On 22-08-2022 11:02, 宋文武 wrote: > Hello list, I have some questions about the 'license' of a package, > currently defined as: > > The license of the package; a value from ‘(guix licenses)’, or a > list of such values. > > 1. It's the license of source files (guix build -S) or built binary > files? (If 'built binary files', I would include generated or copied documentation in the list. And icons, .desktop files, ..., I'm not restricting myself to _executable_ binaries here and also not to binaries that aren't sources as well.) Rarely, there is some weirdness where the source code is free (VSCodium?) but the official build has a non-free license (VSCode?). At least for that example, it doesn't apply to Guix though (because VSCodium is not packaged, and because with some rare exceptions we build from source). However, in my experience, in free software they almost always have the same license, so the distinction appears meaningless to me with the possible exception of build scripts and test files (including, but not limited to, test code). I think it should include the source files, as the license of the source is important for people doing 'guix build --source'. > 2. When its value is a list of multiple licenses, it's files under > different licenses (eg: lib/*.so under LGPL, while bin/* under GPL), > or files under one license select from choices? > > My guess is that the license field is for source files since we can > disable binary substitutes, and list is used for files under different > licenses. > > Does my guess is correct? Thank you! As answered in a reply to a patch, myself I go for 'files under different licenses' -- to me it seems hard to go wrong with 'just include all participating licenses' instead of trying to make a selection. However, keep in mind that sometimes a file is part licensed as, say, BSD(*), part as Expat, with modifications under the GPL -- to me it appears that for practical purposes you could consider such a thing to be 'effectively GPL', but that's not 100% accurate, as it appears required to preserve the BSD and Expat license text. (Such things can happen when incorporating code from other, differently-licensed, projects). (*) let's say without the advertising clause or whatever it was (IIRC and IIUC the original BSD was incompatible with the GPL?). If there's some consensus, I think it would be nice to clarify this matter in the manual. Greetings, Maxime.