spark-instrumented-optimizer/licenses/LICENSE-CC0.txt

121 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

[SPARK-24654][BUILD] Update, fix LICENSE and NOTICE, and specialize for source vs binary Whew, lots of work to track down again all the license requirements, but this ought to be a pretty good pass. Below, find a writeup on how I approached it for future reference. - LICENSE and NOTICE and licenses/ now reflect the *source* release - LICENSE-binary and NOTICE-binary and licenses-binary now reflect the binary release - Recreated all the license info from scratch - Added notes about how this was constructed for next time - License-oriented info was moved from NOTICE to LICENSE, esp. for Cat B deps - Some seemingly superfluous or stale license info was removed, especially for test-scope deps - Updated release script to put binary-oriented versions in binary releases ---- # Principles ASF projects distribute source and binary code under the Apache License 2.0. However these project distributions frequently include copies of source or binary code from third parties, under possibly other license terms. This triggers conditions of those licenses, which essentially amount to including license information in a LICENSE and/or NOTICE file, and including copies of license texts (here, in a directory called `license/`). See http://www.apache.org/dev/licensing-howto.html and https://www.apache.org/legal/resolved.html#required-third-party-notices # In Spark Spark produces source releases, and also binary releases of that code. Spark source code may contain source from third parties, possibly modified. This is true in Scala, Java, Python and R, and in the UI's JavaScript and CSS files. These must be handled appropriately per above in a LICENSE and NOTICE file created for the source release. Separately, the binary releases may contain binary code from third parties. This is very much true for Scala and Java, as Spark produces an 'assembly' binary release which includes all transitive binary dependencies of this part of Spark. With perhaps the exception of py4j, this doesn't occur in the same way for Python or R because of the way these ecosystems work. (Note that the JS and CSS for the UI will be in both 'source' and 'binary' releases.) These must also be handled in a separate LICENSE and NOTICE file for the binary release. # Binary Release License ## Transitive Maven Dependencies We'll first tackle the binary release, and that almost entirely means assessing the transitive dependencies of the Scala/Java backbone of Spark. Run `project-info-reports:dependencies` with essentially all profiles: a set that would bring in all different possible transitive dependencies. However, don't activate any of the '-lgpl' profiles as these would bring in LGPL-licensed dependencies that are explicitly excluded from Spark binary releases. ``` mvn -Phadoop-2.7 -Pyarn -Phive -Pmesos -Pkubernetes -Pflume -Pkinesis-asl -Pdocker-integration-tests -Phive-thriftserver -Pkafka-0-8 -Ddependency.locations.enabled=false project-info-reports:dependencies ``` Open `assembly/target/site/dependencies.html`. Find "Project Transitive Dependencies", and find "compile" and "runtime" (if exists). This is a list of all the dependencies that Spark is going to ship in its binary "assembly" distro and therefore whose licenses need to be appropriately considered in LICENSE and NOTICE. Copy this table into a spreadsheet for easy management. Next job is to fill in some blanks, as a few projects will not have clearly declared their licenses in a POM. Sort by license. This is a good time to verify all the dependencies are at least Cat A/B licenses, and not Cat X! http://www.apache.org/legal/resolved.html ### Apache License 2 The Apache License 2 variants are typically easiest to deal with as they will not require you to modify LICENSE, nor add to license/. It's still good form to list the ALv2 dependencies in LICENSE for completeness, but optional. They may require you to propagate bits from NOTICE. It's tedious to track down all the NOTICE files and evaluate what if anything needs to be copied to NOTICE. Fortunately, this can be made easier as the assembly module can be temporarily modified to produce a NOTICE file that concatenates all NOTICE files bundled with transitive dependencies. First change the packaging of `assembly/spark-assembly_2.11/pom.xml` to `<packaging>jar</packaging>`. Next add this stanza somewhere in the body of the same POM file: ``` <plugin> <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId> <artifactId>maven-shade-plugin</artifactId> <configuration> <shadedArtifactAttached>false</shadedArtifactAttached> <artifactSet> <includes> <include>*:*</include> </includes> </artifactSet> </configuration> <executions> <execution> <phase>package</phase> <goals> <goal>shade</goal> </goals> <configuration> <transformers> <transformer implementation="org.apache.maven.plugins.shade.resource.ApacheNoticeResourceTransformer"/> </transformers> </configuration> </execution> </executions> </plugin> ``` Finally execute `mvn ... package` with all of the same `-P` profile flags as above. In the JAR file at `assembly/target/spark-assembly_2.11....jar` you'll find a file `META-INF/NOTICE` that concatenates all NOTICE files bundled with transitive dependencies. This should be the starting point for the binary release's NOTICE file. Some