back to article What is a Linux distro worth?

Here's a thought experiment proposed by the Linux Foundation today: If you had to start from scratch, what would it cost to create a Linux distribution? The short answer is: about $1.4bn for the Linux kernel and about $10.8bn for the Red Hat Fedora 9 development release, the latest one out this summer. Because Linux is an …

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  1. Tom Chiverton

    invalid

    But it always assumes 'starting from scratch' which isn't the case - FAIL.

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Interesting

    But how do they account for the ammount of programming that need not have been carried out, becuase it gets replaced straight away by better, more consise code?

    The point I'm making is, how much of the code that is written for linux is just dumped because it's rubbish? With a big corporate this sort of thing is kept to a minimum.

    Not that I'm suggesting that Linux wouldn't cost a fair ammount to develop from scratch, mind.

  3. Robert Grant

    Code quality and audit...

    ...from looking at the output of most corporations, the value of the above that Linux contains is almost priceless.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Boffin

    reversing this.....

    If they HAD to pay, would it consist of:

    10 Print

    20 Goto 10?

    maybe it only has so much code, because it is free.....

  5. Paolo
    Gates Halo

    Does this compare to Windows?

    Do we know how much Microsoft invested in, say, XP? Do we know the LOC count?

    Would be an interesting comparison, and of course some validation of whether his economic model is total bollocks or not.

  6. Nathan Meyer

    Free to Cheap, and Worth Every Penny

    The question not asked is if most businesses would pay for Linux or any other Unix derivative if the actual cost were being recouped via sales? Given the implementation and support costs of Unix derived systems, I suspect that would be a big "no". Like DARPANet, if the development and deployment costs had not been inititially underwritten by those subsisting on government largesse, Unix and Linux would have gone nowhere.

  7. amanfromMars Silver badge

    Virtual Accompaniments ..... Joint AddAIdDVentures

    With Linux Code flooding the Money Markets and Invisible Trade Sectors , Crack Coders will be Gifted with Gifting and as Much Wealth as they can Spend for Good Effect ..... for All of their Enobling Endeavour and Selfless Effort Rewarded with just More than always More than Enough to Allow Spendings Gift ..... Freedom to Invent and Build Dream Scenarios .

    AI Companion of the Venus Project ?..... http://www.thevenusproject.com/index.html

  8. Ian McNee
    Flame

    TROLL ALERT!!!

    So that's why Windoze and other legacy OSs are so rubbish - because they spend comparatively little developing them? :)

  9. Dave The Cardboard Box

    My garage cost £120,000,000,000

    When you factor in the real costs. 3000 years of agriculture, 2000 years of written knowledge/education , the London flood defences, the cost of two world wars, £800 to a guy called Jerczy. It all adds up.

  10. Neil Greatorex
    Linux

    I for one

    Thank our selfless FOSS contributors, without them my 8 year old son wouldn't be able to dual boot Ubuntu & Mandrake, as I wouldn't be able to afford them :-)

    He hates Windows, with a will, after spending over 4 hours on a Scratch program only to see all his work lost when the Windoze PC BSoD'ed (totally unrelated to his Scratch session)

    Penguin obviously, though I'd like to boot Paris.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Joke

    Too many line breaks?

    Obviously, the only way to reduce the cost of coding these days is to limit the use of line breaks!

    fewer lines = fewer ££

  12. Mark

    re invalid

    So what?

    Win XP cost more than NT enen though most of the code was

    a) from NT

    b) from Win9x

    c) from device manufacturers

    All that code we already paid for and NO UPGRADE DISCOUNT

  13. Adam Williamson
    Thumb Down

    Largesse?

    NathanMeyer: "Like DARPANet, if the development and deployment costs had not been inititially underwritten by those subsisting on government largesse, Unix and Linux would have gone nowhere."

    Sounds like an excellent argument for government 'largesse', to me. Of course, a more accurate term would be 'extremely sensible investment'. To turn it around, the argument runs "if the government does not spend money on intelligent people doing interesting things which may not have immediate commercial value, no-one will". This is why we have publicly-funded research institutions in the first place, yes?

