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[Savannah-hackers] Re: submission of HTTP-XML Pseudo-Server - savannah.n


From: Mathieu Roy
Subject: [Savannah-hackers] Re: submission of HTTP-XML Pseudo-Server - savannah.nongnu.org
Date: 13 Nov 2002 20:27:25 +0100
User-agent: Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.2

Hi,

I'm evaluating the project you submitted for approval in Savannah.



address@hidden said:

> A package was submitted to savannah.nongnu.org
> This mail was sent to address@hidden, address@hidden
> 
> Marcos Legido Hernández <address@hidden> described the package as follows:
> License: lgpl
> Other License: 
> Package: HTTP-XML Pseudo-Server
> System name: hxps
> Type: non-GNU
> 
> Description:
> HXPS is a CGI interface to run multiple applications that receive and send 
> XML data, but it isn\'t a XML server: it\'s a pseudo-server. With an unique 
> CGI request to a program, various remote applications (CGI or not) can 
> interact with an server side application. It\'s a modular system.
> 
> When the client application makes a request to a HXPS interface application, 
> this is a HTTP request (to an Apache server, or another web servers), sending 
> XML data in a specific schema. The API of HXPS treat the XML data and passes 
> this data to a modules (the \"server side applications\"), which manages the 
> data and returns new XML data with the result. The HXPS interface response to 
> the client application with this data.
> 
> HXPS is a good substitute to an commercial XML server. 

Note that commercial does not means proprietary. 
Free Software can be "free as beer" but it means free
as freedom. And so, it can be commercialized.
For instance, while RedHat sells a distribution, it can be
seen as commercialization of software and it's still Free
Software; there are no conflicts with the free licenses.


> And it\'s extensible. In combination with mod_perl or FastCGI, the
> interface can be extremely quick.

Could you create a tarball with the code as it
now exists and make it available to a temporary URL
(and add this url to your description while submitting
the project)?

We want to help you fix potential legal issues.
For example, in order to release your project under
the GPL you should write copyright notices and copying
permission statements at the beginning of every source code
file, following the advice of
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html

Could you resubmit your project once it's done?
You can resubmit your project with ease by copying
the big re-registration URL provided in the mail
you received  at submission

Regards,



-- 
Mathieu Roy
 
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