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* License issue with SRFI 5
@ 2021-10-23  2:13 Philip McGrath
  2021-10-29 14:44 ` Ludovic Courtès
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Philip McGrath @ 2021-10-23  2:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Guix Devel

Hi Guix,

I was recently reminded of a thorny license issue with the SRFI 5 
standard document, which is part of the main Racket distribution. People 
from Racket, the SRFI community, Debian, and Fedora have taken steps to 
help mitigate the problem: I want to make some further improvements, but 
I first need clarity on what Guix's policy requires and permits.

Since 2005, SRFIs have used the MIT/Expat license, and all but two older 
SRFIs were relicensed: however, the SRFI editors were not able to 
contact the author of SRFI 5, Andy Gaynor, so it remains under the 
original SRFI license.[1] That license, modeled on that of IETF RFCs, 
was intended to be quite permissive while also trying to ensure 
derivative works would not be confused with the final, official SRFI 
itself. (The many versions of some SRFIs that nonetheless have come up 
while hunting down related issues has given me some sympathy for that 
goal.) Unfortunately, the restrictions on modifications went to far, at 
least in the judgement of Debian and Fedora.

Here is the license text, as it appears at 
<https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-5/srfi-5.html> and 
<https://docs.racket-lang.org/srfi-nf/srfi-std/srfi-5.html>:

> Copyright (C) Andy Gaynor (1999). All Rights Reserved.
> 
> This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Scheme Request For Implementation process or editors, except as needed for the purpose of developing SRFIs in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the SRFI process must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English.
> 
> The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be revoked by the authors or their successors or assigns.
> 
> This document and the information contained herein is provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE AUTHOR AND THE SRFI EDITORS DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Before going any further, let me emphasize that a great deal of progress 
has been made since distro packagers first pointed out the problem.[2] 
First, there was work to separate the problematic SRFIs (plural, at the 
time) into "srfi-lib-nonfree" and "srfi-doc-nonfree" Racket packages.[3] 
Distro packagers could cleanly remove these from their Racket 
distributions, and they also work properly if a user of the 
distro-packaged Racket explicitly decides to install them. Later, I 
wrote a free implementation of SRFI 5, so "srfi-lib-nonfree" is now 
(confusingly) free software, an empty package definition for backwards 
compatibility.[4] SRFI 29 was supposed to have been converted to the 
MIT/Expat license in 2005, but somehow was missed: just today, the 
current SRFI editor, Arthur Gleckler, confirmed the permission of the 
author, Scott Miller, and updated the official document.[5][6][7] So the 
only problem remaining is the SRFI 5 standard document.

Racketeers have high expectations of their documentation, like being 
able to right-click on an identifier in DrRacket (or the equivalent in 
Emacs with racket-mode) and jump to the locally-installed documentation 
for the relevant binding according to lexical scope and the module 
system---even for a binding like `let`, which is defined by 27 different 
Racket modules, including `srfi/5`. My tentative plan is to write free 
replacement documentation for SRFI 5, eliminate everything from 
"srfi-doc-nonfree" but the official SRFI 5 document itself, and program 
the free SRFI 5 documentation (in Racket's Scribble language) to link to 
the SRFI 5 document at racket-lang.org if there isn't a local copy 
installed.

This all raises a few questions about Guix policy:

  1. Can Guix distribute the official SRFI 5 standard document under
     the license listed above?

  2. If not, can Guix distribute free documentation that links
     to an online copy of the official SRFI 5 standard document?

  3. Would it be permissible for the free documentation to
     include instructions for installing the official SRFI 5 standard
     document locally, e.g. `raco pkg install srfi-doc-nonfree`?
     (Or perhaps `raco pkg install srfi-5-std-doc`, to avoid the
     implication of arbitrary non-free materials?)

(Of course, if someone can manage to contact Andy Gaynor, that would be 
even better!)

