functional executables to be built as desired. If there is function
which IBM wants, but the Mosquitto project leads do not, it could be
applied by patch or conditional compilation by IBM (but would still be
open source). If code from RSMB is useful, having the codebase
contributed already makes it easy to pick and choose.

Either way, I intend to contribute to the project, whether through code
or tests or documentation, or in other ways. And we already have a
codebase which satisfies the draft aims of the project.

Ian Craggs

On 08/12/2013 04:56 PM, Mike Milinkovich wrote:
>> The proposal looks good to me. Has there been a discussion on how the RSMB
>> and Mosquitto code bases will be merged?
> Step one is to get both code bases contributed to a common project under the
> same license. Before that happens, the code merge conversation is rather
> moot. Especially since RSMB's code is not currently available in open source
> for others to see.
>
>



Back to the top