This directory contains the licence which applies to all material in the LumoSQL project.
The MIT Licence applies to all files in this project. The MIT licence is the most-widely used Open Source licence, including by some of the world's largest companies. The MIT licence grants everyone the right to use the code for any purpose under copyright law. Every LumoSQL file should have a copyright statement at the top and also a Software Package Data Exchange machine-readable header. Even if a file does not have these statements at the top, the MIT licence still applies to all files in the LumoSQL source tree including files that are not clearly code, such as configuration or input data.
The LumoSQL Documentation has source files in /doc in the LumoSQL source tree and therefore also covered by the MIT licence. Documentation-specific licences do exist and they do have certain advantages. If the MIT licence ever becomes a problem for LumoSQL documentation we will adopt one of these licenses.
Some user interface code for the R statistical analysis package is included under /analysis. All of this code is licensed under MIT by the respective authors.
To even further avoid potential misunderstanding, we maintain the site license.lumosql.org with the full text of the MIT Licence.
We do include some academic papers in full in the source tree under /references. Evidently, these papers are copyright their respective authors and universities as listed.
Licenses can be a confusing topic, but LumoSQL really does have no exceptions.
The MIT license covers the source tree for LumoSQL. When you start LumoSQL development, the LumoSQL build tool pulls in code from other projects such as SQLite and LMDB and combines them to produce binaries in the build/ directory. LumoSQL does not pull code from projects with licenses incompatible with the MIT license. The binaries produced by LumoSQL can be used for any purpose.
An example of an interesting licensing case (although the technology is not at all interesting) is the discontinued and deprecated Berkeley DB backend. The BDB code is available under the AGPL license, which means that any code (such as SQLite) combined with it is also under the terms of the AGPL, and so are any binaries using BDB. The AGPL requires that code be made available to anyone provided with the binary... which LumoSQL and SQLite comply with, so there is no conflict. But none of this is even a question with the LumoSQL source tree as distributed. When you type "make" you are then pulling and building code which has other licenses, and we are careful about that too.