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Of course I know FOSS software runs most of the internet. But not all FOSS software equally. “Use the right tool for the job” and all that.

Why by the end of the year? Garage has been around for a while. Its lack of enterprise adoption is not due to its youth, but rather that it’s the wrong tool for the job.

There are plenty of FOSS object stores that exist already and are better targeted at enterprise workloads. Garage is amazing, I run it on my home server, but it’s not really “enterprise” software. And it’s not trying to be.

(Also I know plenty of people from AWS and it seems that a few products are FOSS based but plenty are written in house. Running on Linux, of course)




"lack of enterprise adoption" - That you know of! Most organizations don't blog when they start using a software (:

"wrong tool for the job" - What is the right tool? If it checks all the boxes compared to Minio, and outperforms Minio, it is not unlikely to be used. Minio itself was originally FOSS after all, and it is not without its problems. I'm sure there's many devops folk that welcome an alternative.

AWS (+ S3) is cost prohibitive for many workloads, even at Fortune 500 scale. Plenty of opportunity here.


Enterprise adoption isn't the goal of every software project. If people adopt it, great, but I don't think that all maintainers are targeting this. Garage is explicitly not targeting performance, for example, nor is it targeting a rich feature set.

Minio is certainly trying to be the enterprise-ready FOSS front-end for an object store. I can name a few other alternatives, like SeaweedFS, Ceph, Swift that are also trying to provide rich features. I'm not sure who checks all the boxes compared to Minio or others, depends on the boxes I guess.




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