Paul Rubin wrote:
> Kent Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
>>You've lost me here. The server certainly would contain Karrigell
>>code, it wouldn't function without it. I don't understand the analogy
>>to GCC, the web site is not something that is compiled with
>>Karrigell. Karrigell is a library or framework that is an essential
>>part of the server. I don't know how I would write the app without
>>Karrigell.
> 
> 
> Let me ask it this way: suppose you used ASP instead.  As I understand
> ASP, it's like PHP except it's proprietary.  Would ASP's license be a
> problem?
> 
> Maybe you're using "the server" to encompass too much.  If I have an
> Apache-based web site, then the web server is Apache.  If I have a
> Python CGI script that the Apache server runs, the CGI script is not
> "the server"--it's an application running under the server.  It would
> not be affected by the GPL if Apache used the GPL.  Karrigell scripts
> seem to me to work out about the same way.

You may be right, I don't know. In the case of CherryPy, my code is a bit more 
intimate 
with CP than a CGI is with Apache - I import CP modules, subclass CP classes 
and make 
calls to CP functions from my code. My guess is a Karrigell-based server would 
be similar.

Where would you draw the line? Suppose I want to use a GPLed library in my 
Python code, 
does that mean I have to distribute my code under the GPL if I distribute them 
together?

Kent
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