MESSAGE
DATE | 2005-06-15 |
FROM | From: "Inker, Evan"
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Wind River Executes 'A 180-Degree Turn'
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Wind River Executes 'A 180-Degree Turn' In three years, embedded leader turns from proprietary to major Linux player
By Edward J. Correia
June 15, 2005 - The transformation of Wind River Systems is complete. The embedded giant, seen only a few years ago as the leader of a diminishing group of proprietary software vendors, last month announced that it will develop its own distribution of Linux. This caps a remarkable transition that began with a failed attempt to buy its way into the open-source arena with BSD Unix.
The announcement came at the company's annual user conference in Orlando, Fla., where it also unveiled a new Linux- and VxWorks-based platform for consumer devices and Workbench 2.3, its latest Eclipse-based IDE.
Wind River's first attempt to compete with Linux was in 2002, when it launched BSD/OS, using technology acquired from BSD Unix from Berkeley Software Designs a year earlier. It withdrew the product from the market in November 2003, and the following February partnered with Red Hat on its Linux strategy.
The company hinted that it might develop its own Linux distribution as early as 2003, when in June of that year founder and then chairman Jerry Fiddler was quoted in the San Jose Mercury News saying that Wind River's desire was to build a profitable business with Linux.
According to John Bruggeman, the company's chief marketing officer, the company had little choice but to develop its own Linux distribution, despite having once vowed that it would not. As Wind River began to engage prospective Linux customers, it found that for many types of applications it simply had no choice, he said.
"You had to break the seal," Bruggeman said, adding that distributions of commercial embedded Linux vendors "didn't have the robustness and the quality that the Wind River brand represents." Available now as part of its new General Purpose Platform, Wind River Linux is based on kernel 2.6 from kernel.org and conforms to the Carrier Grade 2.0 specification.
The platform also encompasses VxWorks 6.1, the latest version of Wind River's proprietary RTOS that includes an implementation of the Transparent Interprocess Communication (TIPC) protocol and broader hardware support. General availability is set for this month.
"This is a 180-degree turn for Wind River," said John Carbone, vice president of marketing at Express Logic, which sells a competing real-time operating system, ThreadX. "They used to be relatively adversarial toward Linux and open source in general," he said, adding that Wind River is now not only embracing open source, but supporting ThreadX, a competitive RTOS, in Wind River's Workbench 2.3 integrated development environment.
Revving the Workbench The new version of Wind River's Workbench offers two main new features: support for Express Logic's ThreadX RTOS and also an OS-Awareness API, which Wind River says will let the IDE accommodate any real-time operating system.
For ThreadX, Workbench can now perform stop-mode debugging with Wind River's ICE and PROBE debuggers using JTAG target connections. "That's what most of our customers do. You can stop at a breakpoint and check memory registers and follow a thread or check kernel objects," said Carbone.
Workbench also now encompasses all of Wind River's development tools, including its Sniff+ code analysis, visionPROBE hardware bring-up and on-chip debugging tools.
"There is now one consistent seamless user interface across all the different developer types that contains all the probes, emulators and other technologies," Wind River's Bruggeman said.
Wind River will begin offering Workbench-still priced starting at US$3,000 per seat-in less-expensive editions tailored for specific development needs, including editions with and without hardware debugging capabilities. The IDE, which has long supported Linux, now works with MontaVista Linux; distributions from Red Hat and kernel.org had been supported previously.
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