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(Annotations (replaces Reviewer Comments))
 
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= Introduction =
 
= Introduction =
 +
 +
This wiki page represents a collection of best practices for editing and review. Best practices will be taken from here, at appropriate intervals, and made into an SPDX Technical report.
  
 
= Interpreting the Specification =
 
= Interpreting the Specification =
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The intent of this field is to indicate the URL of the location from which the package is actually obtained. Generally this should be the originating site of the package, but in cases where the package was obtained from a mirror site, the URL of the mirror should be used. The format for the URL should follow RFC conventions, specifically RFC3986 or any newer one that may eventually augment or obsolete it.
 
The intent of this field is to indicate the URL of the location from which the package is actually obtained. Generally this should be the originating site of the package, but in cases where the package was obtained from a mirror site, the URL of the mirror should be used. The format for the URL should follow RFC conventions, specifically RFC3986 or any newer one that may eventually augment or obsolete it.
 +
 +
In SPDX 2.0, when the codebase for an SPDX analysis is taken from a Version Control System (VCS) best practice is to provide the specific point in the VCS history from which the code was pulled.  The Package Download Location specifies syntax for several VCS systems  (git, svn, bzr, hg)
  
 
== Concluded License (4.11); Declared License (4.13) ==
 
== Concluded License (4.11); Declared License (4.13) ==
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= Examples =
 
= Examples =
  
This section contains examples of working with SPDX documents.
+
This section contains examples of working with SPDX documents. The examples, unless otherwise noted, will focus on illustrating a single concept or use case. The following projects are used throughout the use cases to make digesting the use cases easier as you will not have to continually re-familiarize yourself with a new application each time.
  
Jack: In doing this I was looking for open source projects to use but Im now thinking we should "create" our own projects. We could right size them for the examples and we could take the code from other OS projects and store the examples and the SPDX docs in our GIT. These docs could then become a form of validation examples so people generating SPDX docs could compare them back?
+
* GNU CPIO  version 2.10 - http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/cpio/
 
+
* GNU Time  version 1.7  - http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/time/
Jack: Im also wondering of the examples below should be "singular" in nature. That is they illustrate one concept?
+
* SPDX Tool - http://git.spdx.org/spdx-tools.git/
  
 +
<br>
  
 
== Converting 1.2 to 2.0 ==
 
== Converting 1.2 to 2.0 ==
  
Jack: Show a SPDX 1.2 and then a version of it using 2.0 and  explain how one would convert. We can use the spdx tools as the example.  Not sure this belongs here. Could be its own thing? May fit better here if there are things you can do when converting that help.
+
This examples shows a application with a SPDX 1.2 document and then a version of it using 2.0 and  explains how one would convert.  
 +
 
 +
Example Project: SPDX Tools - https://github.com/spdx/
 +
 
 +
<br>
  
 
== Simple 2.0 Document ==
 
== Simple 2.0 Document ==
  
Jack: Just a simple use case. Small number of files, say less then 5. Easy to get your head around.
+
This is a simple use case illustrating an SPDX 2.0 Document. The GNU Time program uses a small number of files so its "easy" to get your head around and how an spdx document could be generated.
Bill: see https://github.com/spdx/tools/blob/develop/TestFiles/SPDXTagExample-v2.0.spdx
+
 
 +
Example project: GNU Time 1.7 http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/time/
 +
 
 +
<br>
  
 
== Using the SPDX License List ==
 
== Using the SPDX License List ==
 +
 +
These are various real world examples of how people are incorporating the SPDX License List.
 +
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
! Who
 +
! Link
 +
! Description
 +
|-
 +
| GitHub
 +
| https://developer.github.com/v3/licenses/
 +
| GitHub projects use the short identifiers from the license list to represent the licensing of their project.
 +
|-
 +
| Yota
 +
| http://docs.yottabuild.org/reference/module.html
 +
| Yota  projects use the short identifiers from the license list and links back to the license list text to represent the licensing of their project.
 +
|}
 +
 +
These are working notes:
  
 
* a site which provides a pick list of SPDX licenses, and based on choice stores the declared license for an OSS project
 
* a site which provides a pick list of SPDX licenses, and based on choice stores the declared license for an OSS project
 
* an API for a site that returns the declared license of a project (e.g. github repo) in terms of SPDX license identifier
 
* an API for a site that returns the declared license of a project (e.g. github repo) in terms of SPDX license identifier
* a package manager (e.g. Rubygems) that encourages use of SPDX identifiers by validating .gemspec files ?
 
