Commit Graph

10 Commits (83ecf2683382b11562ab4d4ec10c971b655950f2)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Leah Rowe a4ea286731 Remove most of Ferass's lbmk contributions
The primary purpose of my intense auditing has
been to improve lbmk's coding style and fix bugs
but there is a secondary purpose: know precisely
who owns what, because I want to re-license as
much as possible of lbmk under *MIT*, instead of
the current GNU licensing. MIT is vastly superior,
because it grants *actual* freedom to the user,
permits *sublicensing* and it is vastly more
compatible with other GPL combinations; for
example, MIT license is compatible with GPL2-only
whereas lbmk's current mix of GPLv3-or-later and
GPLv3-only is legally incompatible with GPLv2-only.

Re-licensing under MIT will most likely result in
more contributions to Libreboot's build system in
the future, especially as it will attract a lot
more commercial interest. Contrary to the popular
arguments, copyleft is a liability to the free
software movement and results in less code being
written; in practise, permissively licensed code
gets more public contributions, including from
commercial entities, even if companies can
theoretically make something proprietary out of
it (in practise, anyone inclined can just use the
upstream and proprietary forks almost always die).

Copyleft propaganda is fundamentally flawed. See:
<https://unixsheikh.com/articles/the-problems-with-the-gpl.html>

Anyway, I've been doing a combination of:

* Seeking permission from other copyright holders,
  for re-licensing
* Deleting, or moving, other contributions; for
  example, splitting certain contributions into
  separate files so that originally modified files
  become unencumbered. This latter solution is a
  result of *code cleanup* arising from the audit.

For Ferass's contributions, I opted to seek
*permission*, and permission was denied. In full compliance
with this legal imperative, I'm acting accordingly; this
commit removes all of Ferass's changes that converted lbmk
to posix shell scripts, thus removing his copyright on the
affected files, bypassing his authority entirely. Therefore,
lbmk is largely now bash-dependent. In practise, nobody is
going to use anything other than a GNU system to build
Libreboot, because many projects that Libreboot makes use
of rely heavily on GNU; for example, coreboot's build
system makes heavy use of GNU-specific extensions in *GNU
Make*, and likely contains many bashisms. Of course,
Libreboot also compiles GNU GRUB.

I would much rather have MIT-licensed Bash scripts
than GPL-licensed posix SCL scripts.

This reverts the changes from Ferass El Hafidi,
for the following commits, with some exceptions:

* 7f5dfebf7d
* f787044642

Exception:

download/mrc not reverted, because that was
already a fork of an existing script under
coreboot's build system, and their script was
GPLv2. i cannot/will not re-license this file
(ergo,
7f5dfebf7d
change remains intact, on this file)

resources/scripts/build/boot/roms_helper, these changes
have been kept:
* 7e6691e9 - Add ARMv7 and AArch64 support
* dec2d720 - add myself in the build/roms_helper script
	(added 2021 copyright for the change below)
* b7405656 - Workaround for grub's slow boot
^ these changes will be re-factored, splitting them
  out of the file into a new file. This will be done in
  a future lbmk revision. (in some cases, it makes sense
  to keep a change but split it, allowing the main file to
  be re-licensed without the change in it)

This is part of a much larger series of
licensing audits. It's likely that lbmk will
be posix-compliant (in its shell scripts)
again some day, because I'm planning to rewrite
most of these scripts (the ones modified in this
patch), and many of them (e.g. individual download
scripts) are subject to future deletion in a planned
overhaul of the download logic for third party
projects.

In addition: these changes are being kept (no attempt
to re-license them will be made):

* cff081c6 - Fix grub's slow boot (1 year, 5 months ago) <Vitali64>
* 4c851889 - Add macbook*1 16mb configs (1 year, 6 months ago) <Vitali64>

Ferass's work that remains will be split into dedicated
files containing them, where feasible.

In the case of grub.cfg (for GNU GRUB), I don't care
because it's a script for an engine (GRUB shell) that's
under GPL anyway, so who really cares about MIT license.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-27 08:10:50 +01:00
Leah Rowe 3cbcfce9d1 gitclone: add my copyright for recent changes
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 13:19:38 +01:00
Leah Rowe 1e8f2cc170 gitclone: only rm the old directory at the end
this way, it will only be deleted after the
new git clone and patching worked successfully

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 13:03:28 +01:00
Leah Rowe 3da8d20cd6 gitclone: stricter error handling
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 13:01:12 +01:00
Leah Rowe e804849486 gitclone: minor cleanup
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 12:56:42 +01:00
Leah Rowe fd2ca12e9e gitclone: split logic out of main()
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 12:55:34 +01:00
Leah Rowe 8d9570b6f7 gitclone: cleaner coding style
main() on top

top-down logic

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-05-18 12:34:47 +01:00
Leah Rowe d89585fb71 gitclone: check for invalid patch filename
where the asterisk is used, it can sometimes
literally try to patch with a file named "*",
which of course does not exist

this change fixes an lbmk error when running:

./download seabios

this was caused recently, because all patches
were seabios were removed (lbmk currently uses
stock seabios, without patching it)
2023-05-14 11:35:04 +01:00
Leah Rowe 6d0ff02864 Import new util: bios_extract 2023-05-06 17:15:14 +01:00
Leah Rowe a942bd6590 move download/gitmodule script to root directory
this fixes the build error:

Error: name not set
Usage: ./download gitmodule [name]

when running:

./download all

running "all" runs all scripts under downloads,
one of which was the gitmodule script itself, therefore
being run without argument
2023-03-17 23:13:20 +00:00