A compromise that could have been reached. Re: [PATCH] Blacklistbinary-only modules lying about their license

From: Timothy Miller
Date: Fri Apr 30 2004 - 15:51:36 EST


Something occurred to me...

It does take some time to get patches to propogate onto people's computers. Linuxant has the problem that they have to be able to work in lots of different already-deployed kernels.

I get the impression that Linuxant attempts to load and try a large number of drivers in order to detect hardware. While that isn't necessarily the best way to probe for devices, I can see why it would be unpleasant to have numerous "taint" messages print out in the general case.

The best solution to this would be both legal (in the sense of them being licensed to do this) and solve Linuxant's problem. How to do this?


Linuxant could have posed this problem to LKML and gotten permission to do something "questionable", which is what I am going to suggest:

First: Do the "GPL\0" thing with the permission of LKML members, conditioned on the next two steps.

Second: Make the Linuxant loader program print out a message that explains to users that the kernel is really being tainted, even though it doesn't look that way, and also that same message needs to get into appropriate system logs.

Third: Find some way to force on the "tainted" flag in the kernel after all the module load attempts have been finished.


I'm not declaring this to be THE solution It might be crap. But the Linux community does enjoy cooperating with people who are trying to do good things and need help. An argument can be made that there is some benefit to what Linuxant does, and that argument is strong enough that enough people would probably agree to this sort of compromize.


In fact, in my opinion, if I were a major kernel contributor, I wouldn't mind the "questionable workaround" at all if the consequences of it were deal with by forcing the "tainting" flag on after the tainting flag had been defeated.

Make sense?

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