 
* a LICENSES.TXT file in a codebase that states the licensing for the code referencing SPDX license identifiers
 
* a LICENSES.TXT file in a codebase that states the licensing for the code referencing SPDX license identifiers
 
* a comment section in a source file that states the licensing for the file referencing SPDX license identifiers
 
* a comment section in a source file that states the licensing for the file referencing SPDX license identifiers
 +
* Package Managers / Distros that state licensing in files specific to that package manager
 +
** a package manager (e.g. Rubygems) that encourages use of SPDX identifiers by validating .gemspec files ?
 +
** a distro that encourages use of SPDX identifiers in their spec files (e.g. Debian DEP-5 format, while not an SPDX doc, can/may use SPDX license identifiers)?
  
== Multiple SPDX Documents in one ==
+
<br>
  
Jack: Use this for a test case of multiple documents related to one another and multiple documents in one.
+
== Relationships and Multiple SPDX Documents in one ==
  
[https://www.openssl.org/ OpenSSL Website]
+
GNU CPIO 2.10 - http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/cpio/  Has source, test code, documentation and its not "overly" large.
 +
 
 +
This example shows  a single SPDX document for an application. Within that document are multiple SPDX documents with relationships that clarify the context the files are used in. Basically it is broken down as follows:
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
! SPDX Document
 +
! Relationships Used
 +
! Description Notes
 +
|-
 +
| CPIO Application
 +
| CONTAINS
 +
| The application contains "bundles" of things. E.g. source that built it, test code, documentation, etc.,. This is the umbrella document.
 +
|-
 +
| CPIO Source
 +
| GENERATES
 +
| This source is used to build the application.
 +
|-
 +
| CPIO Documentation
 +
| DOCUMENTATION_OF
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| These documents describe the application and hows to use it.
 +
|-
 +
| CPIO Test
 +
| TEST_CASE_OF
 +
| This is test code for the application.
 +
|-
 +
| CPIO Project
 +
| BUILD_TOOL_OF
 +
| These are project files.
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
<br>
  
 
== External SPDX Documents ==
 
== External SPDX Documents ==
  
Jack: Binary referencing external source spdx documents. We could use SPDX tools here?
+
These examples show an SPDX document referencing another SPDX document.
  
Below are some pairs of SPDX doc, referencing External SPDX Doc that illustrate a few scenarios
+
=== JAR File ===
 +
 
 +
Example project: SPDX Tool - http://git.spdx.org/spdx-tools.git/
 +
 
 +
This example shows an executable jar with an SPDX referencing back to another SPDX document that describes the source that built it.
  
Ex 1:
 
* Binary Jar file
 
* java source files it was built from
 
  
 
Ex 2:
 
Ex 2:
 
* original java source files (on apache.org)
 
* original java source files (on apache.org)
 
* repackaged java source files (from a distro)  
 
* repackaged java source files (from a distro)  
 +
  
 
Ex 3:
 
Ex 3:
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* patched (modified) java source files (having added a security fix)
 
* patched (modified) java source files (having added a security fix)
  
 +
<br>
  
 
== Annotations (replaces Reviewer Comments) ==
 
== Annotations (replaces Reviewer Comments) ==
  
Jack: Simple example with reviewer comments added after the fact.
+
Example project: GNU Time 1.7  http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/time/
 +
 
 +
This example shows document for a simple application with reviewer comments added after the fact.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<br>
  
 
== File Types ==
 
== File Types ==

Latest revision as of 15:31, 2 July 2015

This is a place holder for working on the Best Practices document.

Best Practices

Introduction

This wiki page represents a collection of best practices for editing and review. Best practices will be taken from here, at appropriate intervals, and made into an SPDX Technical report.

Interpreting the Specification

Clarify and help with what is in the spec. Structure sections around the spec?

Tools

Best practices around using the SPDX tools

Contributing to SPDX

how to provide feedback, get involved, etc

Jack: This should be moved to the website.

Producing

SPDX Version: 1.2 PURPOSE: The SPDX specification is meant to stand on its own and to make clear how a field is to be populated. Still, there are times when more clarification is required. This tech note provides clarification with regard to certain fields about which questions of arisen. Some of these clarifications may be rolled into future versions of the specification.

Package Name (4.1)

The package name should be exclusive of version number. Field 4.2 Package Version is intended for version number and the package name should not redundantly specify this information.

Example

Correct

Package Name: glibc
Package Version: 2.11.1

Incorrect

Package Name: glibc 2.11.1
Package Version: 2.11.1

Package Supplier (4.4); Package Originator (4.5); Source Information (4.10)

The first two fields are intended to where the package came from and what entity created it. In many cases these will be one in the same, but it is possible that the supplier may have gotten the package from another source.

Example:

Wind River supplies the Linux kernel.

Package Supplier: Wind River
Package Originator: linux.org

Source Information is a freeform field, which, like many such fields in SPDX is there to allow the document creator to provide information they feel would be useful or important, but which my not fit neatly into the specification.

