view COPYING @ 39943:b1ba0c77fa16

Assume Automake >= 1.11. * m4/configmake.m4: Update comments. * m4/lib-link.m4 (AC_LIB_RPATH): Assume AC_REQUIRE_AUX_FILE exists. * m4/po.m4 (AM_PO_SUBDIRS, AM_POSTPROCESS_PO_MAKEFILE): Eliminate uses of 'eval'. * gnulib-tool (func_emit_lib_Makefile_am, func_emit_tests_Makefile_am, func_create_testdir, func_create_megatestdir): Emit a Makefile.am that requires Automake >= 1.11.
author Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
date Tue, 23 Oct 2018 00:06:46 +0200
parents aa5db38616a7
children
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$Id: COPYING,v 1.3 2006-10-26 16:20:28 eggert Exp $
The files in here are mostly copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, and
are under assorted licenses.  Mostly, but not entirely, GPL.

Many modules are provided dual-license, either GPL or LGPL at your
option.  The headers of files in the lib directory (e.g., lib/error.c)
state GPL for convenience, since the bulk of current gnulib users are
GPL'd programs.  But the files in the modules directory (e.g.,
modules/error) state the true license of each file, and when you use
'gnulib-tool --lgpl --import <modules>', gnulib-tool either rewrites
the files to have an LGPL header as part of copying them from gnulib
to your project directory, or fails because the modules you requested
were not licensed under LGPL.

Some of the source files in lib/ have different licenses.  Also, the
copy of maintain.texi in doc/ has a verbatim-copying license, and
doc/standards.texi and make-stds.texi are GFDL.  Most (but not all)
m4/*.m4 files have nearly unlimited licenses.