Difference between revisions of "Plug-ins"

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(Status as of 2014: Work is in progress to further extend the plug-in interface.)
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First, the general plug-in architecture design should closely tie the plug-in to the original code, such that the plug-in and the base program are parts of one extended program. (...) Second, you should require plug-in developers to affirm that their plug-ins are released under an appropriate license. This should be enforced with a simple programmatic check. (...)  If a case about this got to court, we can point to that symbol as evidence that the plug-in developer understood that the license had this requirement.<ref>https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Dynamic-Plug_002dIn-Interfaces.html</ref>
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"''First, the general plug-in architecture design should closely tie the plug-in to the original code, such that the plug-in and the base program are parts of one extended program. (...) Second, you should require plug-in developers to affirm that their plug-ins are released under an appropriate license. This should be enforced with a simple programmatic check. (...)  If a case about this got to court, we can point to that symbol as evidence that the plug-in developer understood that the license had this requirement.''" (read [https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Dynamic-Plug_002dIn-Interfaces.html full text])
 
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Latest revision as of 10:19, 6 February 2014

Adding a plug-ins interface to a free software project can carry the risk that others will develop non-free plug-ins, thus reducing the free software project to a platform for a non-free application. This can be avoided by taking care as described in the GNU Coding Standards:

"First, the general plug-in architecture design should closely tie the plug-in to the original code, such that the plug-in and the base program are parts of one extended program. (...) Second, you should require plug-in developers to affirm that their plug-ins are released under an appropriate license. This should be enforced with a simple programmatic check. (...) If a case about this got to court, we can point to that symbol as evidence that the plug-in developer understood that the license had this requirement." (read full text)

GCC example

GCC has had a plug-in interface since 2009.

Status as of 2014

Work is in progress to further extend the plug-in interface.

In January 2014, Richard Stallman commented: "making available the symbol table (identifiers and their types) would not cause this problem [of proprietary plug-ins]. It just needs someone to write the code."[1]

External links

References