Reasons Why You Don't Contribute To Open-Source Software

Posted by Michael Larabel on April 23, 2010

Over on the GCC mailing list is a rather lively discussion (especially for being a Friday evening) that only started earlier today. No, it's not about the recent GCC 4.5 release or even our GCC vs. Clang/LLVM benchmarks, but it's about development participation. A developer is asking why you don't participate in contributing to GCC?

There are many responses already, but the GNU Compiler Collection having higher standards for accepting patches than most other open-source projects and legal reasons have been the two most populous answers. Contributing to GCC requires filing a disclaimer that you assign the copyright to the Free Software Foundation. For developers employed by organizations, this disclaimer is often problematic and can take significant amounts of time before it's cleared by various legal departments, here is a good message in regards to that situation as even at least one developer at Stanford has been turned off by the situation.

Some of the complaints have been about the quality of the code within the free software world being absolutely appalling with different formatting techniques, few code comments, a lack of documentation, and other shortcomings when mostly unpaid developers from around the world all diverge on a single code-base. GCC on the other hand tends to have a higher standard with regard to code quality and documentation with requiring patches comply with the GNU style.

Other expressed barriers in participation have included spoken language difficulties, lack of time, GCC being bloated and crufty, and availability of hardware/architectures in testing patches. It's an interesting read with the different perspectives on the matter, which can be followed via this web thread. The discussion is still ongoing.

More generally than just GCC, why don't you participate in open-source projects that interest you? Or, on the other hand, what are your main motives for participating in such projects? Tell us in the forums.

Discuss this article in our forums, IRC channel, or email the author. You can also follow our content via RSS and on social networks like Facebook, Identi.ca, and Twitter (@Phoronix and @MichaelLarabel). Subscribe to Phoronix Premium to view our content without advertisements, view entire articles on a single page, and experience other benefits.
Latest Hardware Reviews
  1. Intel Haswell HD Graphics 4600 vs. AMD Radeon Graphics On Linux
  2. Intel Haswell HD Graphics 4600 Performance On Ubuntu Linux
  3. Intel Core i7 4770K "Haswell" Benchmarks On Ubuntu Linux
  4. The First Experience Of Intel Haswell On Linux
Latest Software Articles
  1. Optimized Binaries Provide Great Benefits For Intel Haswell
  2. 11-Way Linux, BSD Platform Comparison
  3. SNA Acceleration Works Great For Intel Core i7 Haswell
  4. The Linux Evolution For Intel Haswell's Performance
Latest Linux News
  1. Ubuntu Announces Carrier Advisory Group
  2. Qt 5.1 Release Candidate 1 Has Arrived
  3. In-Fighting Continues Over Mir On Non-Unity Ubuntu
  4. Subversion 1.8 Presents New Features
  5. LLVM 3.3 Officially Released
  6. LLVM/Clang Now Uses Loop Vectorizer At New Levels
  7. Intel GPU Driver Tries To Rip Out FBDEV Support
  8. Coreboot Doing AMD USB 3.0, Q35 QEMU Emulation
  9. VP9 Codec Now Enabled By Default In Chrome
  10. openSUSE 13.1 M2 Plays On PulseAudio 4.0
  11. Debian 7.1 Rounds In Some Bug-Fixes
Latest Forum Talk
  1. Vote for GOG to add Linux versions of games they...
  2. Intel Haswell HD Graphics 4600 vs. AMD Radeon...
  3. Intel GPU Driver Tries To Rip Out FBDEV Support
  4. In-Fighting Continues Over Mir On Non-Unity Ubuntu
  5. Mir Still Causing Concerns By Ubuntu Derivatives
  6. Ubuntu Announces Carrier Advisory Group
  1. Computers
  2. Display Drivers
  3. Graphics Cards
  4. Motherboards
  5. Peripherals
  6. Processors
  7. Software
  8. Operating Systems
  9. All Articles
  1. Linux Benchmarking
  2. OpenBenchmarking.org
  3. Phoronix Test Suite