Guys, Apache CXF has an XMLHttpRequest support library in Javascript, 100% AL.
jQuery is dual-licensed already MIT/GPL, and MIT is acceptable as a dependency for a scripting language. So why not just use one of those. ? --benson On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 3:22 AM, dan haywood <[email protected]> wrote: > Working towards our release. One of our dependencies was licensed LGPL, > which the ASF does not view as compatible with ASLv2. Last year I > corresponded with the author of that dependency; per the email chain below > you can see that he has agreed to dual-license his code under both LGPL and > ASLv2. > > Since his website has not been updated, I'm forwarding this correspondence > to this list in order that it can be referenced in the archives. (His email > is freely available on the web, so I haven't bothered to obscure it). > > Dan > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: Sergey Ilinsky <[email protected]> > Date: 14 October 2010 10:11 > Subject: Re: XmlHttpRequest licensing > To: [email protected] > > > OK. > > I confirm that I now dual license my XMLHttpRequest.js library (available at > the http://code.google.com/p/xmlhttprequest/) under both the Apache License > 2.0 and the LGPL. > > Sergey/ > > > > On 14 October 2010 00:04, Dan Haywood <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi Sergey, >> Yes, sorry to be creating this hassle for you. Answers within. >> >> >> On 13/10/2010 22:04, Sergey Ilinsky wrote: >> >> Could you tell me directly: >> 1) what license will work for your project >> >> The most straightforward is Apache's own, ie: Apache License 2.0. There's >> more discussion of other valid licenses at [1] >> >> >> 2) if the license attribution provided in writing in email is sufficient >> >> Yes it is. You could simply say: >> >> *I confirm that I now license my XMLHttpRequest.js library (available at >> the http://code.google.com/p/xmlhttprequest/) under the Apache License 2.0 >> * >> or you could say (if you didn't want to be bothered updating your website): >> >> *I confirm that I now **dual license my XMLHttpRequest.js library >> (available at the http://code.google.com/p/xmlhttprequest/) under both the >> Apache License 2.0 and the LGPL. >> * >> >> Hope that helps, I appreciate your time. >> Dan >> >> [1] http://www.apache.org/legal/resolved.html#category-a. >> >> >
