The license classifier is a library and set of tools that can analyze text to
determine what type of license it contains. It searches for license texts in a
file and compares them to an archive of known licenses. These files could be,
e.g., LICENSE
files with a single or multiple licenses in it, or source code
files with the license text in a comment.
A "confidence level" is associated with each result indicating how close the
match was. A confidence level of 1.0
indicates an exact match, while a
confidence level of 0.0
indicates that no license was able to match the text.
Adding a new license is straight-forward:
-
Create a file in
licenses/
.- The filename should be the name of the license or its abbreviation. If the license is an Open Source license, use the appropriate identifier specified at https://spdx.org/licenses/.
- If the license is the "header" version of the license, append the suffix
"
.header
" to it. Seelicenses/README.md
for more details.
-
Add the license name to the list in
license_type.go
. -
Regenerate the
licenses.db
file by running the license serializer:$ license_serializer -output licenseclassifier/licenses
-
Create and run appropriate tests to verify that the license is indeed present.
identify_license
is a command line tool that can identify the license(s)
within a file.
$ identify_license LICENSE
LICENSE: GPL-2.0 (confidence: 1, offset: 0, extent: 14794)
LICENSE: LGPL-2.1 (confidence: 1, offset: 18366, extent: 23829)
LICENSE: MIT (confidence: 1, offset: 17255, extent: 1059)
The license_serializer
tool regenerates the licenses.db
archive. The archive
contains preprocessed license texts for quicker comparisons against unknown
texts.
$ license_serializer -output licenseclassifier/licenses
This is not an official Google product (experimental or otherwise), it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.