The first question is fundamental but less immediately important to me: 
since Debian and Fedora, at least, have answered in the negative, that's 
a scenario Racket will have to support. In FSDG terms,[8] the SRFI 5 
standard does seem like "information for practical use", so it probably 
would need a free license. On the other hand, of course, FSDG standards 
do allow some parts of documentation not to be modifiable. As a 
practical matter, the permission for "derivative works that comment on 
or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, 
copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part"---particularly 
given "in part"---seems to grant just about every permission practically 
necessary, and the part about "this document itself" could be read to 
refer only to a document which purports to *be* the official SRFI 5 
standard, rather than merely to be derived it. (But I am not a lawyer.)

I very much hope the answer to the second question is that, yes, we can 
link to an online copy of the standard. It seems there is strong 
precedent for this. The GCC manual [9] links directly to "the 
authoritative manual on traditional Objective-C (1.0)" by NeXTstep, 
hosted by GNUstep, [10] and the "authoritative manual on Objective-C 2.0 
... from Apple" [11], neither of which appear to permit any modified 
derivative works at all. The same page refers to various ISO C 
standards, which AIUI are not even freely (gratis) distributed in final 
published form, and links to a reading list [12] which in turn links to 
numerous restrictively-licensed documents, from the ARM ABI standard 
[13] to a monograph on the history of the C language [14].

However, there are a few less-than-fully-developed sentences in the FSDG 
that cast some doubt, e.g., "Programs in the system should not suggest 
installing nonfree plugins, documentation, and so on."[8] I do not think 
this should be read to prohibit free documentation for free software for 
referring to restrictively licensed standards implemented by the 
software. To interpret the guidelines---which themselves state that they 
"are not complete"[8]---I turn to broader statements about the rationale 
for why free software needs free documentation[15]: in short, so that 
when users exercise their freedom [16] "to modify the software, and add 
or change its features, if they are conscientious they will change the 
manual too—so they can provide accurate and usable documentation with 
the modified program."[15] As long as free documentation for the free 
program implementing the standard exists, that criterion is 
satisfied---and indeed there are subtleties I encountered when writing 
the free implementation of SRFI 5 that are not clearly explained by the 
standard. If someone modifies the free implementation, they are free to 
modify the free documentation accordingly. There is no need to modify 
the SRFI 5 standard document, and indeed any modified document would no 
longer *be* the SRFI 5 standard as finalized on 1999-04-26 and amended 
on 2003-01-27. Perhaps "standards" should not be in precisely the same 
category as "documentation" in general. Of course, we should advocate 
for standards to be freely licensed, too! But when restrictively 
licensed standards exist, free programs can implement them, and I think 
their free documentation need not be coy about referring to the official 
standard document, especially if adequate free documentation exists for 
the free implementation.

Finally, there is the question of whether instructions could be provided 
for changing the hyperlinks in your local installation of some free 
documentation to point to a copy of the restrictively-licensed standard 
that you have downloaded to your machine, rather than a copy on the 
internet. I do not see what good purpose would be served by prohibiting 
this. Indeed, offline documentation advances positive goods like privacy 
that Guix should support. Perhaps this is also a reason to answer the 
first question in the affirmative.

I wish, albeit with the benefit of hindsight, that SRFIs had used a 
well-known and unambiguously libre license from the start---or, again, 
that someone might manage to contact Andy Gaynor and secure permission 
for relicensing. While the status quo persists, I want to provide the 
best-integrated free documentation for SRFI 5 I can.

Thanks for bearing with this long email. I hope we can think through 
together how Guix's principles ought to apply to the case of the SRFI 5 
standard document.

-Philip

[1]: https://srfi-email.schemers.org/srfi-announce/msg/2652023/
[2]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/issues/4
[3]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/5
[4]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/7
[5]: https://srfi-email.schemers.org/srfi-discuss/msg/17984552/
[6]: 
https://github.com/scheme-requests-for-implementation/srfi-29/commit/8790e9acc8c9740eb0f9fc6939ce6b9af4464d20
[7]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/issues/4#issuecomment-949944343
[8]: https://www.gnu.org/distros/free-system-distribution-guidelines.html
[9]: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-11.2.0/gcc/Standards.html#Standards
[10]: http://www.gnustep.org/resources/documentation/ObjectivCBook.pdf
[11]: 
https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/ProgrammingWithObjectiveC/Introduction/Introduction.html
[12]: https://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html
[13]: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ihi0036/latest/
[14]: https://www.bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/chist.html
[15]: https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-doc.en.html
[16]: https://gnu.tools/en/documents/social-contract/