  14. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Well so far it is worth at

    least one leading unix company and a commercial operating system - SCO Xenix anyone?

  15. Ira Downing
    Thumb Down

    Are you sure?

    I thought linux was a kernel? Thats it. Then a bunch of Coders from around the world built the software that runs on the kernel. Did Linus Torvald spend a billion dollars creating a kernel?

    In my experience most small business startups will have founders moonlighting to run the startup until enough income rolls in to work on it full-time.

    The entire notion of some angel investor stepping in with salaries and benefits in the millions to create a product from scratch is not realistic. Any real world attempt to create a new operating system would not waste time re-inventing the wheel. They would be aware of the processes that created OSX.

    I'm sorry but I feel this article is a load of horse shit.

  16. Pete Silver badge

    now, deduct from the total the value of the "fun" ..

    ... the volunteers gained and your total will be negative.

    Really, the people who did this work are volunteers. They chose to spend their own time in this pursuit and therefore gained some (intangible) benefits from doing so. Whether that was entertainment, peer-group recognition, bragging rights, magnanimous giving, the chance for fame or self-education is irrelevant:, what they got out of the exercise was, as a whole, greater than what they put in.

    So far as corporately sponsored or produced donations goes - who can say. In true capitalist traditions some choose to give away, or sell at a loss. Whether they get any long-tern gain from that is part of the gamble. Since wealth is increasing over the long-term, you've got to say that this strategy, too, pays off.

    By trying to put a cash value on the development effort, the researcher betrays a mean spirited attitude: that everything can (should?) be thought of purely in monetary terms. By assuming the costs are all in US dollars and includes american rates of overhead (the 2.4 times salary component) he/she/it demonstrates a level of parochialism that invalidates not only their attitude, but their methodology, too. Ignore.

  17. Robert E A Harvey
    Linux

    I pay

    I used to buy every second issue of SuSe until Novell took it over. I am back on OpenSuse now.

    I have paid for Mandriva before - why not, they have to eat. I only stopped using it 'cos the USB boot version they sold me only jbexed with my thumb pressed down on it.

    I see no reason not to spring 30 quid every other year for something that so many people have worked on. At lkeast the money goes toward something I like, rather than the Microsoft tax.

  18. jake Silver badge

    @Nathan Meyer

    "if the development and deployment costs had not been inititially underwritten by those subsisting on government largesse, Unix and Linux would have gone nowhere."

    I think you'll find otherwise. UNIX was developed at Bell Labs, funded by AT&T. Linux was developed initially by Linus Torvalds when he was attending the University of Helsinki. Likewise, most of the GNU tools (especially GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection) came out of colleges and universities world wide.

  19. Simon Brown
    Flame

    outsource?

    What about if you outsourced it to Russian or Indian programmers? Presumably you could halve the costs...

  20. I. Aproveofitspendingonspecificprojects
    Heart

    Thank You.

    Not you. Fools.

    This is for the open sourcerers:

    Ta.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    The Myth of the "free" workers building Linux

    Sure some lonely hobbyist code bits of Linux occasionaly (hands up even I have), but in reaiity most of the work now is paid for by the likes of IBM or Tata who love to sell services on the back of it or people in Uiversities with time on their hands.

    As the saying goes - anything free is worth what you pay for it.

  22. Ami Ganguli
    Linux

    Wildly underestimates the cost.

    Linux inherited a well-tested basic design (though no actual code) from Unix in 1991 and has accumulated 17 years worth of real world experience since then. X and the GNU tools have matured for over twenty years (I remember installing the GNU toolset on Sun boxes in 1990 because they were so much better, even then, than what Sun offered at the time with SunOS). There's no way to value that experience.

    Plus, Linux vendors choose what they think is the optimal subset of the universe of free software to include in their distributions. Most software (whether Free or commercial) is crap. The fact that the code has been included in a distribution means that it's much better than average.

