Today, Redis makes a dramatic return to its open source roots, offering Redis 8 under the AGPLv3 license. The shift follows a similar move by Elastic in August 2024 and completes the company’s somewhat circ
Redis’ license change “achieved our goal,” writes Redis CEO Rowan Trollope. “AWS and Google now maintain their own forks.” How is this a good thing? Because, Trollope told me in an interview, “We’re on a level playing field now; we get to compete on product.” With AWS and Google focused on developing the Valkey fork of Redis (Microsoft has partnered with Redis), Redis can focus on shipping the best possible product. Trollope is enthusiastic about the prospect: “Who’s going to ship the best stuff? We have the creator [Salvatore Sanfilippo] of Redis behind us, alongside the team who built it. We’re already seeing that pay off in things like vector sets, a new native data type for Redis that Salvatore developed. I’ll bet on that team any time.”
In other words , changing licenses may not have been intended to spur the clouds to fork Redis (or Elasticsearch), but it may end up being the best thing for everyone involved, including customers.
Forking is good for you
I recently wrote about the success of OpenTofu (a fork of HashiCorp’s Terraform), and OpenSearch (a fork of Elastic’s Elasticsearch). I’ve yet to write about Valkey, but there would be plenty of good things to say, given former Redis maintainer (and AWS engineer) Madelyn Olson’s involvement and its growing community. In the past year, it has garnered nearly 20,000 GitHub stars, over 750 forks, and more than 5 million Docker pulls. Despite the success of these forks, or perhaps because of them, Elastic, Redis, and HashiCorp are thriving.
Huh?
Redis’ license changes and, by extension, the Valkey fork, Trollope tells me, “[haven’t] had any effect on our business.” Indeed, he says, “We’ve had record growth since we switched the license.” Though this seems superficially counterintuitive, it’s actually common sense: The more the clouds have focused on the forks, the clearer the product differentiation for Redis (and Elastic and HashiCorp). “We accomplished what we set out to do, which is for cloud providers to stop profiting off our innovation without giving anything back,” Trollope notes.
Not everyone agrees with this, nor do they need to. RedMonk cofounder James Governor suggests such license changes amount to tr eating open source like a “short-term tactic” for marketing
Developers can choose
Having options is the point, right? Open source is always about choice. In a previous interview Trollope told me that “what [developers] really care about is capab
This is a feature, not a bug. Different developers (and their respective employers) want different things. The Valkey community will build a great product, and Redis will build a great product. Both open source. Everyone wins.
“We think [changing to AGPLv3 is] the right thing to do for our users, and it’s the right strategic direction for the company,” says Trollope. It should ensure an even better Redis, while the Valkey fork, steered by an increasingly di verse array of contributors from Alibaba, Google, Ericsson, Huawei, Tencent, AWS, and others, promises to give developers a strong alternative. Neither Redis nor Val
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Source: https://www.infoworld.com/article/3975620/redis-bets-big-on-an-open-source-return.html