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Terraform is no longer open source. Is OpenTofu (ex OpenTF) the successor?
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Terraform is no longer open source. This is the news we got last month (August 2023), when HashiCorp announced its decision to relicense its open source tools, including Terraform, Vault, Packer, Consul, Vagrant and others, into Business Source License 1.1.
The community, led by active Terraform-based vendors, gathered up to create a fork of Terraform to keep it open. The result is OpenTofu (originally called OpenTF), whose manifesto already has tens of thousands of stars on GitHub, less than a month out. Only a month old, engineers are hard at work to establish the first release of OpenTofu, as well as its foundational backbone.
In this month’s episode I covered these significant events that shake our industry and the DevOps world. I was joined by Omry Hay, co-founder and CTO of env0. env0 provides an automation solution based on Terraform, and is one of the creators of OpenTofu and a member of the project’s steering committee. Omry also shared OpenTofu’s mission and current status, as well as exciting updates, hot off Open Source Summit Europe conference taking place these days, in which OpenTofu has officially joined The Linux Foundation.
Omry has been a software engineer and engineering manager for the last 16 years, working at companies like eToro, Fiverr and Proofpoint. As CTO of env0, he leads the R&D and Product departments.
The podcast episodes are available for listening on your favorite podcast app and on this YouTube channel.
Follow us on Twitter @openobserv to get the live stream times and other updates, and to pitch in with your thoughts and comments.
Resources
=========
Chapters
========
00:00 - show intro
00:56 - episode and guest intro
02:45 - HashiCorp’s relicensing announcement
04:58 - what the relicensing means for users
14:50 - implications on the Terraform ecosystem
24:55 - HCL language for IaC
28:36 - what does the new license mean?
32:13 - Terms of service changed for Terraform Registry
36:08 - forking Terraform and starting OpenTF/OpenTofu
41:08 - how many engineers work on OpenTofu
42:18 - joining the Linux Foundation and renaming OpenTofu
48:50 - OpenTofu release and Terraform compatibility
56:54 - roadmap for OpenTofu
59:00 - how to get touch with the community and Omry
1:04:30 - The OSI Approved Licenses database is available
1:05:28 - Red Hat changed the CentOS release process
Dotan Horovits
============
Omry Hay
===============
The community, led by active Terraform-based vendors, gathered up to create a fork of Terraform to keep it open. The result is OpenTofu (originally called OpenTF), whose manifesto already has tens of thousands of stars on GitHub, less than a month out. Only a month old, engineers are hard at work to establish the first release of OpenTofu, as well as its foundational backbone.
In this month’s episode I covered these significant events that shake our industry and the DevOps world. I was joined by Omry Hay, co-founder and CTO of env0. env0 provides an automation solution based on Terraform, and is one of the creators of OpenTofu and a member of the project’s steering committee. Omry also shared OpenTofu’s mission and current status, as well as exciting updates, hot off Open Source Summit Europe conference taking place these days, in which OpenTofu has officially joined The Linux Foundation.
Omry has been a software engineer and engineering manager for the last 16 years, working at companies like eToro, Fiverr and Proofpoint. As CTO of env0, he leads the R&D and Product departments.
The podcast episodes are available for listening on your favorite podcast app and on this YouTube channel.
Follow us on Twitter @openobserv to get the live stream times and other updates, and to pitch in with your thoughts and comments.
Resources
=========
Chapters
========
00:00 - show intro
00:56 - episode and guest intro
02:45 - HashiCorp’s relicensing announcement
04:58 - what the relicensing means for users
14:50 - implications on the Terraform ecosystem
24:55 - HCL language for IaC
28:36 - what does the new license mean?
32:13 - Terms of service changed for Terraform Registry
36:08 - forking Terraform and starting OpenTF/OpenTofu
41:08 - how many engineers work on OpenTofu
42:18 - joining the Linux Foundation and renaming OpenTofu
48:50 - OpenTofu release and Terraform compatibility
56:54 - roadmap for OpenTofu
59:00 - how to get touch with the community and Omry
1:04:30 - The OSI Approved Licenses database is available
1:05:28 - Red Hat changed the CentOS release process
Dotan Horovits
============
Omry Hay
===============
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