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Re: [Savannah-hackers] submission of The Bright Sparc Project - savannah
From: |
Jaime E . Villate |
Subject: |
Re: [Savannah-hackers] submission of The Bright Sparc Project - savannah.gnu.org |
Date: |
Wed, 5 Feb 2003 21:06:05 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.2.5i |
Hi,
I'm evaluating the project you submitted for approval in Savannah.
In order to release your project under the GPL you
should write copyright notices and copying permission
statements at the beginning of every source-code file, and
include a copy of the plain text version of the GPL
(http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt). Copy it for instance
into a file named COPYING.
Please follow the advice of http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html
The GPL FAQ can also help you understand the reason behind
thoses recommendations. For example, there is an entry explaining
why the GPL requires including a copy of the GPL with
every copy of the program:
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#WhyMustIInclude
Please register your project once more with the changes mentioned
above. The way we handle pending projects makes it difficult to keep
track of projects that have been answered but have not been approved
yet, so we erase them and we ask you to register the project again every
time some change has to be done to the registration, and users might
have to register their projects several times. Thank you for your
understanding.
Some users find it useful to use the big re-registration URL provided in
the acknowledgment e-mail you received after registration.
Regards,
Jaime
On Tue, Feb 04, 2003 at 01:16:03PM -0500, address@hidden wrote:
>
> A package was submitted to savannah.gnu.org
> This mail was sent to address@hidden, address@hidden
>
>
> Warwick Brown <address@hidden> described the package as follows:
> License: gpl
> Other License:
> Package: The Bright Sparc Project
> System name: bright-sparc
> Type: GNU
>
> Description:
> This project is aims to provide a startup script system primarily for
> GNU/Linux systems, it is based upon the Slackware init scripts and can be
> used as a straight drop in replacement.
>
> The advantage of these scripts is to provide finer tuned control over the
> boot process while protecting the user from the nightmare of sysv way of
> doing things. the scripts show a similarity to both BSD and sysv in its
> approach and has been tested on Slackware/i386 and Splack/SuperSPARC so far.
>
> The goal of this project is to provide a standard startup regiem that can be
> used on any unice
>
> current home: http://www.linux-moonman.net/
>