On Fri, Jan 15, 2016 at 04:00:21AM +0100, Alexander Graf wrote: > > > On 25.12.15 17:50, Tom Rini wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 25, 2015 at 09:53:22AM +0100, Alexander Graf wrote: > >> > >> > >> On 25.12.15 04:29, Tom Rini wrote: > >>> On Tue, Dec 22, 2015 at 02:57:47PM +0100, Alexander Graf wrote: > >>> > >>>> This is my Christmas present for my openSUSE friends :). > >>>> > >>>> U-Boot is a great project for embedded devices. However, convincing > >>>> everyone involved that only for "a few oddball ARM devices" we need to > >>>> support different configuration formats from grub2 when all other > >>>> platforms > >>>> (PPC, System Z, x86) are standardized on a single format is a nightmare. > >>>> > >>>> So we started to explore alternatives. At first, people tried to get > >>>> grub2 running using the u-boot api interface. However, FWIW that one > >>>> doesn't support relocations, so you need to know where to link grub2 to > >>>> at compile time. It also seems to be broken more often than not. And on > >>>> top of it all, it's a one-off interface, so yet another thing to > >>>> maintain. > >>>> > >>>> That led to a nifty idea. What if we can just implement the EFI > >>>> application > >>>> protocol on top of U-Boot? Then we could compile a single grub2 binary > >>>> for > >>>> uEFI based systems and U-Boot based systems and as soon as that one's > >>>> loaded, > >>>> everything looks and feels (almost) the same. > >>>> > >>>> This patch set is the result of pursuing this endeavor. > >>> > >>> So, I owe the whole codebase a real review. My very quick question > >>> however is, aside from what you had to borrow from wine, can you license > >>> everything else as GPL v2 or later rather than LGPL? > >> > >> I'm personally a pretty big fan of the LGPL, since it's a very > >> reasonable compromise between closed and open source IMHO ;). > >> > >> Is there a particular reason you're asking for this? LGPL code is fully > >> compatible with GPL code and the resulting binary would be GPL anyway > >> because FWIW you can't compile U-Boot without GPL code inside. > > > > The general rules for U-Boot code are to be GPL v2 or later. U-Boot is > > (and always will be) a GPL v2 only project as there's simply too much > > Linux kernel code that we want to leverage. We do make special > > exceptions at times for very good reasons (like include/android_image.h > > is the authorative BSD-2 clause copy of that information) and I've even > > told some companies that for crypto-auth-sensitive stuff they can do GPL > > v2 only in their submission (again, due to U-Boot always being a v2 only > > project). > > > > So, I'm not gonig to reject the EFI loader code if you say no, you won't > > re-license it as GPL v2 (or v2 and later) but I'd really appreciate it. > > Thanks! > > I've just read up and apparently it's completely legal and allowed to > simply remove the LGPL (2.1+) boilerplate from a file and instead put a > GPL (2.0+) one on it, even if you didn't write the code.
Legal and good idea don't always match up :) > So even if I had insisted to stick to LGPL v2.1+, you could've just > written a patch to change it after the fact ;). > > But since everyone seems to be far more happy with GPL rather than LGPL, > I've spared you that patch and changed the headers myself now. Thanks, I appreciate it! -- Tom
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