Hello,
We would like to package for fedora the Data Ware House component of oVirt, which contains parts generated using Talend Open Studio (see [1]).
This tool allows the user to define graphically some data flows and transformations and then generates Java code. The generated Java code states in the header that the license is LGPL and the tool itself claims to be open source using GPL v2 (see [2]).
Is it acceptable from the legal point of view to create a Fedora package using the generated Java code as the source?
Thanks in advance, Juan Hernandez
[1] http://www.talend.com [2] http://www.talend.com/download.php
On 04/23/2012 10:50 AM, Juan Hernandez wrote:
Hello,
We would like to package for fedora the Data Ware House component of oVirt, which contains parts generated using Talend Open Studio (see [1]).
This tool allows the user to define graphically some data flows and transformations and then generates Java code. The generated Java code states in the header that the license is LGPL and the tool itself claims to be open source using GPL v2 (see [2]).
Is it acceptable from the legal point of view to create a Fedora package using the generated Java code as the source?
Is _all_ code generated via Talend Open Studio automatically marked as being LGPL, or is this a decision that the use generating the Java code makes consciously?
~tom
== Fedora Project
On 04/23/2012 05:20 PM, Tom Callaway wrote:
On 04/23/2012 10:50 AM, Juan Hernandez wrote:
We would like to package for fedora the Data Ware House component of oVirt, which contains parts generated using Talend Open Studio (see [1]).
This tool allows the user to define graphically some data flows and transformations and then generates Java code. The generated Java code states in the header that the license is LGPL and the tool itself claims to be open source using GPL v2 (see [2]).
Is it acceptable from the legal point of view to create a Fedora package using the generated Java code as the source?
Is _all_ code generated via Talend Open Studio automatically marked as being LGPL, or is this a decision that the use generating the Java code makes consciously?
I think that all the code is marked LGPL, there is no other alternative. Yaniv, can you confirm this?