This pull request changes the value of the license property in package.json to a standard, machine-readable SPDX license identifier.
I'll be honest: This is a semi-automated pull request. I started by using dat and dat-npm to review metadata for all packages on npm, looking for packages updated sometime in the last year that don't use a valid SPDX license identifier in package.json. I used my own npm module, spdx-correct to guess what license you were after: "GPL-2.0". A quick manual check and a few shell scripts later, and this pull request was born.
npm doesn't require that you use a valid SPDX identifier, but it's strongly recommended. (Try npm help 7 package.json and search for “License”.) Other source code package managers, like Maven for Java and RubyGems for Ruby, recommend the same.
Why care about SPDX? A machine-readable standard makes it possible for programs, rather than just people, to review a module or even an entire codebase to make sure that licenses are compatible. Whatever the reason—strong personal conviction, company policy, terms of a business deal—SPDX makes it easier to collaborate with others when licenses can be a problem, and helps take open-source software to more places. Given that npm has a ton of modules but also handles dependencies in a novel way, I think a little license hygiene could help npm build amazing new relationships between communities that lawyers have long kept apart.
Though this PR was semi-automatic, my responses to any questions you have won't be. I can't give legal advice over GitHub, but I'm happy to answer questions about SPDX or point you to good resources on related problems.
Thanks for your contribution to open-source software!
This pull request changes the value of the license property in
package.json
to a standard, machine-readable SPDX license identifier.I'll be honest: This is a semi-automated pull request. I started by using dat and dat-npm to review metadata for all packages on npm, looking for packages updated sometime in the last year that don't use a valid SPDX license identifier in
package.json
. I used my own npm module, spdx-correct to guess what license you were after:"GPL-2.0"
. A quick manual check and a few shell scripts later, and this pull request was born.npm doesn't require that you use a valid SPDX identifier, but it's strongly recommended. (Try
npm help 7 package.json
and search for “License”.) Other source code package managers, like Maven for Java and RubyGems for Ruby, recommend the same.Why care about SPDX? A machine-readable standard makes it possible for programs, rather than just people, to review a module or even an entire codebase to make sure that licenses are compatible. Whatever the reason—strong personal conviction, company policy, terms of a business deal—SPDX makes it easier to collaborate with others when licenses can be a problem, and helps take open-source software to more places. Given that npm has a ton of modules but also handles dependencies in a novel way, I think a little license hygiene could help npm build amazing new relationships between communities that lawyers have long kept apart.
Though this PR was semi-automatic, my responses to any questions you have won't be. I can't give legal advice over GitHub, but I'm happy to answer questions about SPDX or point you to good resources on related problems.
Thanks for your contribution to open-source software!
K