It might occasionally be necessary to include an encumbered file in the FreeBSD source tree. For example, if a device requires a small piece of binary code to be loaded to it before the device will operate, and we do not have the source to that code, then the binary file is said to be encumbered. The following policies apply to including encumbered files in the FreeBSD source tree.
Any file which is interpreted or executed by the system CPU(s) and not in source format is encumbered.
Any file with a license more restrictive than BSD or GNU is encumbered.
A file which contains downloadable binary data for use by the hardware is not encumbered, unless (1) or (2) apply to it. It must be stored in an architecture neutral ASCII format (file2c or uuencoding is recommended).
Any encumbered file requires specific approval from the Core Team before it is added to the repository.
Encumbered files go in src/contrib
or src/sys/contrib
.
The entire module should be kept together. There is no point in splitting it, unless there is code-sharing with non-encumbered code.
Object files are named
.arch
/filename
.o.uu>
Kernel files:
User-land files:
The Core
team decides if the code
should be part of make world
.
The Release Engineering decides if it goes into the release.
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
documentation may be
sent to <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>.
Send questions about this document to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org>.