Alternatives To SF.net's CompileFarm?
cronie writes "Not long ago, SourceForge.net announced the shutdown of the Compile Farm — a collection of computers running a wide variety of OSes, available for compiling and testing open source projects. SF.net stated their resources 'are best used at this time in improving other parts' of the service. I consider this sad news for the OSS community, because portability is one of the strengths of OSS, and not many of us have access to such a variety of platforms to compile and test our software on. As a consequence, I expect many projects dropping support for some of the platforms they can't get access to. Are there any sound alternatives with at least some popular OS/hardware combinations? Any plans to create one? (Perhaps Google or IBM might come up with something?)"
Hardly. The future is and has long been one of "write once, test anywhere". And that's the need the compile farm filled. Writing once and expecting it to automatically run everywhere without modifications is a pipe dream.
Posted By: wdavison
Date: 2007-02-16 00:13
Summary: Compile Farm News
As of 2007-02-08, SourceForge.net Compile Farm service has been officially discontinued.
Shutdown on Feb. 8, announcement on Feb. 16th?
With behavior like that, SourceForge can't be considered a safe location for important code. I'd suggest that it's time to get projects off SourceForge. Make offsite backups of anything important now.
Latest announcement from VA Software, which owns SourceForge:
VA Software Corp., whose software and online media are targeted for the open-source software community, said Thursday it named Scott E. Howe to its board of directors.
Howe is president of a division of digital marketing company aQuantive Inc.
"Scott's extensive knowledge of the media markets will be invaluable as we continue to focus on our core media assets and strive to secure alliances in the global competitive landscape," VA Software President and Chief Executive Ali Jenab said in a statement.
VA Software slipped a penny to close at $4.24 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
If VA Software thinks they're now a "media company", it's time to get off SourceForge.
VA Software owns Slashdot:
http://www.ostg.com/about/index.htm:
Ergo, VA Software is a media company.
Time to get off Slashdot.