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: License issue with SRFI 5
  2021-10-23  2:13 License issue with SRFI 5 Philip McGrath
@ 2021-10-29 14:44 ` Ludovic Courtès
  2022-02-01  1:05   ` Philip McGrath
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Ludovic Courtès @ 2021-10-29 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Philip McGrath; +Cc: Guix Devel

Hi,

Philip McGrath <philip@philipmcgrath.com> skribis:

> Since 2005, SRFIs have used the MIT/Expat license, and all but two
> older SRFIs were relicensed: however, the SRFI editors were not able
> to contact the author of SRFI 5, Andy Gaynor, so it remains under the 
> original SRFI license.[1] That license, modeled on that of IETF RFCs,
> was intended to be quite permissive while also trying to ensure 
> derivative works would not be confused with the final, official SRFI
> itself. (The many versions of some SRFIs that nonetheless have come up 
> while hunting down related issues has given me some sympathy for that
> goal.) Unfortunately, the restrictions on modifications went to far,
> at least in the judgement of Debian and Fedora.
>
> Here is the license text, as it appears at
> <https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-5/srfi-5.html> and 
> <https://docs.racket-lang.org/srfi-nf/srfi-std/srfi-5.html>:

Oh.

Do people actually use SRFI-5? (Honest question, I didn’t know about it
and don’t feel much appeal.)

Is there code inside Racket that uses it?

[...]

> Racketeers have high expectations of their documentation, like being
> able to right-click on an identifier in DrRacket (or the equivalent in 
> Emacs with racket-mode) and jump to the locally-installed
> documentation for the relevant binding according to lexical scope and
> the module system---even for a binding like `let`, which is defined by
> 27 different Racket modules, including `srfi/5`. My tentative plan is
> to write free replacement documentation for SRFI 5, eliminate
> everything from "srfi-doc-nonfree" but the official SRFI 5 document
> itself, and program the free SRFI 5 documentation (in Racket's
> Scribble language) to link to the SRFI 5 document at racket-lang.org
> if there isn't a local copy installed.
>
> This all raises a few questions about Guix policy:
>
>  1. Can Guix distribute the official SRFI 5 standard document under
>     the license listed above?

I don’t think so; it looks like a non-free software license to me.

>  2. If not, can Guix distribute free documentation that links
>     to an online copy of the official SRFI 5 standard document?

I think it would be easy to do a “clean room” section documenting SRFI-5
no?  I mean, once you know the spec, documenting it is trivial, to the
point that it’s even hardly copyrightable (there’s little invention).

>  3. Would it be permissible for the free documentation to
>     include instructions for installing the official SRFI 5 standard
>     document locally, e.g. `raco pkg install srfi-doc-nonfree`?
>     (Or perhaps `raco pkg install srfi-5-std-doc`, to avoid the
>     implication of arbitrary non-free materials?)

Per the FSDG, no.

[...]

> However, there are a few less-than-fully-developed sentences in the
> FSDG that cast some doubt, e.g., "Programs in the system should not
> suggest installing nonfree plugins, documentation, and so on."[8] I do
> not think this should be read to prohibit free documentation for free
> software for referring to restrictively licensed standards implemented

[...]

You’re right that the FSDG can be interpreted in different ways.
Hopefully its spirit is clearer than its wording.

For this case, I’d take the pragmatic approach (if Debian and Fedora
haven’t done it way) to either remove SRFI-5 from Racket if it’s
possible, or to do, like you suggest, a clean-room implementation of the
code and spec.  Rewriting is likely going to take less time and be more
fun than trying to disentangle all the issues you mention.

Again, it’s probably going to look very similar to the original code
(unless you use ‘syntax-parse’ for the fun of it :-)), but that’s
because there’s little code and there aren’t a thousand ways to do it.

Thanks for raising this issue; HTH!