    If you just gave a team of 2000 thousand developers the money and time to produce something like a Linux distribution (as suggested by these models) 1) the code wouldn't have the decades to mature and learn from mistakes, 2) it would be of merely average quality (mostly crap, some good stuff) and not comparable to a distribution that only chooses the best software to include.

    To make it more concrete, there's a huge selection of Free window managers to choose from (http://xwinman.org/). They all work (they do what a window manager needs to do). A Linux distribution gets to choose the best from these pre-existing applications.

    If you had to create a window manager from scratch you could give some money to developers and get something that worked. But if you wanted to duplicate what goes into a Linux distribution, you'd have to pay 20(ish) teams to develop window managers and then choose the best.

  23. Adrian Waterworth
    Coat

    Dumping rubbish code.

    @Fraser: "With a big corporate this sort of thing is kept to a minimum" - what?!?? You must be kidding!! There's as much garbage code produced and subsequently dumped inside big corporates as there is anywhere else - possibly more. Back in the day, I've picked some of the most horrendous crap out of everything from Unix kernel modules at one extreme to piddling Windows utilities and bits of Javascript web front-end at the other. And like anyone else, I've produced the occasional abomination myself and then either had to fix it up or turn to one of my colleagues with a sheepish "Oops! My bad!" when he or she has spotted it. And all of that in the big corporate world in which you seem to have such faith. (Unless you were being ironic, in which case forget everything I said...)

    @Nathan: Not sure how much government largesse was involved in the development of Linux, but most of the other core Unix variants would probably have happened along quite nicely with or without it. Unix as a saleable, commercial proposition was fairly successful from a reasonably early stage and most of the really big IT market players have made plenty of money from it over the years. Hell, most of them still do make a bit of cash from it in one way or another. Of course, you could always turn the situation around and wonder whether DOS and Windows would ever have gone anywhere if Microsoft and the PC manufacturers hadn't, essentially, stitched up the market and foisted them on us. (Actually, there might be more truth in that than there is in the Unix/Linux thing come to think of it...)

  24. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Surely it is very easy

    To know how much a linux distribution is worth.

    What would a comparable commercial Unix distribution cost?

    Question answered.

    Why do people love to go about things the long and hard way?

  25. Ian
    Thumb Down

    Eh?

    Now according to my calculator if 17 million lines of code takes 4500 man years, that's 3778 lines a year, or if a developer does 200 working days a year that's 19 lines a day. Or 204.5 million lines taking 59,389 man years gives 17.2 lines a day. Now I've known some pretty slow developers but if I were paying $75,000 a year and got 17.2 lines a day ($21 per line) I'd be mighty pissed off, and almost certainly out of business. I just checked my own little open source project. It's been going a year had some major re-writes in places, all the work done in the evening while maintaining a normal(ish) family life - comes to 16,000(ish) lines of code as it stands. So that's 4.2 man years and worth $336,000. There is something very wrong with either:

    a) those figures

    b) my calculator

    c) me.

    (my guess is mainly a) with a dose of c).

  26. Martin Owens

    No Gnu love? Linux-tards

    >> most of the GNU tools ...

    Were made by The FSF with Richard Stallman leading the charge.

    Man you drop the Gnu project from the name and it's suddenly missing from the history too. See if you don't give credit were credit is due, you start saying silly things like "Linus created the Linux operating system":False

  27. Anonymous Coward
    Flame

    @Martin Owens

    "most of the GNU tools ...

    Were made by The FSF with Richard Stallman leading the charge."

    Exactly. And most members of the FSF at the time were, er, college/university students. Which is exactly the point Jake made. The Gnu's Not Unix project was (and still is) fired by the input of students. Read your history before you blame others for being historically correct, sir.

  28. Geoff Mackenzie

    @Ira Downing

    You're assuming that the kernel was a single-handed effort and has not received any volunteer contributions since. Also, re-inventing the wheel was necessary to produce an operating system whose source was available, so that future programmers wouldn't have to choose between lashing their work to the side of a sinking proprietary OS and reinventing the wheel themselves.

    In other words, I'm sorry, but your comment is horse shit.

