Tryton

Not to be confused with Triton (disambiguation).
Tryton

The Tryton logo

A screenshot of GNU Health, which uses the Tryton framework
Developer(s) Cédric Krier and the Tryton community
Stable release 3.8 / 2 November 2015 (2015-11-02)
Development status Active
Written in Python Javascript
Operating system BSD, GNU Linux, Mac OS X, Windows
Available in 18 languages
Type Business software, ERP, CRM, Accounting
License GPLv3
Website www.tryton.org
As of 2015-06-29

Tryton is a three-tier high-level general purpose computer application platform on top of which is built an Enterprise resource planning (ERP) business solution through a set of Tryton modules. The three-tier architecture consists of the Tryton client, the Tryton server and the Database management system (mainly PostgreSQL).

License

The platform, along with the official modules, are Free software, licensed under the GPLv3.[1]

Modules and functional coverage

The official modules provide a coverage of the following functional fields:

Technical features

The client and the server applications are written in Python, the client uses GTK+ as graphical toolkit. Both are available on Linux, OS X, and Windows.[2] A standalone version including client and server exists and is named Neso.

The kernel provides the technical foundations needed by most business applications. However it is not linked to any particular functional field hence constituting a general purpose framework:

Being a framework, Tryton can be used as a platform for the development of various other solutions than just business ERPs. A very prominent example is GNU Health, a free Health and Hospital Information System based on Tryton.

Origin and history

Tryton's origin is a fork of the version 4.2 of TinyERP (which was later called OpenERP and now renamed Odoo; a comparison with OpenERP can be seen here). The first version was published in November 2008[3][4][5]

Project management & governance

Worldwide distribution of service companies that are part of the federation of the Tryton project

In contrast to their parent project and other open-source business software, the Tryton founders avoided creating a partner network which tends to generate opposition and duality between the partners and the community of volunteers. They followed the PostgreSQL example where the project is driven by a federation of companies.[6] As of August 2015, Tryton is supported by 17 of such companies, which are distributed globally as follows: France 3, Spain 3, Colombia 2, Germany, 2, Argentina 1, Australia 1, Belgium 1, Brazil 1, India 1, Mexico 1, Switzerland 1.

As of December 2012, the project is backed by Tryton, a Belgian private foundation pursuing a disinterested purpose. The foundation's missions are:[7]

The release process is organised around series. A series is a set of releases with the same two first numbers (e.g. 1.0 or 1.2) that shares the same API and the same database scheme. A new series appears every six months and new versions in older release are introduced when bugfixes are available.[8]

Name

The name Tryton refers to Triton, a mythological Greek god (son of Poseidon, god of the sea, and Amphitrite, goddess of the sea) and Python, the implementation language.

See also

External links

References

As of this edit, this article uses content from "Tryton", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.