Re: how much license information inside the kernel ?

From: Chris Snook
Date: Thu Oct 30 2008 - 14:48:16 EST


devzero@xxxxxx wrote:
hi,

i found that there is a LOT of repeating licensing information in the
kernel.

for me,

find ./linux-2.6.27 -type f -exec cat {} \; |egrep "free software|GNU
General Public License|Free Software Foundation|version 2 of the
License|distributed in the hope|WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY|FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR"

gives a file sized ~3.5M

That`s more than 1% of the kernel source.

What about the idea to shorten that licening information to a minimum
, e.g. by shrinking that to a single, catchy line , linking to a
special licensing file like COPYING or linking to the FSF website ?

please no flames, i know this idea could be pure dynamite for some
people - but i thought 3.5M is worth this mail.

regards roland

ps: i`m not sure if that has been discussed already, but i didn`t
find that in the archive. please ignore, otherwise.

It may be 3.5 MB uncompressed, but disk space is cheap, and repeated strings compress extremely well to save bandwidth. If you work with the kernel source enough for this to be an issue, you should use git. You'll download these license headers once, and never again unless the copyright info gets changed by a patch. From a technical perspective, the problem isn't nearly as bad as it looks, and it keeps the lawyers happy, so it's really not worth messing with. There's plenty of lower-hanging fruit in unifying drivers for similar hardware, unifying 32-bit and 64-bit architectures, and other things that make the code more maintainable.

-- Chris
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