On Sunday 09 November 2014 09:23:11 Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > On Sat, Nov 08, 2014 at 10:49:09PM -0800, Olof Johansson wrote: > > >>> +/* > > >>> + * Copyright 2014 Broadcom Corporation. All rights reserved. > > >>> + * > > >>> + * Unless you and Broadcom execute a separate written software license > > >>> + * agreement governing use of this software, this software is licensed > > >>> to you > > >>> + * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as > > >>> + * published by the Free Software Foundation version 2. > > >>> + * > > >>> + * This program is distributed "as is" WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY of any > > >>> + * kind, whether express or implied; without even the implied warranty > > >>> + * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the > > >>> + * GNU General Public License for more details. > > >> > > >> > > >> We ask for new DT contents to be added with dual BSD/GPL license, to > > >> allow for reuse of the DT data structures in other projects as well. > > >> There's currently a lot of activity going on relicensing the current > > >> files so I recommend sorting it out before they are added if you can. > > > > > > > > > This may take more time than you think. I am going to have to go through > > > legal to get such a license created. Also, why would you need dual > > > license? > > > If it is BSD that should serve both purposes? > > > > I haven't followed the discussion close enough to know if there's been > > discussion about single-license BSD vs dual BSD/GPL.
I think for all practical purposes, BSD and dual BSD/GPL is the same and listing it as dual was meant as a clarification to make it easier to see that all files in the kernel are GPLv2 compatible. > > At the very least, please start the process of getting it changed. > > > > Also, I see now that this isn't even a clean GPL v2, given "Unless you > > and Broadcom..." language. I see the bnx2x driver had that in the > > past, but none of the Kona contributions did. I strongly suggest > > sticking to the normal copyrights here and not making things more > > complicated than they have to. > > I'm thinking that the "unless you and Broadcom..." language really > doesn't mean much other than what all other files in the kernel mean > from what I can tell. This should just default to GPLv2 and everyone > should be ok. I would hope so at least. It's certainly not obvious whether that means Broadcom can give additional rights to someone over what someone else contributed upstream, or worse if this becomes GPL-incompatible and makes the kernel undistributable for anybody who has an additional license agreement that doesn't give them all the rights that they already had under the GPL. Arnd -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/