Package Download Location (4.6)

The intent of this field is to indicate the URL of the location from which the package is actually obtained. Generally this should be the originating site of the package, but in cases where the package was obtained from a mirror site, the URL of the mirror should be used. The format for the URL should follow RFC conventions, specifically RFC3986 or any newer one that may eventually augment or obsolete it.

In SPDX 2.0, when the codebase for an SPDX analysis is taken from a Version Control System (VCS) best practice is to provide the specific point in the VCS history from which the code was pulled. The Package Download Location specifies syntax for several VCS systems (git, svn, bzr, hg)

Concluded License (4.11); Declared License (4.13)

In cases where there is a contradiction between the Declared License and some other license present, the concluded license should represent that contradiction, and best practice would be to explain further in the 4.14 Comments on License field.

LEGAL TEAM SHOULD REVIEW THIS

Example:

A GPL 2 package that contains files licensed under Apache 2.0.

Declared License: GPL-2.0
Concluded License: GPL-2.0 and Apache-2.0
Comments on License: Several Apache licensed files (A, B, and C) are included in the packages causing an incompatibility with the licensing of the package.

Extracted Text (5.2)

To clarify, or reinforce, the text included here, should be the exact text in that is included with the package and no more. Some early SPDX tools included full text of the relevant license even though the full text was not supplied in the actual package. The example in the specification is one where full text is included, but if the text is incomplete, so should be the text in the Extracted Text field.

Example:

A copying file in the top level of the directory says, “This software is licensed under the Beer License.”

Correct:

Extracted Text: This software is licensed under the Beer-ware License

Incorrect:

“THE BEER-WARE LICENSE" (Revision 42):<phk@FreeBSD.ORG> wrote this file. As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in return Poul-Henning Kam

File Name (6.1)

To clarify, the format for the file name should follow URI RFC conventions, specifically RFC3986 or any newer one that may eventually augment or obsolete it. Specifically, it uses the relative path reference format of an URI, and is defined as being relative to the root of the package from which the file came.

In RFC3986, section 4.2, a relative path reference must not start with a slash character ("/"). Relative references also do not need to start with a "./" (dot slash), although there is one format for which the preceding "./" is necessary. In any case, RFC3986 is clear about how to handle dot-segments, and in the case of "./", it is simply removed.

Example:

Correct:

FileName: ./package/foo.c
FileName: package/foo.c

Incorrect:

FileName: /package/foo.c
FileName: //package/foo.c

Note about RFC3986:

This document obsoletes [RFC2396], which merged "Uniform Resource Locators" [RFC1738] and "Relative Uniform Resource Locators" [RFC1808] in order to define a single, generic syntax for all URIs.

Author vs. Creator (3.1) vs. Reviewer (7.1)

Author: The author is used occasionally in the text of the specification and generally refers to the creator(s) of the package. There is no explicit field for the author information other than copyright information and URL, which may or may not reflect the actual original author. In section 2.2.1, there is also a reference to an "SPDX Author"; this actually refers to the SPDX Creator.

Creator: The SPDX Creator is defined in section 3.1 and is used to identify who (or what, in the case of a tool) created the SPDX file.

Reviewer: The SPDX Reviewer is detined in section 7.1 and is used to identify who reviewed the content of the SPDX.

To put things into context, let's consider the following flow:

  1. An author creates a package and assigns a license to it, hopefully to each individual file, and also follows all of the best practices and obligations for the chosen or found licenses in the package.
  2. An SPDX creator analyzes the content of the package, extracts the pertinent information and assembles the SPDX file, whether manually or using a tool.
  3. An SPDX reviewer inspects the work of the SPDX creator, whether manually or using a tool. Consider the reviewer to be anything from another set of eyes, to a recognized reliable entity with some kind of sign-off authority.

The SPDX creator is a mandatory parameter - every file must have its creator. However, not every SPDX file is reviewed.

Use of Parentheses in License Tag Fields

In the RDF object model, licenses can be defined to be nested disjunctive or conjunctive sets in a very flexible manner. However, when using the Tag value format, it is not clear how, if at all, one could use the parentheses to define more complex licensing scenarios. It is not the intention to restrict either one of the formats, hence we view these additional examples as acceptable:

Examples:

Correct

LicenseConcluded: LGPL-2.0
LicenseConcluded: (LGPL-2.0 or LicenseRef-2)
LicenseConcluded: (LGPL-2.0 and (LicenseRef-2 or LicenseRef-3))
LicenseConcluded: ((LicenseRef-2 or (LicenseRef-3 and LicenseRef-4)) and LGPL-2.0)

Incorrect

LicenseConcluded: (LGPL-2.0)
LicenseConcluded: LGPL-2.0 or LicenseRef-2
LicenseConcluded: (LGPL-2.0 and LicenseRef-2 or LicenseRef-3)


Conceptually, much like in the RDF format, there are no limits to the depth of nested license sets, although practically, more than 2 levels are improbable.

