On 2/17/07, Giuseppe Bilotta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Which shows how that case is different from writing Linux drivers. For example, looking at the example the OP was himself proposing a few alternative approaches to work around the limitation they were hitting: could just switch to static major/minors instead of dynamics ones, they could skip sysfs, or they could even reimplement something like sysfs themselves, or whatever other interface they deem useful for the purpose of plopping in their own binary blob on top of it, sort of like what nVidia and ATi do for their stuff.
Or they could run: find . -type f -exec perl -i.bak -pe 's/EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL/EXPORT_SYMBOL/g' and be done with it. Or even just MODULE_LICENSE("GPL") in their module -- that's not "lying about the module license", it's "doing the minimum necessary in order to interoperate efficiently with the kernel". Atari v. Nintendo is still good law, but _only_ to the extent that it does not conflict with Lexmark, which now has the seal of Supreme Court approval. And (IMHO, IANAL) if writing MODULE_LICENSE("GPL") is obviously the only remotely efficient way to achieve the goal of interoperation with the kernels that people already have on their systems, through the documented, tested, currently recommended APIs (like sysfs), then you have a Sega / Altai / Lexmark fact pattern, not an Atari v. Nintendo fact pattern. So what's the penalty for MODULE_LICENSE("GPL") on code that is not actually offered under the GPL? Being shunned by the kernel community. Maintaining a fork. Getting to keep both halves when it breaks. Friends don't let friends write non-GPL drivers. But friends also don't let friends go off into delusional spasms of denial. nVidia and ATI do what they do so that their code has more than a snowball's chance in hell of running on people's desktops, not out of fear that the Big Bad LKML Wolf will come blow down their houses. Their hardware is doubtless so fiddly and buggy and crash-prone that four out of five attempts to compile a driver for it reorder the instructions enough to slag the GPU, under Windows or Linux. _That's_ why they ship binary drivers. Capisce? Cheers, - Michael - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/