The Symbian Foundation says it is well on its way toward the goal of open-sourcing the Symbian OS, having reached the release of the platform microkernel and supporting development kit under the Eclipse Public License.The Symbian Foundation announced Oct.
21 that it is well on its way toward the goal of open-sourcing the Symbian OS
by reaching the release of the platform microkernel and supporting development
kit under the Eclipse Public License.
The release of the kernel, EKA2 (Epco Kernel Architecture 2), is "nine
months ahead of schedule and reflects the positive momentum behind Symbian's ambitious
platform migration plan, which began with the release of security code under EPL,"
Symbian said in the release.
The Symbian Foundation will discuss its open-source plans further at the
upcoming Symbian
Exchange and Exposition, its annual developer conference in London,
which will be held Oct. 27 to 28.
According to the release:
"16 out of a total 134 platform
packages have now been released into open source since the code was first made
available on the Symbian Foundation servers in April 2009.
"'The release of the micro kernel
demonstrates three vital, guiding principles of the foundation: first, the
commitment of many community members to the development of the platformin this
case, Accenture, ARM, Nokia and Texas Instruments Incorporated
(TI) all made contributions; second, progress in fulfilling our commitment to a
complete open source release of Symbian; and third, a tangible example of
providing the most advanced mobile platform in the world,' said Lee Williams,
Executive Director [of] Symbian Foundation."
It continued:
"As the 'heart' of the platform,
Symbian's real-time microkernelcomprising robust, fully multi-tasking architecturemanages
all system resources and frameworks necessary for the co-existence of the
processes and applications that make up the complete system.
"To enable the community to fully
leverage the open source kernel, Symbian is providing a complete development
kit, free of charge, including ARM's high
performance RVCT [RealView Compilation Tool] compiler tool chain.
"The provision of the kit
demonstrates Symbian's commitment to lowering access barriers to encourage the
wider development communitysuch as research institutions, enthusiast groups
and individual developersto get creative with the code.
"The complete kit, which can be
downloaded from http://tiny.symbian.org/SymbianKernel, consists of:
Open source kernel and other complementary packages
High performance ARM
compiler tool chain (RVCT4.0): free to developers and companies of less than 20
employees
Open source simulation environment based on the QEMU open source
processor emulator
Open source base support package for the low cost Beagle Board
Supporting binaries
Hardware execution environment"
"We are delighted to see Symbian Foundation achieve this milestone in
its migration to open source. Symbian has always taken full advantage of
leading-edge ARM processors increasing the performance
and feature set of mobile handsets," said John Cornish, executive vice
president and general manager of the system design division at ARM,
in a statement. "It is essential that developers have access to the best
tools, which is why we have partnered with Symbian to enable widespread
development using the ARM compiler tool
chain. We are also pleased to join the Architecture Council of the Symbian
Foundation and contribute to the long-term success of the Symbian
platform."
"TI continues its long history of supporting Symbian with its multiple
solutions available within the Symbian Foundation, including code for
connectivity as well as parts of our base support package," said Pierre
Garnier, vice president and general manager of TI's wireless business.
"Our customers have access to a variety of open solutions from TI and
other open-source communities, such as beagleboard.org and omapzoom.org, that
make it easier for the Symbian developer community to create applications on
the OMAP 3 platform. We believe access to such resources will spark innovation
and help developers advance the next generation of media-rich devices."
Meanwhile, on a separate note, David Wood, who has served in many roles at
Symbian, including executive vice president of research and chief
technologist, has stepped down from his role with the organization to
explore the future of energy.
In a blog post, Wood
said:
"Anyone who has dipped into my
personal blog or followed my tweets will have noticed my deep interest in
topics such as: the future of energy, accelerated climate change, accelerated
artificial intelligence, looming demographic changes and the longevity
dividend, life extension and the future of medicine, nanotechnology, smart
robotics, abundance vs. scarcity, and the forthcoming dramatic societal and
personal impacts of all of these transformations. In short, I am fascinated and
concerned about the breakthrough future of technology, as well as by the
breakthrough future of smartphones."
Wood added: "I do believe that I need to step back from employment with
the Symbian Foundation in order to give that investigation a proper chance to
succeed. I need to open up time for wide-ranging discussions with numerous interesting
individuals and companies, both inside and outside the smartphone
industry."
In a blog post of his own on the subject, the Symbian Foundation's
Williams said:
"Here at the Symbian Foundation
we want to give David Wood our best wishes as he steps back from his role at
Symbian Foundation to pursue his interests in the future of energy, accelerated
climate change, artificial intelligence, and life extensionin short, exploring
the future of technology as it transforms our lives and our planet."