    --

    Thanks, open-sourcers. Now I feel guilty that I've taken advantage of their excellent products for many years without contributing! Guess I'll have to start.

    Where's the GNU icon?

  29. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Fail

    I can pull meaningless big numbers out of my ass (arse) too. Look!

    $234893489237892348923789489234247890234

  30. Loki

    Thanks to the devs...

    I also add my thanks to those who contribute be them hobbyists who do it for the challenge/fun/recognition or if they are the big corporations who are sponsoring OSS.

    Over the years i have bought a few distros in order to support the producers.

    And who gives a damn about how much money could have been spent developing it... the point is nowhere near this amount was invested as many people gave freely.

    Do you think after readying this article Linus and RMS are banging their heads against walls thinking "Why didnt i go and code for money???". Nah... they are probably laughing their asses off.

  31. Edward Miles

    So... if I...

    $_ = ~s/\n//;

    LINUX COST VIRTUALLY NOTHING TO DEVELOP!

    :P

    A nice measure, but difficult to take seriously :)

  32. Paul M.
    Thumb Down

    Eat my gratitude!

    "... such estimates are a simple way of saying a simple thing: Thank you"

    ... for simple people.

    Exploitation is much easier when it's a) completely voluntary b) carried out in the name of a religion and c) administered with a smile.

  33. Ken Hagan Gold badge

    The timescale is important

    "If you had to start from scratch, what would it cost to create a Linux distribution?"

    How long have you got? It makes a huge difference to the answer.

    If I had to write some code to solve a problem, then I might decide that I could save a packet by building on an existing package and save even more by doing *my* bit open source and thereby getting contributions from other people. We'd all have our own reasons (quite possibly hard commercial ones) for wanting to solve this particular problem and we'd end up with a joint solution for less than any one of us could have engineered an individual one. The net cost of *adding* to a Linux distribution therefore works out negative.

    I think an AC pointed this out with regard to companies like IBM selling services on top of Linux. (I wouldn't want to claim this insight for myself, but I *do* want to emphasise it.) Linux passed the point some years ago where the incremental cost of addition was negative. It may by now have passed the point whereby the total cost (over history) is actually negative and the "seed capital" invested by governments and hobbyists has been repaid to society. (It certainly will pass that point eventually.)

    So, you see, if you work on it for long enough, Linux actually works out costing you less than nothing. The figures cited by the Linux Foundation are a bit like judging a startup right at the end of the "pre-revenue" stage.

  34. James Hughes

    @Ian

    There is a well known metric that on average, a developer produces about 20 lines of written, tested, debugged and documented lines of code a day. I think this is probably a bit out of date now, but the right order of magnitude.

    Yes, your open source project may have 16k lines developed in a year, but is it fully (FULLY) tested, is it fully commented and is it fully documented. If it has any of the above, then it's very unusual for Open source, where the majority of stuff I have to work with is badly documented, appallingly commented, but does, to its credit, mostly work (but I have not idea of whether it works in all scenarios)

  35. Anonymous Coward
    Linux

    That could be a very useful figure...

    ...if someone ever manages to establishe a legal precedent that says they should be paid for their contribution.

  36. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Turing got there quicker

    "(but not the David Wheeler who got the world's first PhD in computer science in 1951 and went on to invent the programming subroutine)..."

    Alan Turing was using subroutines long before that. I recall a remark of his about how, if programmers wanted "advanced operations" like addition and subtraction they could write subroutines for them - all he was putting into the hardware was logical AND and logical OR.

    So he invented RISC too...

  37. TimNevins
    Alien

    Sums up USA Big Business nicely

    No focus on the benefits reaped worldwide by FOSS.

    No focus on all the man-hours and expenses saved by FOSS.

    No focus on all 2nd/3rd World inhabitants able to get into programming/software for free compared to paying thousands for IDE's to MS/Borland/Sun in the days gone by.

    No focus on altruism as being a valid facet of human nature just as much as greed.

    Money.Money.Money.

    Explains their current financial predicaments.

    Evet held a door open for a woman?

    Just imagine how much money it would have cost if they had a doorman to do just that!!