This applies to all license fields.

Consuming

Best practices around the process of doing it. Examples of how this is done.

Notes from LinuxCon 2013 17 Sept 2013

What should be in a best practices, how does it relate to the spec?

Possibilities:

  • examples
  • particular questions (sort of like a FAQ)
  • Could start with things that are not well defined but end up in the specification
  • I need a field for X, its not there, what field could I use?
  • best practices around the specification and best practices around contributing to SPDX. Maybe two documents?
  • Snapshot best practices document at intervals and post on site. Use wiki for active discussions, new proposals, etc.,.
  • Should we have a getting started guide?
  • best practices for meta tagging like u-boot did. maybe link it in here but should be separate page. Could possibly include other information for developers supporting spdx and producing spdx friendly code. Look at things like U-boot, Mozilla, etc.,.


Examples

This section contains examples of working with SPDX documents. The examples, unless otherwise noted, will focus on illustrating a single concept or use case. The following projects are used throughout the use cases to make digesting the use cases easier as you will not have to continually re-familiarize yourself with a new application each time.


Converting 1.2 to 2.0

This examples shows a application with a SPDX 1.2 document and then a version of it using 2.0 and explains how one would convert.

Example Project: SPDX Tools - https://github.com/spdx/


Simple 2.0 Document

This is a simple use case illustrating an SPDX 2.0 Document. The GNU Time program uses a small number of files so its "easy" to get your head around and how an spdx document could be generated.

Example project: GNU Time 1.7 http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/time/


Using the SPDX License List

These are various real world examples of how people are incorporating the SPDX License List.

Who Link Description
GitHub https://developer.github.com/v3/licenses/ GitHub projects use the short identifiers from the license list to represent the licensing of their project.
Yota http://docs.yottabuild.org/reference/module.html Yota projects use the short identifiers from the license list and links back to the license list text to represent the licensing of their project.

These are working notes:

  • a site which provides a pick list of SPDX licenses, and based on choice stores the declared license for an OSS project
  • an API for a site that returns the declared license of a project (e.g. github repo) in terms of SPDX license identifier
  • a LICENSES.TXT file in a codebase that states the licensing for the code referencing SPDX license identifiers
  • a comment section in a source file that states the licensing for the file referencing SPDX license identifiers
  • Package Managers / Distros that state licensing in files specific to that package manager
    • a package manager (e.g. Rubygems) that encourages use of SPDX identifiers by validating .gemspec files ?
    • a distro that encourages use of SPDX identifiers in their spec files (e.g. Debian DEP-5 format, while not an SPDX doc, can/may use SPDX license identifiers)?


Relationships and Multiple SPDX Documents in one

GNU CPIO 2.10 - http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/cpio/ Has source, test code, documentation and its not "overly" large.

This example shows a single SPDX document for an application. Within that document are multiple SPDX documents with relationships that clarify the context the files are used in. Basically it is broken down as follows:

SPDX Document Relationships Used Description Notes
CPIO Application CONTAINS The application contains "bundles" of things. E.g. source that built it, test code, documentation, etc.,. This is the umbrella document.
CPIO Source GENERATES This source is used to build the application.
CPIO Documentation DOCUMENTATION_OF These documents describe the application and hows to use it.
CPIO Test TEST_CASE_OF This is test code for the application.
CPIO Project BUILD_TOOL_OF These are project files.


External SPDX Documents

These examples show an SPDX document referencing another SPDX document.

JAR File

Example project: SPDX Tool - http://git.spdx.org/spdx-tools.git/

This example shows an executable jar with an SPDX referencing back to another SPDX document that describes the source that built it.


Ex 2:

  • original java source files (on apache.org)
  • repackaged java source files (from a distro)


Ex 3:

  • original java source files
  • patched (modified) java source files (having added a security fix)


Annotations (replaces Reviewer Comments)

Example project: GNU Time 1.7 http://mirror.sdunix.com/gnu/time/

This example shows document for a simple application with reviewer comments added after the fact.



File Types

Jack: Example showing use of all file types, especially when there are "choices".

“SOURCE” | “BINARY” | “ARCHIVE” | “APPLICATION” | “AUDIO” | “IMAGE” | “TEXT” | “VIDEO” | “DOCUMENTATION” | “SPDX” | “OTHER”

2.0 Spec allows for multiple filetypes

  • a .jar file containing compiled .class files could be described as BINARY and ARCHIVE
  • a .java file could be both SOURCE TEXT
  • a binary PDF file could be BINARY DOCUMENTATION