Hi,
Werner just added me as a developer to Gnu Queue,
and I'd like to take a moment to introduce myself.
My name is John Taylor,
I work at Cadence Design Systems, Inc., in Cary, NC.
I have been programming in C and C++ since sometime in the 80s,
and my primary platforms are Linux and Solaris,
with side trips to Windows, DOS, and PalmOS.
We recently bought a bunch of IBM Xeon and Opteron 1u
servers, and my first reflex was to load DQS on them,
which I used to use on Suns.
Alas, DQS is no more, so I started looking at what the net
had to offer. Constraints were 1. Open Source, 2. Free, as in beer.
This quickly ruled out
LSF (no source, $$$),
Condor (weird licensing),
Sun "GridWare" (formerly Codine, formerly DQS, weird licensing, no
source),
and a couple of others.
Gnu Queue and GNQS emerged on top, to me.
Gnu Queue's cool rsh-like facility really set it apart from the others.
But when I went to download and compile it on RH8,
I couldn't!
And when I went to subscribe to the mailing lists,
I couldn't!
And when I examined the file dates, they were ancient!
Assuming there was still life in the project,
and noticing that people are still sending emails to the lists,
I decided to try to get Gnu Queue useful to me -
and that's why I am here.
I am not sure how much impact I will have,
or how much time I can commit,
but my goal is to get GQ into shape so that I can simply
download and compile it on my RH8 & RH9 and Solaris 8 & 9 machines.
Beyond that, who knows?
I think the market is wide-open for a good, solid queuing product -
and GQ might as well be it!
Please let me know if you have any questions or comments.
Thanks!
best regards,
-- johnT
John McKowen Taylor, Jr.
Cadence Design Systems, Inc.
200 Regency Forest Dr.
Cary, NC 27511 USA
+1 919 481 6835
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