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Samba 'pleased' with Microsoft co-operation

Andrew Tridgell, author of Samba, has said communication with Microsoft engineers is back on track following last year's interoperability deal
Written by Angus Kidman, Contributor

Microsoft and the developers of the open-source Samba protocol are co-operating much more effectively since a landmark settlement late last year, according to the software's original developer.

In December, Microsoft agreed to make documentation relating to its workgroup server products available to the Samba team under a non-disclosure agreement.

The non-disclosure agreement was brokered on behalf of Samba by the Protocol Freedom Information Foundation (PFIF), an organisation that seeks to facilitate the exchange of free and open-source software information. PFIF, which paid a one-off fee of €10,000 (£5,000) for the documentation, is part of the Software Freedom Law Center.

While Samba's developers must keep that documentation confidential, they can implement code reflecting it within open-source projects.

"In the early '90s we had a very good engineering relationship with [Microsoft]," Samba author Andrew Tridgell said during a presentation on clustering Samba at the linux.conf.au conference in Melbourne.

"Then there was a period in the wilderness for about 10 years," said Tridgell. During that time, Samba's developers had to rely on reverse-engineering to make the product work, which was difficult when dealing with entirely undocumented features.

Following the December settlement, communication has quickly resumed. "We're talking directly to the engineers again, and engineers, as with engineers everywhere, like talking," Tridgell said.

"We're really very pleased with how that's going," Tridgell added.

With more than 15,000 pages of documentation to consider, however, major changes to the software will be some time coming, Tridgell said. "There's a lot to look at."

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