Although Murdock's parents were both from
Southern Indiana, he was born in
Konstanz, West Germany, on April 28, 1973, where his father was pursuing postdoctoral research. The family returned to the United States in 1975, and Murdock grew up in
Lafayette, Indiana, beginning in 1977 when his father became a professor of
entomology at
Purdue University. Murdock graduated from
Harrison High School in 1991, and then earned his
bachelor's degree in
computer science from Purdue in 1996. While a college student, Murdock founded the Debian project in August 1993, and wrote the
Debian Manifesto in January 1994. Murdock conceived Debian as a Linux distribution that embraced open design, contributions, and support from the
free software community. He named Debian after his then-girlfriend (later wife) Debra Lynn Roundy, and himself. They later married, had three children, and divorced in January 2008. In January 2006, Murdock was appointed Chief Technology Officer of the
Free Standards Group and elected chair of the
Linux Standard Base workgroup. He continued as CTO of the
Linux Foundation when the group was formed from the merger of the Free Standards Group and
Open Source Development Labs. Murdock left the Linux Foundation to join
Sun Microsystems in March 2007 to lead
Project Indiana, which he described as "taking the lesson that Linux has brought to the operating system and providing that for
Solaris", making a full
OpenSolaris distribution with
GNOME and
userland tools from
GNU plus a network-based package management system. From March 2007 to February 2010, he was Vice President of Emerging Platforms at Sun, until the company
merged with Oracle and he resigned his position with the company. From November 2015 until his death, Murdock was working for
Docker, Inc. ==Death==