Mike, > Operating systems are typically treated as "exempt pre-reqs" because they are > already installed on the target machine. I/O access libraries have to be > treated on a case-by-case basis, and it makes a great deal of difference if > you are distributing the library with your code, or simply calling a library > that is already installed on the target machine. Thanks for the clarification. How would we treat operating systems as often sued on smaller IoT devices where the operating system is a library linked to the application (e.g., eCos, freeRTOS). Would these be treated like any library?
I'll read through the docs. Thanks for the pointers. Alois > See http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/ for the following > documents:http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/Eclipse_Policy_and_Procedure_for_3rd_Party_Dependencies_Final.pdf[http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/Eclipse_Policy_and_Procedure_for_3rd_Party_Dependencies_Final.pdf] > http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/GPL_CE_Policy.php > http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/LGPL_API_Policy.pdfHope that helps. -- Mike Milinkovich [email protected][[email protected]] +1.613.220.3223 _______________________________________________ incubation mailing list [email protected] To change your delivery options, retrieve your password, or unsubscribe from this list, visit https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/incubation[https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/incubation] _______________________________________________ incubation mailing list [email protected] To change your delivery options, retrieve your password, or unsubscribe from this list, visit https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/incubation
