Mail Archives: cygwin/2001/06/21/05:19:35
So . . .
Does it build OOTB in Cygwin? Presumably the Linux sources. I looked at
www.python.org and there's no mention of Cygwin as a platform.
At 6/16/01 04:01 PM (Saturday), Tim Peters wrote:
>Briefly following up on a thread here from the end of April: the FSF and
>PSF (Python Software Foundation) reached an unexpected (but exceedingly
>welcome) agreement on the Python licensing situation wrt the GPL. We'll be
>releasing new versions of Python primarily to get the new license out there,
>but also with accumulated bugfixes since their original releases:
>
> 2.0.1 2.0 + bugfixes + new license. Release candidate already
> available, and final release scheduled for the coming week.
>
> 2.1.1 2.1 + bugfixes + new license. Partly depends on volunteer
> time; range of 2 to 4 weeks is my best guess.
>
>all's-well-that-ends-ly y'rs - tim
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: python-list-admin AT python DOT org [mailto:python-list-admin AT python DOT org]
> On Behalf Of Guido van Rossum [mailto:guido AT digicool DOT com]
>Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2001 11:46 AM
>To: python-dev AT python DOT org
>Cc: python-list AT python DOT org
>Subject: 2.0.1's GPL-compatibility is official!
>
>
>Richard Stallman, Eben Moglen and the FSF agree: Python 2.0.1 is
>compatible with the GPL. They've updated the text about the Python
>license on http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/license-list.html, stating in
>particular:
>
> GPL-Compatible, Free Software Licenses
>
> [...]
>
> The License of Python 1.6a2 and earlier versions.
> This is a free software license and is compatible with the
> GNU GPL. Please note, however, that newer versions of Python
> are under other licenses (see below).
> The License of Python 2.0.1, 2.1.1, and newer versions.
> This is a free software license and is compatible with the
> GNU GPL. Please note, however, that intermediate versions of
> Python (1.6b1, through 2.0 and 2.1) are under a different
> license (see below).
>
>I would like to emphasize and clarify (again!) that Python is *not*
>released under the GPL, so if you think the GPL is a bad thing, you
>don't have to worry about Python being contaminated.
>
>The GPL compatibility is important for folks who distribute Python
>binaries: e.g. the new license makes it okay to release Python
>binaries linked with GNU readline and other GPL-covered libraries.
>
>We'll release the final release of 2.0.1 within a week; so far we've
>had only one bug reported in the release candidate.
>
>I expect that we won't have to wait long for 2.1.1, which will have
>the same GPL-compatible license as 2.0.1.
>
>--Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
>
>--
>http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
>
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David A. Cobb, Software Engineer, Public Access Advocate, All around nice guy.
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