| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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For permissive licenses like MIT and BSD, OR EPL doesn't make sense, because the
copyright original permission notice must be retained at all times.
For code simply copied with minimal modifications that are unrelated to
Refinery, we can just use the plain MIT license or BSD-3-clause license.
For code with complex modifications related to Refinery, we can instead use the
MIT AND EPL-2.0 SPDX expression, which forces downstream users to retain the
original MIT notices as required by the MIT license, but also extends Refinery's
copyleft to our modifications.
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Make sure we obey the REUSE (https://reuse.software) specification and the
origin, copyright owner, and license of all files are clearly marked.
The whole project is under the EPL-2.0, except for trivial files where copyright
is not applicable that are marked with the CC0-1.0 license. Moreover, code
included from third parties is also available under the respective license.
chore: add CONTRIBUTORS.md
List all authors and supporting organizations in accordance with the REUSE
specification.
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Also overhaulds the building and linting for frontend assets.
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* Remove the direct keyword because it can be inferred
* Use may/must/current instead of value literals
* Transformation rule changes
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This allows us to simplify the webpack configuration and the gradle
build scripts.
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