|
From: | Robert Kausch |
Subject: | Re: [Libcdio-devel] Packaging libcdio 0.92 and libcdio-paranoia 10.2+0.90+1 for Debian |
Date: | Fri, 26 Sep 2014 11:23:11 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:32.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/32.0 |
I mention this because this is why libcdio-paranoia and libcdio were split in the first place: we couldn't mix GPL 3 or later with GPL 2 only or LGPL.
Dug a bit deeper; the problem at that time was mixing GPL 3 or later with GPL 2 only. libcdio included cdparanoia 9.8 code which was released as GPL 2 only, so when libcdio changed to GPL 3 or later, there was a problem. The licenses are not compatible, so the split was necessary at that point.
Later, libcdio-paranoia upgraded to cdparanoia 10.0 and then 10.2 which changed the license to LGPL 2.1 only for the library and GPL 2 or later for the tool. Both allow distributing derivative works under the GPL 3 or later, so there's no problem anymore.
Am 26.09.2014 um 08:10 schrieb Rocky Bernstein:
I updated the libcdio-paranoia license to GPLv3 to match libcdio.I am not sure we can do this. GPLv2 I think means GPLv2 and *only* GPLv2. LGPL of Paranoia 10.2 allows LGPL 2.1 or later but I don't think GPL. I mention this because this is why libcdio-paranoia and libcdio were split in the first place: we couldn't mix GPL 3 or later with GPL 2 only or LGPL. I am sorry for the confusion and apologize that I wasn't clear about the history of this before. Although I don't care to spend time thinking much about this, there are lots of other people inside and outside the project that do. On Thu, Sep 25, 2014 at 6:32 PM, Robert Kausch <address@hidden> wrote:I updated the libcdio-paranoia license to GPLv3 to match libcdio. Also updated two files in the libcdio tree that were still GPLv2. @Nicolas: Please have a look at the sources at https://github.com/rocky/ libcdio-paranoia. Everything should be consistent now. Am 25.09.2014 um 15:09 schrieb Rocky Bernstein: Ok. Would you and Nicolas make the changes as appropriate? I'll hold offon a release after you both go over this. Thanks. On Thu, Sep 25, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Robert Kausch <address@hidden> wrote: Had a look at libcdio again and realized it's GPL only.In that case, I think we should go the other way and make libcdio-paranoia GPL only as well. It cannot be used without libcdio anyway so anything using it would have to be GPL anyway. The LGPL option for libcdio-paranoia does not really make sense in that case. Robert Am 25.09.2014 um 14:27 schrieb Robert Kausch: Hi Rocky,I had a look at the licenses of cdparanoia 10.2 and cdio-paranoia source files. In cdparanoia, the only files that carry a GPL license are cachetest.c and main.c (which would be cd-paranoia.c in cdio-paranoia). Everything else, including the whole library, is LGPL licensed. In cdio-paranoia about half the files are GPL, the other half LGPL. I think this is because the license of cdparanoia used to be the GPL until svn revision 14871. In revision 14872, they changed the license to LGPL, but that switch was never made in cdio-paranoia. As cdio-paranoia is now based on the latest cdparanoia release which, except for the two files mentioned above, is LGPL licensed, we could change the license to LGPL as well. Only the cd-paranoia tool would still have to be GPL licensed. Tell me what you think. Robert Am 15.09.2014 um 13:43 schrieb Rocky Bernstein: My intent was to make this identical tohttp://downloads.xiph.org/releases/cdparanoia/ cdparanoia-III-10.2.src.tgz from https://www.xiph.org/paranoia/down.html I may have botched things though. If there are discrepancies, I'd appreciate it if you or others would fix and make a pull request off of the git repository https://github.com/rocky/libcdio-paranoia I see that doc/FAQ.txt isn't in the source mentioned above. So maybe we remove that file? On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 5:56 AM, Nicolas Boullis <address@hidden> wrote: Hi Rocky,On Mon, Sep 08, 2014 at 05:17:26AM -0400, Rocky Bernstein wrote: Lastly, the doc/FAQ.txt file has a copyright notice, with the "Allrights reserved." sentence. Isn't it non-free? Sorry for bothering you, but do you have an opinion on this one?I cannot start the Debian transition to libcdio 0.92 (or the upcoming 0.93) without packages for libcdio-paranoia, and I cannot ship a non-free documentation within Debian main. Do you have a reason to think this file is free? Or should I use a stripped-down tarball? Cheers, -- Nicolas
[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |