The Open Source Census is a collaborative project started by OpenLogic with the aim of collecting and sharing quantitative data on the use of open source software, and has revealed that more the 220,000 open source packages and project installations are in use on business hard drives. The census now aims to delve further in to open source products used by enterprise adapters. The project has many sponsors, one of them being Microsoft.
Kim Weins, senior vice president of marketing for OpenLogic, said, “The big push now is working with enterprises to submit data from a much larger sampling of machines in their organizations.”
According to organisers, the ranks of the census membership are swelling as the third phase of the ongoing open source census begins. The first two stages involved drumming up support and framework for conducting a global census and an initial wave of survey reporting by participating companies.
Now the survey is gaining international recognition. Around 66 percent f computer hard drives canned by their owners in the first two months were outside the US. Global participation in the census extended to Europe, Canada and Australia.
“The first wave of program surveying was based on data from only a handful of computers in each participating business,” Weins said “the company representative participating in the software scan would search perhaps his or her own desktop computer or a few in a single location inside the company.”
OpenLogic now wants to dive “deeper to get more detailed data compiled from scans done on hundreds or even thousands of computers within the same organization”, she said
According to the census finding released on Monday, thus far, the top open source packages found installed in business offices – in order – are Firefox, Xerces, Zlib, Xalan and Prototype. The Linux OS Ubuntu is the top Linux Distribution on machines scanned to this point.
Various versions of Ubuntu accounted for almost half of all Linux distributions installed on participating machines. Debian accounted for 14 percent; Suse Linux distributions accounted for 12 percent of install base and Fedora Core with 7 percent.
“As more extensive surveys of installed packages are conducted, higher usage incidents of Red Hat Enterprise Linux should be evident”, believes Weins.
“At the enterprise level, we found 59 different installed packages a bit lower than we expected. This is probably because the census is still in the early stage. We expect to see the number of different installed packages to grow to around 100,” Weins explained.
New members have joined the census organization at various levels, including a new level called “Friends of the Open Source Census.” New participants at the Friends level include ActiveState, EnterpriseDB and OSAlt.com (Open Source as Alternative). New sponsors include Microsoft and Oregon State University’s Open Source Lab.
“ActiveState was built on open source, and we’re excited to support the Open Source Census,” said Bart Copeland, CEO of ActiveState. “Open source software offers enterprises flexibility, community development and increased innovation. The census is going to shine the light on how much enterprises are actually using open source technologies, including languages like Perl, Tcl and Python.”
Jeff Sheltren, the facility’s operations manager says the goal at Oregon State’s Open Source Labs’ is to not only facilitate open source communities but also the development and distribution of open source software.
“One of the main benefits we see with the Open Source Census is that it allows individuals and enterprises to report their OSS usage data anonymously to a centralized location. The census data can be used by open source software developers to see how widely used their applications are, while at the same time allowing enterprises to review their OSS usage and compare it to the aggregate data reported by all census users,” he said.
“Microsoft is participating in the open source census because its customers, partners and developers are working in increasingly heterogeneous environments”, explained Sam Ramji, senior director of platform strategy at Microsoft. “Projects like the Open Source Census are relevant for the ecosystem in which Microsoft participates”, he added.
Microsoft, he claimed, actively participates in open source through Microsoft engineers and product teams and with industry partners and OSS projects.
OpenLogic launched the Open Source Census in April 2008. The goal is to provide improved data on how open source software is used in the enterprise. Sponsors include IDC; CollabNet; Holme, Roberts & Owen; Navica; Olliance Group; Open Solutions Alliance; Open Source Business Foundation; and Unisys.
The Open Source Census also has enlisted advisors from the open source development community, including Jim Jagielski, chairman of the Apache Foundation; and Tony Wasserman, director of the Software Management Program at Carnegie Melon West.