Terracotta boosts app-scaling with Ehcache buy

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The move will help the startup approach more customers

Terracotta has has acquired the intellectual property behind Ehcache, a popular, Java-based, open-source distributed caching technology.

As part of the deal Ehcache maintainer
Greg Luck will be joining Terracotta, which makes open-source infrastructure software for scaling out Java applications.

Distributed caches boost the performance of applications by storing needed data in memory, rather than on disk.


See: Computerworld's open source special feature
Ehcache already has "hundreds of thousands of production deployments", with some 50 percent of Terracotta's own customers using it, so it made more sense to acquire the intellectual property and Luck's expertise, according to Terracotta CEO Amit Pandey.

Ehcache will remain available under the Apache 2.0 open-source licence, according to Luck and Pandey. The community and project will benefit from the additional engineering resources Terracotta can throw at it, Pandey says.

Luck provided commercial support for Ehcache and sold a book about the technology, but for the most part "it really hasn't been monetised", he says.

By having Ehcache and Terracotta under one roof, the company will be able to better support the customers who are using it already, Pandey says. In addition, Terracotta will be able to pitch its own technology to a broader potential customer base.

Luck had already been subject to a few outside offers, including a merger proposal from a "less successful" open-source project.

"This is the one that makes sense for the community," he says.

Meanwhile, some analysts recently suggested VMware may follow up its deal to buy Java tools and middleware vendor SpringSource, by acquiring scale-out software like that sold by Terracotta. Pandey declined comment on the prospect.

"We're excited about where we are in terms of our market position," he says.

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