A proposal for SPDX Private License Identifiers. Example: .com.amazon.-.ASL-2.0
I would like to propose a syntax for SPDX "Private License Identifiers".
SPDX short identifiers and SPDX-License-Identifier declarations in source code and in compliance documents have proven to be useful. This proposal extends SPDX license tags to licenses created and used by organizations, that are unlikely to be applied to content by anyone other than the license author. And when I see an expanding namespace with worries about collisions and an overworked central naming authority, I always think "why not use the DNS?" Examples (these URLs are not correct): SPDX-License-Identifier: .com.amazon.-.ASL-2.0 SPDX-License-Identifier: .com.amazon.-.ASL-2.0 https://aws.amazon.com/doc/ASL-2.0 SPDX-License-Identifier: .com.amazon.-.ASL-2.0 https://github.com/aws/AmazonSoftwareLicense Private License Identifiers are indicated by a leading dot, followed by the reversed DNS name of the organization who created or authored the license, followed by a dot dash dot and then a short name of the same general form of a SPDX license short identifier. The leading dot is sufficient to separate this namespace from the registered SPDX short identifiers, and is inspired by the fact that DNS names have an implied trailing dot. The dot dash dot is to prevent someone from reversing the entire identifier string into a DNS name and trying to dereference it, because a bare dash is not a valid DNS name part. . DNS names be IDN (Internationalized Domain Name) and thus can contain non-ASCII characters. IDN components can be encoded in IDN Punycode, or in UTF-8, or in the Unicode encoding appropriate to the document. In a SPDX-License-identifier declaration, a Private License Identifier can optionally be followed by a URI pointing to the canonical license text. This URI should be under the control of the entity that controls the DNS namespace of the Private License Identifier. ..m Mark Atwood <atwoodm@...> Principal, Open Source +1-206-604-2198 |
|