OSS Compliance with FoundriesFactory

The Yocto Project provides a set of tools to help with Open Source Software compliance. The FoundriesFactory is configured to use some of them by default and provides a good starting point when working with license requirements.

There are several different licenses. The focus in this document is to detail some technical aspects needed when handling the GPLv2 and GPLv3 license family, however the content here can be extended the same way for other licenses which require the same.

Warning

This document focus on some technical aspects and must not be considered a legal advice. Always consult a lawyer.

Providing source code, and license manifest

A common requirement for some of the OSS licenses, such as GPLv2 and others, is to provide:

  • A license manifest: all the projects used and their license
  • The source code: some licenses, such as GPLv2, require that all source code, including scripts and changes be available (accessible) to the user
  • The license text and the copyright information: a copy of the license for each project (required by some licenses such as GPLv2 and others) and the copyright information for attribution.

FoundriesFactory configures the LmP to provide a license manifest and source code tarball by default.

The license manifest can be found at

https://app.foundries.io/factories/<factory>/targets/<version>/artifacts/<machine>/other/<image>-<machine>.license.manifest

All the package’s source code under GPLv2 or GPLv3 license family can be found at

https://app.foundries.io/factories/<factory>/targets/<version>/artifacts/<machine>/other/<machine>-source-release.tar

Where:

  • <factory> is the FoundriesFactory name
  • <version> is the target version (and can be found in the first column of Targets).
  • <machine> is the machine name as in the factory-config.yml.
  • <image> is the image name as in the factory-config.yml.

How to avoid using packages depending on the license

When using FoundriesFactory with hardware configured with secure boot, depending on the use case, it might be necessary to avoid installing packages under certain licenses.

One example is GPLv3 which requires that hardware restrictions not limit or disallow variations of the software from being executed on the hardware. When using secure boot, the hardware is configured only to execute a complete boot and run unmodified software signed with a private key.

Warning

There are other examples on why a license should be avoided or chosen. Advice from a lawyer is recommended.

Note

Another option to meet the GPLv3 requirement when using a hardware configured with secure boot is to provide a way to disable secure boot or to provide the keys when requested.

When using LmP there are two variables that can be used for blocking licenses, INCOMPATIBLE_LICENSE and IMAGE_LICENSE_CHECKER_ROOTFS_BLACKLIST. Both of these variables list the licenses by SPDX identifier.

INCOMPATIBLE_LICENSE

Add to the build/conf/local.conf or to the distro the following line:

INCOMPATIBLE_LICENSE = "GPL-3.0 LGPL-3.0 AGPL-3.0"

Using this configuration to build lmp-factory-image results in the following error:

ERROR: lmp-factory-image-1.0-r0 do_rootfs: Package bash cannot be installed into the image because it has incompatible license(s): GPL-3.0+

In this example, the package bash cannot be installed because it is licensed under GPLv3.

This approach is default from the Yocto Project. This raises an error when a package under one of the listed licenses during the build time, even if the package is not going to be installed to the final image.

If a package is released under multi-license, this error is raised if any of the incompatible licenses are included in the list.

This strategy can be used when there is a need to verify build time dependencies between packages.

IMAGE_LICENSE_CHECKER_ROOTFS_BLACKLIST

This variable is introduced by the image-license-checker class and, in the same way as INCOMPATIBLE_LICENSE, it lists the licenses to be avoided, by SPDX identifier.

When using this class, the package under the avoided license is built, when brought as a dependency. When creating the rootfs, the licenses are checked and If a package is released under multi-license, this error is raised if any of the incompatible licenses are included in the list.

Another important difference is that this class prevents the installation of the avoided license package even for multi-licensed packages.

This class can be reviewed at image-license-checker.

Add to the LmP factory customization file meta-subscriber-overrides/conf/machine/include/lmp-factory-custom.inc the following lines:

IMAGE_LICENSE_CHECKER_ROOTFS_BLACKLIST = "GPL-3.0 LGPL-3.0 AGPL-3.0"
IMAGE_LICENSE_CHECKER_NON_ROOTFS_BLACKLIST = "GPL-3.0 LGPL-3.0 AGPL-3.0"
inherit image-license-checker

Using this configuration to build lmp-factory-image results in the following error:

ERROR: lmp-factory-image-1.0-r0 do_rootfs: Packages have blacklisted licenses:
libunistring (LGPLv3+ | GPLv2), bash (GPLv3+), time (GPLv3), mc (GPLv3),
mc-helpers (GPLv3), grep (GPLv3), dosfstools (GPLv3), coreutils (GPLv3+),
mc-fish (GPLv3), libelf (GPLv2 | LGPLv3+), tar (GPLv3), less (GPLv3+ |
BSD-2-Clause), sed (GPLv3+), gmp (GPLv2+ | LGPLv3+), libidn2 ((GPLv2+ |
LGPLv3)), parted (GPLv3+), readline (GPLv3+), gawk (GPLv3), coreutils-stdbuf
(GPLv3+), findutils (GPLv3+), bc (GPLv3+), cpio (GPLv3), gzip (GPLv3+), ed
(GPLv3+), mc-helpers-perl (GPLv3)

This error means, for image lmp-factory-image, a long list of packages under GPLv3 are being installed, for example bash. The goal now to clear the image from those dependencies.

How to remove packages under GPLv3 family license

FoundriesFactory uses the image-license-checker approach. The only change needed to configure the LmP to avoid using packages under GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0 or AGPL-3.0 license in final image.

Change the file ci-scripts/factory-config.yml to include the variable DISABLE_GPLV3: "1" to the branches with the goal to disable GPLv3 packages.

lmp:
  ref_options:
    refs/heads/master:
      params:
        DISABLE_GPLV3: "1"
    refs/heads/devel:
      params:
        DISABLE_GPLV3: "1"

mfg_tools:
  - machine: <machine>
    params:
      DISTRO: lmp-mfgtool
      EXTRA_ARTIFACTS: mfgtool-files.tar.gz
      IMAGE: mfgtool-files
      DISABLE_GPLV3: "0"

Tip

it is possible to enable or disable DISABLE_GPLV3 on mfgtool targets as shown above.

This is the only change needed, the meta-layers are configured to react to DISABLE_GPLV3 variable.

It is important to note that, when using an image different than lmp-factory-image, other packages might be used. In this case, the error message guides on which package to target.