▲ | chao- 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I am aware of that. I did a bad job phrasing my post, and it came off sounding more confident than I actually intended. I have two questions: (1) What are the expected consequences of a violation? (2) Why haven't any consequences occurred yet? My understanding is that Canonical is shipping ZFS with Ubuntu. Or do I misunderstand? Has Canonical not actually done the big, bad thing of distributing the Linux kernel with ZFS? Did they find some clever just-so workaround so as to technically not be violation of the Linux kernel's license terms? Otherwise, if Canonical has actually done the big, bad thing, who has standing to bring suit? Would the Linux Foundation sue Canonical, or would Oracle? I ask this in all humility, and I suspect there is a chance that my questions are nonsense and I don't know enough to know why. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | p_l 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Oracle has no standing. Additionally, GPLv2 does not prevent shipping ZFS combined with GPL code, because CDDL code is not derivative work of GPLv2 code. So it's legal to ship. It could be problematic to upstream, because kernel development would demand streamlining to the point that the code would be derivative. Additionally, two or three kernel contributors decided that the long standing consensus on derivative work is not correct and sued Canonical. So far nothing happened out of that, Los Alamos National Laboratory also laughed it off. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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