COPYRIGHT 2.9 KB

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  1. The authors of this software are Christopher W. Fraser and
  2. David R. Hanson.
  3. Copyright (c) 1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998 by AT&T,
  4. Christopher W. Fraser, and David R. Hanson. All Rights Reserved.
  5. Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
  6. purpose, subject to the provisions described below, without fee is
  7. hereby granted, provided that this entire notice is included in all
  8. copies of any software that is or includes a copy or modification of
  9. this software and in all copies of the supporting documentation for
  10. such software.
  11. THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
  12. WARRANTY. IN PARTICULAR, NEITHER THE AUTHORS NOR AT&T MAKE ANY
  13. REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE MERCHANTABILITY
  14. OF THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
  15. lcc is not public-domain software, shareware, and it is not protected
  16. by a `copyleft' agreement, like the code from the Free Software
  17. Foundation.
  18. lcc is available free for your personal research and instructional use
  19. under the `fair use' provisions of the copyright law. You may, however,
  20. redistribute lcc in whole or in part provided you acknowledge its
  21. source and include this CPYRIGHT file. You may, for example, include
  22. the distribution in a CDROM of free software, provided you charge only
  23. for the media, or mirror the distribution files at your site.
  24. You may not sell lcc or any product derived from it in which it is a
  25. significant part of the value of the product. Using the lcc front end
  26. to build a C syntax checker is an example of this kind of product.
  27. You may use parts of lcc in products as long as you charge for only
  28. those components that are entirely your own and you acknowledge the use
  29. of lcc clearly in all product documentation and distribution media. You
  30. must state clearly that your product uses or is based on parts of lcc
  31. and that lcc is available free of charge. You must also request that
  32. bug reports on your product be reported to you. Using the lcc front
  33. end to build a C compiler for the Motorola 88000 chip and charging for
  34. and distributing only the 88000 code generator is an example of this
  35. kind of product.
  36. Using parts of lcc in other products is more problematic. For example,
  37. using parts of lcc in a C++ compiler could save substantial time and
  38. effort and therefore contribute significantly to the profitability of
  39. the product. This kind of use, or any use where others stand to make a
  40. profit from what is primarily our work, requires a license agreement
  41. with Addison-Wesley. Per-copy and unlimited use licenses are
  42. available; for more information, contact
  43. J. Carter Shanklin
  44. Addison Wesley Longman, Inc.
  45. 2725 Sand Hill Rd.
  46. Menlo Park, CA 94025
  47. 650/854-0300 x2478 FAX: 650/614-2930 jcs@awl.com
  48. -----
  49. Chris Fraser / cwfraser@microsoft.com
  50. David Hanson / drh@microsoft.com
  51. $Revision: 145 $ $Date: 2001-10-17 16:53:10 -0500 (Wed, 17 Oct 2001) $