Patrick McHardy wrote: > Adrian Bunk wrote: >> On Sun, Dec 02, 2007 at 09:03:56PM +0100, Patrick McHardy wrote: >> >>> For all I care binary modules can break, but frankly I don't see >>> how encapsulating a couple of structures and pointers in a new >>> structure and adding a new argument to existing functions shifts >>> the decision about how a function should be usable to the namespace >>> guys. IMO all functions should continue to be usable as before, >>> as decided by whoever actually wrote them. >>> ... >> >> Even ignoring the fact that it's unclear whether distributing modules >> with not GPLv2 compatible licences is legal at all or might bring you >> in jail, > > Agreed, lets ignore that :) > >> your statement has an interesting implication: >> >> Stuff like e.g. the EXPORT_SYMBOL(sk_alloc) predates the >> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL stuff. >> >> Who is considered the author of this code? >> >> And when should he state whether he prefers to use EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL >> but wasn't able to use it at that when he wrote it since his code >> predates it and is glad to be able to decide this now? > > > He can state it when he feels like it, I don't see the point. > Authors generally get to decide whether they use EXPORT_SYMBOL > or EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL unless in cases where its really clear-cut > that EXPORT_SYMBOL is inapproriate. But thats a different matter. > > If a symbol was OK to be used previously and something using it > would not automatically be considered a derived work, how does > passing &init_net to the function just to make the compiler > happy, avoid BUG_ONs and generally keep things working as before > make it more of a derived work?
We, namely, Pavel Emelyanov and me, if we have some rights as a committers to this staff :), do not mind against change EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL to EXPORT_SYMBOL. Regards, Den -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html