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xTuple

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xTuple
Company typePrivate
IndustrySoftware
Founded2001
FounderJeffrey Lyon, Ned Lilly
Headquarters,
United States
ProductsERP
Websitehttps://www.xtuple.com

Designed for manufacturing and distribution, xTuple features the tools, functionality and analytics manufacturers and distributors need to improve productivity and performance to achieve sustainable profitability. Our commitment to Customer Success means we get customers up and running in as little as 90 days.

The company was originally formed in 2001 as OpenMFG and rebranded as xTuple in 2007. The company is privately held.[1]

History

xTuple began under the name OpenMFG, developing its product of the same name beginning in the year 2001. Jeffrey Lyon, the original developer cofounded OpenMFG with Ned Lilly in October 2001.

xTuple headquarters, Norfolk, Virginia

OpenMFG was a commercially licensed ERP system targeted toward small to midsize manufacturers. The company adopted a "community code" model, meaning that customers who purchase or subscribe to licenses for the product have access to view and modify the source code. Unlike open source software, however, the code was not made publicly available.

OpenMFG spent several years building its product, and settled into a release cycle of roughly one major release every twelve months. The version 2.0 of OpenMFG (released in 2006) added Master Production Schedule, multi-currency, and CRM, filling the most obvious gaps in its claim on true mid-tier ERP functionality.

Jeffrey Lyon departed OpenMFG in 2004 to eventually found SabeSoft to continue development of its mid-range ERP system, initially based on licensed OpenMFG functionality but, since, progressing to become a wholly unique product.

The project was originally to be released under the "xTuple License," a derivative of the Mozilla Public License, but xTuple was quickly criticized for introducing "yet another" open source license variant.[2] However, at that very same conference SocialText announced the release of the new Open Source Initiative approved Common Public Attribution License (CPAL). Two days later xTuple switched PostBooks to CPAL and became the second company to adopt this licenses which is the licenses in use today.

Products

The PostBooks® Edition of xTuple ERP is a Free (for up to four users, five or more users requires a commercial license[3]) and Open Source Software (FOSS) application, available for download from SourceForge on the PostBooks project page. The Distribution, Manufacturing, and Enterprise Editions are commercially licensed Enterprise resource planning solutions. All three products are built on the same Open source technology foundation, and share the same code base. The commercial Editions have more functionality for larger companies.

Technology

xTuple ERP provides multiple interface options including a locally installable GUI client application, a web client, and a web services API for third party application integration.

GUI Client

The GUI client is written in Qt, a C++ toolkit for application development. It lets application developers target all major operating systems (Windows, Linux/Unix, Mac) with a single application source code. Qt provides a platform-independent API to all central platform functionality: GUI, database access, networking, file handling, etc. The Qt library encapsulates the different APIs of different operating systems, providing the application programmer with a single, common API for all operating systems. The native C APIs are encapsulated in a set of object-oriented C++ classes.

Web Client

There is a browser-based web client in versions 4.4.0 through 4.9.5. It was deprecated in v4.10.0 and will be removed by v5.0.0. This web client was built entirely in JavaScript using the Enyo framework for presentation and Backbone.js for model handling.

Web Services

The web client application is served by a NodeJS server, which also provides a REST based web services API that can be used for third party integration. The web services API uses Google's Discovery Service model to provide a self documenting interface.

Database

xTuple uses the PostgreSQL database exclusively for storing and managing data. The GUI client relies heavily on PostgreSQL's native procedural language (PL/pgSQL) functions to process business logic, while the web client and node layers leverage additional capability made possible by the integration of Google's V8 JavaScript engine into the database using an extension known as PLV8. xTuple has written an Object-relational mapping system embedded in the database using JavaScript that processes all reads and transaction requests made via the NodeJS server.

Notes

  1. ^ "Deal Radar 2009: xTuple". Sramanamitra.com, Sramana Mitra.
  2. ^ Asay, Matt (2007-07-25). "OpenMFG transforms into xTuple, but misses the open-source train". CNET. Retrieved 2008-01-07.
  3. ^ Using PostBooks® — the community version of xTuple — requires a software license key. It's complimentary — for up to four (4) concurrent users — or you can explore commercial options for five (5) or more users. https://xtuple.com/products/postbooks/get-started-with-postbooks