On Wednesday 03 January 2001 08:07 pm, you wrote: > On Jan 03 2001, at 14:33, Stephen P. Smith was caught saying: > > We were talking liscening issues here today and I was asked a > > question. > > > > If the linux kernel is under the GPL, it can be linked against > > glibc without a problem. > > > > Now let's say that I write a non-GPL compatible program and want to > > run it on Linux. If it links against the kernel then I am in > > volation of the GPL'ed kernel liscense - correct. If so, how do I > > run my program on linux? > > wrong > > The kernel and system libraries (glibc, libm, etc) are LGPL. You can > dynamically link to them with a binary only application. You cannot; > however, build a static linked version of you application and > distribute it as binary only. Hold it a second here. There are lots of problems above. First of all, the kernel is GPL, the system libraries are LGPL. You can link proprietary code to LGPL without a problem, either static or dynamic - that's what the LGPL was created for in the first place. The kernel is GPL, and whether one can dynamically link to GPL code or not is an issue for debate. However, Linus has specifically said that he will allow dynamically loaded kernel modules to be released in a binary only format. The kernel DOES NOT link to glibc. It is compiled with no C library functions. If you write an application that runs on Linux the only Linux code that you could be accused of using are the system header files - you do not link against the kernel. Therefore you can run proprietary code on Linux. -- Pete Buechler Developer, SuSE Labs peterb@suse.com http://www.suse.com/~peterb