  38. Ian

    @James

    You are probably right, but how much of a Unix distro falls under the 'usual for Open Source' bracket? Much of the distro is a collection of 'standard' open source packages. Some will be well tested and documented, but many won't.

    20 lines a day is, I think, rather out of date, considering modern development and test enviroments - but then I write c# in VS, not c++ in vi :)

    (My project is, of course, not tested/doc'd, it's a hobby project and aimed at developers. Chances are the number of lines will not change much now, but the testing and documentation will. I guess in four years I'll still have 16,000 lines of code but it will have taken four years - but it still won't be worth $336,000)

  39. Mark

    @James Hughes

    How do you know ANY of the millions of hidden lines of code in Vista have been checked?

    Results.

    Which doesn't look good for Vista, but let that pass...

    Now if you have Windows source, you can't compile it and you have no proof that that code you have is in the binary you are checking veracity from.

    OSI approved open source you CAN prove the code is right (except for Tivo-like bypassing of the open source license, where you can't install your checked code and see that this really IS the code running on your Tivo).

  40. Mark

    re: The timescale is important

    Not to total cost. Actually, because it's future value that economists use, the longer you take, the more expensive it is. £10 spent in the 1850's is worth a LOT more than a tenner spent now.

    Oh, and in the ONE YEAR between releases from Red Hat, $7Billion value has been added to Red Hat. So that would be a timescale of one year.

    IF you consider timescale important.

    NOTE: that was only possible because Red Hat didn't pay for all of that. IBM paid, Cisco paid, volunteers "paid". Each got enough value from their own contribution to make the spending worthwhile and gained so much more from other people's work there's no comparison.

  41. Mark

    re: Eat my gratitude!

    Uh, it's not exploitation if I only do what I want.

    And tell the luser "if you want that, code it yourself".

    Which people like you then point to as why Linux is the suxxors.

    So now you have admitted what sux is not being able to exploit people. Well sux to you.

  42. Mark

    re: now, deduct from the total the value of the "fun" ..

    Some people are accountants at heart and cannot think of ANYTHING without a price tag attached.

    This study is for them.

  43. Ken Hagan Gold badge

    @Ian, @James

    "20 lines a day is, I think, rather out of date"

    Measuring code in "lines" is, I think, rather out of date. Not only does it mostly measure the expressiveness of your language, or your use thereof, there's also the well-known witticism that a good day is one where you manage less than zero.

  44. FreeTard
    Thumb Down

    You have to laugh at stuff like this.

    Coz its a load of bollox.

  45. Nathan Meyer

    Bell Labs Was An ARPA Shop...

    Bell Labs flourished because (under the Vannevar Bush scheme) they were getting vast sums of Federal dollars. As did PARC Xerox, etc. When the Feds cut funding, they choked and died. Even more immediate, the people who built UNIX had started the effort as part of MULTICS, which was a DOD project, of which Bell had a piece. There are a lot of legends surrounding the birth of UNIX, but as far as I can tell it was not an official project funded by AT&T. UNIX was a bunch of guys at loose ends waiting for the next project who hacked something using software and hardware that had originally been bought for a different task. Not to demean their accomplishment; but it was never intended to be used for anything like what it is used for today.

    By the way, MULTICS continued after Bell dropped out, and I hear the source is now in the public domain.

  46. Mark

    @Ken Hagan

    Feel free to tell the world how to evaluate the value of code, then. That 20 lines per day figure is used when working out what code is worth when liquidating or when asserting damages for copyright infringement.

    If you have a better one, then please, tell us.

  47. A J Stiles
    Coat

    @ Reg Miles

    FAIL! You never need $_ =~ s///; . s///; is enough, since the =~ operator binds a regular expression operation to a variable. If used unbound, it binds to $_ .

    In Perl, if you call almost any function without an argument, it uses $_ . This allows you to avoid using temporary variables (like a stack only one space deep, and still much more useful than no stack). Also, where $_ is created by a foreach loop, it has highly magical scoping.

    All you people coming from lesser languages really have no idea!

    Mine's the camel-hair one.

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