ARRIS DCX3510M User Guide User Manual

Page 56

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Appendix A

B

DCX with OCAP Software DCX3510-M • User Guide

47

365-095-17068-x.1

"Standard Version" refers to such a Package if it has not been

modified, or has been modified in accordance with the wishes of

the Copyright Holder as specified below.
"Copyright Holder" is whoever is named in the copyright or
copyrights for the package.
"You" is you, if you're thinking about copying or distributing this

Package.
"Reasonable copying fee" is whatever you can justify on the basis of

media cost, duplication charges, time of people involved, and so on.
(You will not be required to justify it to the Copyright Holder, but

only to the computing community at large as a market that must

bear the fee.)
"Freely Available" means that no fee is charged for the item itself,

though there may be fees involved in handling the item. It also
means that recipients of the item may redistribute it under the same

conditions they received it.
1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form

of the Standard Version of this Package without restriction, provided

that you duplicate all of the original copyright notices and
associated disclaimers.
2. You may apply bug fixes, portability fixes and other modifications

derived from the Public Domain or from the Copyright Holder. A

Package modified in such a way shall still be considered the

Standard Version.
3. You may otherwise modify your copy of this Package in any way,

provided that you insert a prominent notice in each changed file

stating how and when you changed that file, and provided that you

do at least ONE of the following:
a) place your modifications in the Public Domain or otherwise make
them Freely Available, such as by posting said modifications to

Usenet or an equivalent medium, or placing the modifications on a

major archive site such as uunet.uu.net, or by allowing the

Copyright Holder to include your modifications in the Standard

Version of the Package.
b) use the modified Package only within your corporation or

organization.
c) rename any non-standard executables so the names do not

conflict with standard executables, which must also be provided,

and provide a separate manual page for each non-standard
executable that clearly documents how it differs from the Standard

Version.
) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
4. You may distribute the programs of this Package in object code or

executable form, provided that you do at least ONE of the following:
a) distribute a Standard Version of the executables and library files,

together with instructions (in the manual page or equivalent) on

where to get the Standard Version.
b) accompany the distribution with the machine-readable source of

the Package with your modifications.
c) give non-standard executables non-standard names, and clearly

document the differences in manual pages (or equivalent), together

with instructions on where to get the Standard Version.
d) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
5. You may charge a reasonable copying fee for any distribution of
this Package. You may charge any fee you choose for support of

this Package. You may not charge a fee for this Package itself.

However, you may distribute this Package in aggregate with other

(possibly commercial) programs as part of a larger (possibly

commercial) software distribution provided that you do not advertise

this Package as a product of your own. You may embed this

Package's interpreter within an executable of yours (by linking); this
shall be construed as a mere form of aggregation, provided that the

complete Standard Version of the interpreter is so embedded.
6. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as

output from the programs of this Package do not automatically fall

under the copyright of this Package, but belong to whoever
generated them, and may be sold commercially, and may be

aggregated with this Package. If such scripts or library files are

aggregated with this Package via the so-called "undump" or

"unexec" methods of producing a binary executable image, then

distribution of such an image shall neither be construed as a
distribution of this Package nor shall it fall under the restrictions of

Paragraphs 3 and 4, provided that you do not represent such an

executable image as a Standard Version of this Package.
7. C subroutines (or comparably compiled subroutines in other

languages) supplied by you and linked into this Package in order to
emulate subroutines and variables of the language defined by this

Package shall not be considered part of this Package, but are the

equivalent of input as in Paragraph 6, provided these subroutines do

not change the language in any way that would cause it to fail the

regression tests for the language.
8. Aggregation of this Package with a commercial distribution is

always permitted provided that the use of this Package is

embedded; that is, when no overt attempt is made to make this

Package's interfaces visible to the end user of the commercial

distribution. Such use shall not be construed as a distribution of
this Package.
9. The name of the Copyright Holder may not be used to endorse or

promote products derived from this software without specific prior

written permission.
10. THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT

LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY

AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
The End
Specific attribution items for component depmod.pl_217: Copyright
(c) 2001 David Schleef <[email protected]> Copyright (c) 2001 Erik

Andersen <[email protected]> Copyright (c) 2001 Stuart

Hughes <[email protected]> Copyright (c) 2002 Steven J. Hill

<[email protected]> Copyright (c) 2006 Freescale

Semiconductor, Inc <[email protected]>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify

it under the same terms as Perl itself.
David Schleef <[email protected]>
*** python_2.0.1 ***
License contents for all components under the python_2.0.1 family:
HISTORY OF THE SOFTWARE
=======================
Python was created in the early 1990s by Guido van Rossum at

Stichting Mathematisch Centrum (CWI) in the Netherlands as a

successor of a language called ABC. Guido is Python's principal
author, although it includes many contributions from others. The

last version released from CWI was Python 1.2. In 1995, Guido

continued his work on Python at the Corporation for National

Research Initiatives (CNRI) in Reston, Virginia where he released

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