Blink! Google Is Forking WebKit
Carewolf writes "In a blog post titled Blink: A rendering engine for the Chromium project, Google has announced that Chromium (the open source backend for Chrome) will be switching to Blink, a new WebKit-based web rendering engine. Quoting: 'Chromium uses a different multi-process architecture than other WebKit-based browsers, and supporting multiple architectures over the years has led to increasing complexity for both the WebKit and Chromium projects. This has slowed down the collective pace of innovation... This was not an easy decision. We know that the introduction of a new rendering engine can have significant implications for the web. Nevertheless, we believe that having multiple rendering engines—similar to having multiple browsers—will spur innovation and over time improve the health of the entire open web ecosystem. ... In the short term, Blink will bring little change for web developers. The bulk of the initial work will focus on internal architectural improvements and a simplification of the codebase. For example, we anticipate that we’ll be able to remove 7 build systems and delete more than 7,000 files—comprising more than 4.5 million lines—right off the bat. Over the long term a healthier codebase leads to more stability and fewer bugs.'"
Opera has said that they will also be moving to Blink as they transition away from the Presto engine.
Forking has a long tradition in open source software, webkit itself was forked from KHTML. There is absolutely nothing anti open source about it. Find yourself a new argument why Google sucks.
This is not true. I have been contributing to WebKit for 2 years, and overall I feel Apple reviewers are the easiest to work with.
The problem you're referring to is due to the lack of testing infrastructure on non-popular platforms. For every patch entering the commit queue, a whole set of unit tests and layout tests need to be run, and the patch will only land if none of the tests failed. Apple and Google do provide their own buildbots for each port they maintain, to minimize chance of breaking. It is not like we are hostile against other platforms. Just that without proper test coverage it is really difficult not to break them by accident, and in the unlikely event that a port break, we try to fix it or revert the patch.