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by stgraber
917 days ago
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Of course following the move and going AGPLv3 would solve the project contribution issue.
In fact it'd back Canonical into an interesting corner as Incus would be allowed to freely take LXD changes, but the opposite would not be possible unless they let go of the CLA. It certainly would put Incus in a great situation, if it wasn't for the fact that we think keeping the Apache2 license is the right thing to do. The Go packages provided by Incus are used in hundreds of other codebases, a switch to AGPLv3 would cause those codebases to have to follow which would only lead to reduced adoption for Incus and a lot of pain in the Go ecosystem as a whole. And then there is the fact that many large companies, including some that have been relying on LXD in the past, have policies specifically against the consumption of AGPL code. One prime example of that would be Google, which last I checked make up more than 50% of the LXD user base thanks to LXD being used on Chromebooks for the Linux shell feature. Overall, the thing I hate most with this change is that it's going to make what was otherwise a pretty cordial relationship between the two projects now turn into a very stressful one where we need to basically be careful not to look at each other's stuff...
It may seem that LXD and Incus were straight up competitors, but in reality, we were doing behind the scenes debugging together, sending each others' link to pull requests and specifications, ... this effectively all ends today and it's a shame. |
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