Ludo’.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: License issue with SRFI 5
  2021-10-29 14:44 ` Ludovic Courtès
@ 2022-02-01  1:05   ` Philip McGrath
  2022-03-07 10:41     ` Ludovic Courtès
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Philip McGrath @ 2022-02-01  1:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ludovic Courtès; +Cc: Guix Devel

Hi,

On 10/29/21 10:44, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
> Hi,

This reply has taken a while because I did as you suggested and wrote 
some free replacement documentation (which involved paging back in some 
confusing details[1] and shaving several yaks), so now we have something 
concrete to talk about.

To start with that, my proposed approach, which I hope satisfies the 
FSDG, is here: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/15

There are some loose ends to tie up (e.g. I have 48 pull requests open 
making tedious changes to the HTML markup of SRFI specification 
documents to bring Racket's version into alignment with upstream, which 
the current SRFI editor, Arthur Gleckler, is stalwartly reviewing), but 
Guix can cherry-pick it on top of Racket 8.4 (which may be released as 
soon as this week).

The question is, do these changes resolve the situation for Guix (as I 
hope they do for Debian and Fedora, too), or is there anything 
more/different that needs to be done?

> 
> Philip McGrath <philip@philipmcgrath.com> skribis:
> 
>> Since 2005, SRFIs have used the MIT/Expat license, and all but two
>> older SRFIs were relicensed: however, the SRFI editors were not able
>> to contact the author of SRFI 5, Andy Gaynor, so it remains under the
>> original SRFI license.[1] That license, modeled on that of IETF RFCs,
>> was intended to be quite permissive while also trying to ensure
>> derivative works would not be confused with the final, official SRFI
>> itself. (The many versions of some SRFIs that nonetheless have come up
>> while hunting down related issues has given me some sympathy for that
>> goal.) Unfortunately, the restrictions on modifications went to far,
>> at least in the judgement of Debian and Fedora.
>>
>> Here is the license text, as it appears at
>> <https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-5/srfi-5.html> and
>> <https://docs.racket-lang.org/srfi-nf/srfi-std/srfi-5.html>:
> 
> Oh.
> 
> Do people actually use SRFI-5? (Honest question, I didn’t know about it
> and don’t feel much appeal.)
> 
> Is there code inside Racket that uses it?

In short, no.

When the Debian package maintainer first discovered the problem in late 
2017 [2], the conclusion was that SRFI 5 wasn't used by any other part 
of Racket. The workaround [3] contributed by the Fedora package 
maintainer in early 2018 was to move the offending files into new 
"srfi-lib-nonfree" and "srfi-doc-nonfree" packages and for distribution 
maintainers to patch out the dependencies on them from the "srfi" 
package. This was all to accommodate Racket's exceptionally strong 
commitment to backwards compatibility, because it's a breaking change 
for a Racket package to stop providing a particular module (or 
documentation for a module) without adding an `implies` dependency on 
the new package it has moved to, and Racket packages are never supposed 
to make breaking changes. (The idea is you should make a new package 
under a different name, analogous to how a Debian system could have both 
the "guile-2.2" and the "guile-3.0" packages installed.)

(At the time there were also issues with SRFIs 32 and 29 at the time, 
but those had actually been relicensed to MIT/Expat; it was just a 
matter of resolving lots of confusing different versions of things.)

I then noticed "srfi-lib-nonfree" fly across my terminal, learned of the 
whole mess, and contributed a free reimplementation of SRFI 5 in 2019 
[4], using `syntax-parse` to give vastly better error reporting. At that 
point "srfi-lib-nonfree" became an empty, free package that exists only 
to provide an `implies` dependency on "srfi-lib".

According to [5], though, SRFI 5 is also implemented for Chez, Gauche, 
Larceny, STklos, and Scsh: I'm in the process of adapting my free 
implementation and compatibility test suite, which covers various 
ambiguities and errata [1], to R6RS to send upstream, so hopefully no 
one has to deal with this headache again.

> 
>> Racketeers have high expectations of their documentation, like being
>> able to right-click on an identifier in DrRacket (or the equivalent in
>> Emacs with racket-mode) and jump to the locally-installed
>> documentation for the relevant binding according to lexical scope and
>> the module system---even for a binding like `let`, which is defined by
>> 27 different Racket modules, including `srfi/5`.