elements in the file are from Spark itself, like: ``` Spark Project Assembly Copyright 2018 The Apache Software Foundation Spark Project Core Copyright 2018 The Apache Software Foundation ``` These can be removed. Remove elements of the combined NOTICE file that aren't relevant to Spark. It's actually rare that we are sure that some element is completely irrelevant to Spark, because each transitive dependency includes all its transitive dependencies. So there may be nothing that can be done here. Of course, some projects may not publish NOTICE in their Maven artifacts. Ideally, search for the NOTICE file of projects that don't seem to have produced any text in NOTICE, but, there is some argument that projects that don't produce a NOTICE in their Maven artifacts don't entail an obligation on projects that depend solely on their Maven artifacts. ### Other Licenses Next are "Cat A" permissively licensed (BSD 2-Clause, BSD 3-Clause, MIT) components. List the components grouped by their license type in LICENSE. Then add the text of the license to licenses/. For example if you list "foo bar" as a BSD-licensed dependency, add its license text as licenses/LICENSE-foo-bar.txt. Public domain and similar works are treated like permissively licensed dependencies. And the same goes for all Cat B licenses too, like CDDL. However these additional require at least a URL pointer to the project's page. Use the artifact hyperlink in your spreadsheet if possible; if non-existent or doesn't resolve, do your best to determine a URL for the project's source. ### Shaded third-party dependencies Some third party dependencies actually copy in other dependencies rather than depend on them as Maven artifacts. This means they don't show up in the process above. These can be quite hard to track down, but are rare. A key example is reflectasm, embedded in kryo. ### Examples module The above _almost_ considers everything bundled in a Spark binary release. The main assembly won't include examples. The same must be done for dependencies marked as 'compile' for the examples module. See `examples/target/site/dependencies.html`. At the time of this writing however this just adds one dependency: `scopt`. ### provided scope Above we considered just compile and runtime scope dependencies, which makes sense as they are the ones that are packaged. However, for complicated reasons (shading), a few components that Spark does bundle are not marked as compile dependencies in the assembly. Therefore it's also necessary to consider 'provided' dependencies from `assembly/target/site/dependencies.html` actually! Right now that's just Jetty and JPMML artifacts. ## Python, R Don't forget that Py4J is also distributed in the binary release, actually. There should be no other R, Python code in the binary release. That's it. ## Sense checking Compare the contents of `jars/`, `examples/jars/` and `python/lib` from a recent binary release to see if anything appears there that doesn't seem to have been covered above. These additional components will have to be handled manually, but should be few or none of this type. # Source Release License While there are relatively fewer third-party source artifacts included as source code, there is no automated way to detect it, really. It requires some degree of manual auditing. Most third party source comes from included JS and CSS files. At the time of this writing, some places to look or consider: `build/sbt-launch-lib.bash`, `python/lib`, third party source in `python/pyspark` like `heapq3.py`, `docs/js/vendor`, and `core/src/main/resources/org/apache/spark/ui/static`. The principles are the same as above. Remember some JS files copy in other JS files! Look out for Modernizr. # One More Thing: JS and CSS in Binary Release Now that you've got a handle on source licenses, recall that all the JS and CSS source code will *also* be part of the binary release. Copy that info from source to binary license files accordingly. Author: Sean Owen <srowen@gmail.com> Closes #21640 from srowen/SPARK-24654.
2018-06-30 20:27:16 -04:00
Creative Commons Legal Code
CC0 1.0 Universal
CREATIVE COMMONS CORPORATION IS NOT A LAW FIRM AND DOES NOT PROVIDE
LEGAL SERVICES. DISTRIBUTION OF THIS DOCUMENT DOES NOT CREATE AN
ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP. CREATIVE COMMONS PROVIDES THIS
INFORMATION ON AN "AS-IS" BASIS. CREATIVE COMMONS MAKES NO WARRANTIES
REGARDING THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS
PROVIDED HEREUNDER, AND DISCLAIMS LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES RESULTING FROM
THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS PROVIDED
HEREUNDER.
Statement of Purpose
The laws of most jurisdictions throughout the world automatically confer
exclusive Copyright and Related Rights (defined below) upon the creator
and subsequent owner(s) (each and all, an "owner") of an original work of
authorship and/or a database (each, a "Work").
Certain owners wish to permanently relinquish those rights to a Work for
the purpose of contributing to a commons of creative, cultural and
scientific works ("Commons") that the public can reliably and without fear
of later claims of infringement build upon, modify, incorporate in other
works, reuse and redistribute as freely as possible in any form whatsoever
and for any purposes, including without limitation commercial purposes.
