On Sat, Oct 08, 2005 at 10:31:30AM -0500, Scott Marlowe wrote: > What it comes down to is this. MySQL is dual licensed. You can use > the GPL version, or the commercial version. In order to sell the > commercially licensed version, MySQL must have the rights to all the > code in their base. So, in order for MySQL to sell a commercail > version of MySQL with innodb support, they have to pay innobase a > bit to include it, or rip it out. I don't understand. If both MySQL and Innodb are GPL licensed, commercial or not should make no difference, and they can add all the GPL changes they want o the last Innodb GPL release. What am I missing? -- ... _._. ._ ._. . _._. ._. ___ .__ ._. . .__. ._ .. ._. Felix Finch: scarecrow repairman & rocket surgeon / felix@xxxxxxxxxxx GPG = E987 4493 C860 246C 3B1E 6477 7838 76E9 182E 8151 ITAR license #4933 I've found a solution to Fermat's Last Theorem but I see I've run out of room o ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend