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Added by Bob 'The Despot' McWhirter , last edited by Ben Walding on Mar 14, 2008  (view change)
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The Codehaus was formally registered on 26 February, 2003. Bob 'The Despot' McWhirter had been active in open-source for several years, with projects such as Jaxen and Drools. For a while, The Werken Company hosted his projects along with the projects of a handful of other developers. The Codehaus "brand" was created to allow for a neutral environment for non-Werken people to host their projects. Mostly, this was due to several folks thinking that Xulux was a project of The Werken Company since it was hosted on our server. The Codehaus helped to correct that misconception. kschrader publically announced the existance of the Codehaus a wee bit before Bob was ready for it. Oh well.

Jason van Zyl was sharing the cost of the Werken hardware and didn't object to the formation of the Codehaus and is thus honored with the title of [The First Hausmate].

So, things trucked along for a while until folks from ThoughtWorks started sending me mails. paul, Joe Walnes and Aslak Hellesøy migrated and initiated some projects, With the advent of PicoContainer, the reputation (good? bad?) of the Codehaus took off.

Ben Walding drifted into the role of primary system administrator; with other hausmates taking on some of the load of managing a system put together with rubber-bands and paper-clips.

Bob 'The Despot' McWhirter decided to go spend some time in Amsterdam, and the seed for the idea of the First Irregular Haus Party was planted. In October, 2003, over a dozen hausmates from across the globe assembled in Amsterdam for a weekend of brain-storming, pair programming, presentations about projects, and general socializing. It was at the Haus Party that Groovy was publically birthed.

Around the New Year of 2004, Bob 'The Despot' McWhirter travelled to Guelph, Ontario to arrange for a new hosting providing at Sentex. The new provider allowed for a much larger machine ([beaver.codehaus.org]), much more bandwidth, and much fewer dollars. Plus, we're billed in those small Canadian dollars.

In 2005, the effort of managing and maintaining JIRA got to be too much for poor Bob 'The Despot' McWhirter and he migrated JIRA to http://contegix.com

In May 2006, the drives on "beaver" failed, along with the previous 7 days of backups. A hasty migration was made to Contegix where services had been slowly been provisioned in the background.

An application; Xircles; was written (by OpenXource to manage the migration and services on the new box. This application replaced all the rubber-bands and paper-clips with a relatively coordinated system.

All shell-level access was removed to users which caused much consternation and cries of "I could have done this myself in the old world"; these cries were largely ignored.

Xircles continued to grow and adjust and now provides a reasonably flexible mechanism for managing the Codehaus infrastructure that now covers 3 Contegix servers and 1 non-Contegix server (for continuous integration). Xircles is mostly reliable; with most issues arising from those wacky users and defects arising from the rapid pace with which new functionality moves from development to production.

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