Common Public License
In computing, the Common Public License (CPL) is a free software / open-source software license published by IBM. The Free Software Foundation and Open Source Initiative have approved the license terms of the CPL.
| Author | IBM | 
|---|---|
| Latest version | 1.0 | 
| Publisher | IBM | 
| Published | May 2001 | 
| SPDX identifier | CPL-1.0 | 
| Debian FSG compatible | Yes[1] | 
| FSF approved | Yes[2] | 
| OSI approved | Yes[3] | 
| GPL compatible | No[2] | 
| Copyleft | Limited[2] | 
| Linking from code with a different licence | Yes | 
Definition
    
The CPL has the stated aims of supporting and encouraging collaborative open-source development while still retaining the ability to use the CPL'd content with software licensed under other licenses, including many proprietary licenses. The Eclipse Public License (EPL) consists of a slightly modified version of the CPL.
The CPL has some terms that resemble those of the GNU General Public License (GPL), but some key differences exist. A similarity relates to distribution of a modified computer program: under either license (CPL or GPL), one must make the source code of a modified program available to others.
CPL, like the GNU Lesser General Public License, allows non-CPL-licensed software to link to a library under CPL without requiring the linked source code to be made available to the licensee.
CPL lacks compatibility with both versions of the GPL because it has a "choice of law" section in section 7, which restricts legal disputes to a certain court. Another source of incompatibility is the differing copyleft requirements.[2]
To reduce the number of open source licenses, IBM and Eclipse Foundation agreed upon using solely the Eclipse Public License in the future.[4] Open Source Initiative therefore lists the Common Public License as deprecated and superseded by EPL.
Projects using the Common Public License
    
- Microsoft has released its Windows Installer XML (WiX) developer tool, Windows Template Library (WTL) and the FlexWiki engine under the CPL as SourceForge projects.
- Some projects of the COIN-OR Foundation use the CPL.
See also
    
- Software license
- Software using the CPL (category)
