XenServer Creedence: XenServer one year after being open-sourced - Tim Mackey, Citrix
In June of 2013 Citrix officially transitioned XenServer form being primarily a commercial software effort to being an open source software effort. During the last year we’ve had ups and downs, but are also countering detractors with one of the largest XenServer engineering efforts in years. Code named Creedence, we’ve embarked on a complete platform refresh, and done so with active community input. In this session we’ll cover some of what’s happened at XenServer.org, what the core philosophy is for XenServer, and what changes you can expect to see in XenServer as Creedence is released.
In June of 2013 Citrix officially transitioned XenServer form being primarily a commercial software effort to being an open source software effort. During the last year we’ve had ups and downs, but are also countering detractors with one of the largest XenServer engineering efforts in years. Code named Creedence, we’ve embarked on a complete platform refresh, and done so with active community input. In this session we’ll cover some of what’s happened at XenServer.org, what the core philosophy is for XenServer, and what changes you can expect to see in XenServer as Creedence is released.