On Fri, May 15, 2015 at 07:54:17PM +0300, Sergey Korshunoff wrote: > Hi! Plan 9 Edition 4 Cfront update > http://www.quintile.net/plan9/c++/index.html > There is LLONG as VLONG present. > > And http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_9_from_Bell_Labs > 1995 Plan 9 2nd edition Released by Bell Labs for non-commercial > purposes[13] > cfront was there.
Sorry to sound negative but what says that the Plan 9 license is applicable to cfront, even if somebody ported it there? The cfront "porting status" document explicitly refers to the very site and source which bears the "historical research only" license. The cfront2 source you mentioned in another message says among others: cfront/main.c ----------------- THIS IS UNPUBLISHED PROPRIETARY SOURCE CODE of AT&T and UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. The copyright notice above does not evidence any actual or intended publication of such source code. ----------------- So unless we find a statement from AT&T that they remove the restrictions specified in the licenses which we have seen up to now, we are not in clear waters. Historical research - yes. Any practical application - only at one's own risk, left to the discretion of AT&T to wipe one out of existence or not. Rune _______________________________________________ Tinycc-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/tinycc-devel