[...]

>>
>> This all raises a few questions about Guix policy:
>>
>>   1. Can Guix distribute the official SRFI 5 standard document under
>>      the license listed above?
> 
> I don’t think so; it looks like a non-free software license to me.
> 
>>   2. If not, can Guix distribute free documentation that links
>>      to an online copy of the official SRFI 5 standard document?
> 
> I think it would be easy to do a “clean room” section documenting SRFI-5
> no?  I mean, once you know the spec, documenting it is trivial, to the
> point that it’s even hardly copyrightable (there’s little invention).
> 

This is what I've done.

With these changes, documentation for the `srfi/5` module points to the 
new, free Scribble documentation I've written. That let me remove the 
dependency from "srfi" on "srfi-doc-nonfree", which in turn means that 
"srfi-doc-nonfree" will no longer be a transitive dependency of 
"main-distribution".

>>   3. Would it be permissible for the free documentation to
>>      include instructions for installing the official SRFI 5 standard
>>      document locally, e.g. `raco pkg install srfi-doc-nonfree`?
>>      (Or perhaps `raco pkg install srfi-5-std-doc`, to avoid the
>>      implication of arbitrary non-free materials?)
> 
> Per the FSDG, no.
> 
> [...]
> 
>> However, there are a few less-than-fully-developed sentences in the
>> FSDG that cast some doubt, e.g., "Programs in the system should not
>> suggest installing nonfree plugins, documentation, and so on."[8] I do
>> not think this should be read to prohibit free documentation for free
>> software for referring to restrictively licensed standards implemented
> 
> [...]
> 
> You’re right that the FSDG can be interpreted in different ways.
> Hopefully its spirit is clearer than its wording.
> 
> For this case, I’d take the pragmatic approach (if Debian and Fedora
> haven’t done it way) to either remove SRFI-5 from Racket if it’s
> possible, or to do, like you suggest, a clean-room implementation of the
> code and spec.  Rewriting is likely going to take less time and be more
> fun than trying to disentangle all the issues you mention.
> 

I hope the way I've handled this can satisfy even a much more stringent 
interpretation of the FSDG than the reading I proposed in my last email.

Before I give my opinion, though, let me point to the Scribble code in 
question, from 
<https://github.com/racket/srfi/blob/db6434cd6d2255f223aec3798b45fec368d72131/srfi-doc/srfi/scribblings/srfi-5-doc-free.scrbl#L27-L43>:

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
  (define srfi-nf-doc
    '(lib "srfi/scribblings/srfi-nf.scrbl"))
  ]

Original specification:
@seclink[#:indirect? #t #:doc srfi-nf-doc srfi-5-std-taglet]{SRFI 5}

For @hyperlink[srfi-license-history-url]{historical
  reasons}, the SRFI 5 specification document has a
@seclink[#:indirect? #t #:doc srfi-nf-doc srfi-5-license-taglet]{
  restrictive license} and is not included in the main Racket distribution.

The implementation in @racketmodname[srfi/5] and this
documentation are distributed under the same
@seclink["top" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/main/license.scrbl")]{license}
as Racket: only the original specification document is
restrictively licensed.
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

The Scribble sections documenting SRFIs with free specification 
documents begin with "Original specification: SRFI N", where "SRFI N" is 
linked to the installed copy of "srfi-n.html".

In this case, since there will not be a local copy installed, these 
expressions:

--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
@seclink[#:indirect? #t #:doc srfi-nf-doc srfi-5-std-taglet]{SRFI 5}
@seclink[#:indirect? #t #:doc srfi-nf-doc srfi-5-license-taglet{
  restrictive license}
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---

will generate links to 
<https://docs.racket-lang.org/srfi-nf/srfi-std/srfi-5.html> and 
<https://docs.racket-lang.org/srfi-nf/srfi-std/srfi-5.html#copyright>. 
By using those esoteric Scribble incantations, though, the target of the 
link is not resolved until the very last minute, and, if it turns out 
the user has already installed the specification locally, the link will 
point to the local copy.

