Andreas Kotes wrote: > > >> There is no license issue. > > There would be a serious licence issue the other way round, but BSD is a > tad more permissive than the GPL is, so - no problem there BUT: there is > an advertisement clause, so rsync would need to display certain messages > when compiled with OpenSSL.
The modern BSD licenses, which are compatible with the GPL, are not the same as OpenSSL's license, which is more like the _original_ BSD license which isn't compatible with the GPL. Any advertisement clause is widely considered to conflict with the GPL's "no further restrictions" clause. This conflict is important enough that Berkeley changed the BSD license used for BSD itself, and FreeBSD changed their license, and so on. The OpenSSL FAQ has a section on this question: * Can I use OpenSSL with GPL software? On many systems including the major Linux and BSD distributions, yes (the GPL does not place restrictions on using libraries that are part of the normal operating system distribution). On other systems, the situation is less clear. Some GPL software copyright holders claim that you infringe on their rights if you use OpenSSL with their software on operating systems that don't normally include OpenSSL. If you develop open source software that uses OpenSSL, you may find it useful to choose an other license than the GPL, or state explicitly that "This program is released under the GPL with the additional exemption that compiling, linking, and/or using OpenSSL is allowed." If you are using GPL software developed by others, you may want to ask the copyright holder for permission to use their software with OpenSSL. The FSF's considered position is that OpenSSL is incompatible with the GPL. They say: The license of OpenSSL is a conjunction of two licenses, one of them being the license of SSLeay. You must follow both. The combination results in a copyleft free software license that is incompatible with the GNU GPL. It also has an advertising clause like the original BSD license and the Apache license. We recommend using GNUTLS instead of OpenSSL in software you write. However, there is no reason not to use OpenSSL and applications that work with OpenSSL. I think libcurl supports both OpenSSL and GNUTLS for these sorts of reasons. -- Jamie -- To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html