These owners may contribute to the Commons to promote the ideal of a free
culture and the further production of creative, cultural and scientific
works, or to gain reputation or greater distribution for their Work in
part through the use and efforts of others.
For these and/or other purposes and motivations, and without any
expectation of additional consideration or compensation, the person
associating CC0 with a Work (the "Affirmer"), to the extent that he or she
is an owner of Copyright and Related Rights in the Work, voluntarily
elects to apply CC0 to the Work and publicly distribute the Work under its
terms, with knowledge of his or her Copyright and Related Rights in the
Work and the meaning and intended legal effect of CC0 on those rights.
1. Copyright and Related Rights. A Work made available under CC0 may be
protected by copyright and related or neighboring rights ("Copyright and
Related Rights"). Copyright and Related Rights include, but are not
limited to, the following:
i. the right to reproduce, adapt, distribute, perform, display,
communicate, and translate a Work;
ii. moral rights retained by the original author(s) and/or performer(s);
iii. publicity and privacy rights pertaining to a person's image or
likeness depicted in a Work;
iv. rights protecting against unfair competition in regards to a Work,
subject to the limitations in paragraph 4(a), below;
v. rights protecting the extraction, dissemination, use and reuse of data
in a Work;
vi. database rights (such as those arising under Directive 96/9/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 1996 on the legal
protection of databases, and under any national implementation
thereof, including any amended or successor version of such
directive); and
vii. other similar, equivalent or corresponding rights throughout the
world based on applicable law or treaty, and any national
implementations thereof.
2. Waiver. To the greatest extent permitted by, but not in contravention
of, applicable law, Affirmer hereby overtly, fully, permanently,
irrevocably and unconditionally waives, abandons, and surrenders all of
Affirmer's Copyright and Related Rights and associated claims and causes
of action, whether now known or unknown (including existing as well as
future claims and causes of action), in the Work (i) in all territories
worldwide, (ii) for the maximum duration provided by applicable law or
treaty (including future time extensions), (iii) in any current or future
medium and for any number of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever,
including without limitation commercial, advertising or promotional
purposes (the "Waiver"). Affirmer makes the Waiver for the benefit of each
member of the public at large and to the detriment of Affirmer's heirs and
successors, fully intending that such Waiver shall not be subject to
revocation, rescission, cancellation, termination, or any other legal or
equitable action to disrupt the quiet enjoyment of the Work by the public
as contemplated by Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose.
3. Public License Fallback. Should any part of the Waiver for any reason
be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, then the
Waiver shall be preserved to the maximum extent permitted taking into
account Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose. In addition, to the
extent the Waiver is so judged Affirmer hereby grants to each affected
person a royalty-free, non transferable, non sublicensable, non exclusive,
irrevocable and unconditional license to exercise Affirmer's Copyright and
Related Rights in the Work (i) in all territories worldwide, (ii) for the
maximum duration provided by applicable law or treaty (including future
time extensions), (iii) in any current or future medium and for any number
of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever, including without
limitation commercial, advertising or promotional purposes (the
"License"). The License shall be deemed effective as of the date CC0 was
applied by Affirmer to the Work. Should any part of the License for any
reason be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, such
partial invalidity or ineffectiveness shall not invalidate the remainder
of the License, and in such case Affirmer hereby affirms that he or she
will not (i) exercise any of his or her remaining Copyright and Related
Rights in the Work or (ii) assert any associated claims and causes of
action with respect to the Work, in either case contrary to Affirmer's
express Statement of Purpose.
4. Limitations and Disclaimers.
a. No trademark or patent rights held by Affirmer are waived, abandoned,
surrendered, licensed or otherwise affected by this document.
b. Affirmer offers the Work as-is and makes no representations or
warranties of any kind concerning the Work, express, implied,
statutory or otherwise, including without limitation warranties of
title, merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, non
infringement, or the absence of latent or other defects, accuracy, or
the present or absence of errors, whether or not discoverable, all to
the greatest extent permissible under applicable law.
c. Affirmer disclaims responsibility for clearing rights of other persons
that may apply to the Work or any use thereof, including without
limitation any person's Copyright and Related Rights in the Work.
Further, Affirmer disclaims responsibility for obtaining any necessary
consents, permissions or other rights required for any use of the
Work.
d. Affirmer understands and acknowledges that Creative Commons is not a
party to this document and has no duty or obligation with respect to
this CC0 or use of the Work.