In FSDG terms, neither the free Scribble documentation nor the docs that 
will be on the Racket website "suggest installing nonfree ... 
documentation". On the contrary, in all three places that so much as 
mention the existence of the original specification document---the one 
quoted above, an almost-empty Scribble file that needs to exist to put 
the document in place on docs.racket-lang.org, and a sort of banner at 
the top of the Racket's copy of the "srfi-5.html" document itself---I've 
given "a clear and serious exhortation" along the lines of the above 
warning that the SRFI 5 specification is restrictively licensed (which 
<https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-5/srfi-5.html> copy does not explicitly 
point out) and linking readers to the free documentation, instead. Since 
this exceeds the example set by `info "(gcc)Standards"`, I hope it fully 
satisfies the FSDG.

Indeed, if someone does want to use SRFI 5, I hope the new free 
documentation I've written will be more useful than the original 
specification document, since the new documentation addresses the 
confusion and ambiguity [1] I've found in the standard over the last … 
um, over three years, somehow.

> 
> Thanks for raising this issue; HTH!
> 
> Ludo’.

I do think there are some interesting things to think about from a 
philosophical/political perspective. Mostly I find the whole license 
situation quite sad. I think the Scheme community intended to create a 
free license for SRFIs, as evidenced particularly by the fact that, when 
concerns were raised, the editors managed to track down all but two of 
the authors of the c. 77 SRFIs finalized up to that point and 
successfully obtained permission to relicense. I think a sufficiently 
creative lawyer---but I am not any kind of lawyer---could argue that the 
restrictive language should be interpreted as a less well worded attempt 
to state the same substantive requirement as the Haskell Language Report 
License [7] saying, "Modified versions of this Report may also be copied 
and distributed for any purpose, provided that the modified version is 
clearly presented as such, and that it does not claim to be a definition 
of the Haskell 2010 Language." But I'm also glad Guix aims for a higher 
standard than "maybe arguably free"!

Anyway, I hope these changes will finally resolve this issue for Racket, 
but, if anyone thinks something more or different ought to be done, 
please do let me know.

-Philip

[1]: https://srfi-email.schemers.org/srfi-discuss/msg/18709900/
[2]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/issues/4
[3]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/5
[4]: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/7
[5]: https://practical-scheme.net/wiliki/schemexref.cgi?SRFI-5
[6]: https://srfi-email.schemers.org/srfi-announce/msg/2652023/
[7]: https://spdx.org/licenses/HaskellReport.html


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: License issue with SRFI 5
  2022-02-01  1:05   ` Philip McGrath
@ 2022-03-07 10:41     ` Ludovic Courtès
  2022-03-07 22:11       ` Philip McGrath
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Ludovic Courtès @ 2022-03-07 10:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Philip McGrath; +Cc: Guix Devel

Hi,

Philip McGrath <philip@philipmcgrath.com> skribis:

> To start with that, my proposed approach, which I hope satisfies the 
> FSDG, is here: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/15

Good to know; I hope the next Racket release will include it.

Thank you,
Ludo’.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

* Re: License issue with SRFI 5
  2022-03-07 10:41     ` Ludovic Courtès
@ 2022-03-07 22:11       ` Philip McGrath
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Philip McGrath @ 2022-03-07 22:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ludovic Courtès; +Cc: Guix Devel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 508 bytes --]

Hi,

On Monday, March 7, 2022 5:41:46 AM EST Ludovic Courtès wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> Philip McGrath <philip@philipmcgrath.com> skribis:
> > To start with that, my proposed approach, which I hope satisfies the
> > FSDG, is here: https://github.com/racket/srfi/pull/15
> 
> Good to know; I hope the next Racket release will include it.
> 

Yes! It's been merged upstream, so it will be in 8.5 (and snapshots, 
meanwhile), and we've included it in Guix as of the recent update to Racket 
8.4.

-Philip

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Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
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2021-10-23  2:13 License issue with SRFI 5 Philip McGrath
2021-10-29 14:44 ` Ludovic Courtès
2022-02-01  1:05   ` Philip McGrath
2022-03-07 10:41     ` Ludovic Courtès
2022-03-07 22:11       ` Philip McGrath

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