OSDL signs off new Linux rules
Published: 24 May 2004 15:20 BST
The Open Source Development Labs, which promotes adoption of the Linux operating system, said on Monday that it is putting in place a new system to better track and document changes to the Linux kernel.
The group, which employs Linux founder Linus Torvalds, said the new system will require that contributions to the Linux kernel only be made by developers who agree to submit code under "appropriate" open-source licences.
The system puts in place an agreement, called the Developer's Certificate of Origin, or DCO, that will ensure that acknowledgement is given to developers for contributions and derivative works, as well to those contributors who "receive submissions and pass them, unchanged, up the kernel tree", according to a press release issued on Monday.
The DCO is intended to eliminate questions and legal battles over the origin of Linux code contributions. Last year, the SCO Group, which owns a disputed amount of Unix intellectual property, sued IBM, alleging that the company violated its Unix contract by moving Unix technology to Linux that it should have kept secret.
The case has since ballooned into a far-ranging attack on Linux, attracting legal attention from Linux companies Novell and Red Hat and the ire of Linux supporters worldwide. SCO later also brought suit against several big companies that use Linux.
The new system put in place by the OSDL could help eliminate future battles over Linux code origin. The group said that under the DCO, all contributors to a particular submission are called upon to "sign off" on it before it may be considered for inclusion in the kernel.
Andrew Morton, who maintains the current Linux 2.6 kernel, along with Torvalds, endorsed the new system after gaining support for it from other key Linux contributors, OSDL said.
"We've always had transparency, peer review, pride and personal responsibility behind our open-source development method. With the DCO, we're trying to document the process. We want to make it simpler to link submitted code to its contributors. It's like signing your own work," Torvalds said in a statement.













