On Mar 23, 2010, at 6:57 PM, Michael J. Bergin wrote:
> I'm working on a Java implementation of portions of LLVM and have a
question about licensing. The project won't contain any LLVM source code
although I can foresee using JNI stubs that link against LLVM libraries. It
does however in many cases follow LLVM APIs. From my understanding of the
University of Illinois/NCSA license this means:
>
> 1. I need to include the copyright notice in the documentation
> 2. I'm can release the project under any license I want provided its
compatible with inclusion of the LLVM copyright
>
> Please let me know if I'm understanding this correctly, I should
provide more info and/or there are any considerations I've missed. If
anyone is interested in the project please don't hesitate to contact me. I
would be especially grateful to anyone with experience releasing open source
software that wouldn't mind receiving an email here and there. Thanks.
Yep, that's it! The uiuc license is intentionally designed to be very
liberal, nearly "you can do whatever you want with the code, just don't
sue us, and ack your use in your docs". Some more description is here:
http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#license
But, I am not a lawyer and can't give legal advise,
-Chris
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