.\" dhcp-contrib.5 .\" .\" Copyright (c) 1996-1999 Internet Software Consortium. .\" Use is subject to license terms which appear in the file named .\" ISC-LICENSE that should have accompanied this file when you .\" received it. If a file named ISC-LICENSE did not accompany this .\" file, or you are not sure the one you have is correct, you may .\" obtain an applicable copy of the license at: .\" .\" http://www.isc.org/isc-license-1.0.html. .\" .\" This file is part of the ISC DHCP distribution. The documentation .\" associated with this file is listed in the file DOCUMENTATION, .\" included in the top-level directory of this release. .\" .\" Support and other services are available for ISC products - see .\" http://www.isc.org for more information. .TH dhcp-contrib 5 .SH NAME Contributing to the Internet Software Consortium DHCP Distribution .SH EXHORTATION .PP The Internet Software Consortium DHCP Distribution has historically been funded through the donation of various charitable and non-charitable organizations, as well as by individual contributions. To some degree, support for the distribution has been done on a volunteer basis, but by and large the reason that you have this distribution in your hands right now is because people like you have provided funding for it. .PP We would like to encourage you to continue to provide such support, or to begin providing it if you have not in the past. You are in no way obliged to provide us with any support at all, and this message is not intended to guilt-trip you about providing support. If you choose not to provide support, for whatever reason, you aren't going to be treated differently on the mailing lists, and your requests for features aren't going to be prioritized any differently. If you want to be treated differently, you can buy a formal support contract, of course, but this document is about contributions, not support contracts. .SH FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS .PP Q: So if I won't be treated differently, why contribute? .PP A: The obvious answer is self-interest. If you contribute, it means that the author will have time to work on stuff that's not of the utmost high priority. People are constantly asking for things that we would really like to provide, but for which we have no time. By contributing, you are literally giving us time to do these things. The amount of time varies with the contribution, of course, but if everybody contributes a little bit, it can add up to a lot. .PP Q: But everybody isn't required to contribute. If I contribute and nobody else does, doesn't that make me kind of a sucker? .PP A: Obviously, we don't think so, but think about this: if you contribute, then we can point out to others that we've received contributions, and this will make the idea of contributing seem more legitimate to them, making it more likely that they will contribute. So your contribution has more value than just the money you provide - it also helps us to raise funds from others. .PP Q: If I contribute, I want a say in what work gets done. .PP A: We do sell support contracts, and we will also do development work on specification if we feel it is relevant (although you won't get to own it). This can be quite expensive, though - much more than even the maximum we'd expect you to donate. So no, contributing doesn't buy you a say in what work gets done. .PP Q: I work for a charity that feeds the homeless. Should my charity contribute? .PP A: Absolutely not! The idea here is not to take food out of the mouths of poor people. If donating to us would mean that somebody in need that you could have helped will go without help, keep the money. It's not worth it to us. This goes for providing shelter, psychiatric aid, legal assistance, and any other similar charity work. .PP Q: Cool! I work for a university, helping students who are in need of an education, so we shouldn't contribute, right? .PP A: No, that's not quite what we mean. Sure, if you work for an organization that provides free education to needy people, at whatever level, then we'd rather you did that than support us. But if your university has a big budget for running the computer center, can afford to plant nice gardens and maintain nice lawns, and maybe has all its dorms wired for ethernet, then even if you qualify as a nonprofit under federal law (or the law in your own country) you should still contribute. DHCP is just as much a part of your infrastructure as your campus wiring. .PP Q: This software came on a CD that I bought. Haven't I already contributed? .PP A: If you're seeing this notice, and you didn't see a notice saying that the people who sold you your CD contributed to us, then no, you haven't already contributed. In general, we encourage people to include this software on their distributions if they feel it would be useful, and we do not require them to contribute in exchange for that privilege. .PP Q: I've contributed to the development of this software by submitting bug reports and patches. Why should I also contribute money? .PP A: When you contributed these bug reports and patches, was there zero effort involved on our part in integrating the patches or figuring out what was wrong? Probably not. Bug reports and patches can be extremely valuable, and we can't say that in no event do they qualify you to get out of contributing - after all, we're leaving that up to your judgement anyway, aren't we? But unless your contribution was pretty massive, and is actually in this distribution, we aren't likely to agree with you about this. .PP Q: Software should be free. You have no right to ask for money to support this effort. .PP A: You are entitled to that opinion, but please don't raise it on the mailing list, as it will tend to get people excited. Please remember that while copying software is generally a very cheap process, creating it is not. The amount of work that's gone into this software package is quite significant, and there's plenty more work to do. If you happen to be in college, working toward your degree, and have no social life (and yes, I've been there and done that) then it can seem like there's no additional cost to hacking on software - after all, it's fun, isn't it? While this is true, it is also true that you're a lot better off with this software than you would have been with the software I wrote in college. Enough said? .PP Q: Can't I contribute work instead of software? .PP A: We'd like to encourage that to some extent, and are indeed trying to bring some developers into the fold, but you shouldn't expect that your willingness to do this translates directly into an opportunity. For example, you may want very much to work for [insert the name of your favorite commercial Linux vendor here], but unless you have the appropriate skills, they like you, they're willing to pay what you need, and they have work that's appropriate to your skills, you're not going to get hired there. .PP Q: I don't contribute to the Free Software Foundation - why do you rate? .PP A: You should contribute to the Free Software Foundation too! .PP Q: I don't contribute to [insert name of your local food bank here]. Why do you rate? .PP A: If you feel bad about not contributing to the local food bank, this is a very easy problem to solve, and we encourage you to do so. .PP Q: Once I've contributed once, am I done? .PP A: We'd like to encourage you to contribute once a year. If you want, we can send you a reminder notice on the year anniversary of your original contribution. If you don't specifically ask for this, we won't force it on you. No salesperson will call. No spam will be sent. We definitely won't try to convince you that it's been a year since you last contributed when it hasn't been a year yet. .PP Q: I don't have you in my budget this year. .PP A: Fine, put us in your budget for next year! .PP Q: It's really hard to do charitable contributions at my organization. .PP A: We'd be happy to sell you a product instead. If you choose to go down this route, what we'l sell you is a license for some number of clients and a CD. Just let us know how many DHCP clients you have, and we'll use the following schedule to figure out how much to invoice you (shipping is included on orders of $100 or more). Even if you can do charitable contributions, you might want to use this schedule as a guideline for figuring out how much to donate. It is only a guideline, of course - if the amounts listed feel like too much or too little to you, do what seems appropriate. .PP .nf $10k for businesses supporting >10k nodes $5k for charities supporting >10k nodes $2.5k for businesses supporting >1k nodes $1k for charities supporting >1k nodes $500 for businesses with >500 nodes $250 for charities with >500 nodes $200 for businesses with >150 nodes $100 for charities with >150 nodes $100 for businesses with <150 nodes $50 for charities with <150 nodes $25 for home use, client or server $0.10 to $1 per client for businesses that are reselling the client, depending on volume. .fi .PP Q: Are you nuts? I live in [insert your country name here] and the typical annual salary for a programmer is less than what you're asking me to contribute! .PP A: We leave the choice of how much to contribute up to you. Really. We aren't kidding. .PP Q: Can I contribute with my credit card? .PP A: Yes. The details haven't been ironed out at this writing, but if you send mail to dhcp-contributions@isc.org, we'll work it out. By the time you read this, we may have a web interface set up - if so, it will be linked in at http://www.isc.org/dhcp-contrib.html. .SH SEE ALSO dhcpd.conf(5), dhcpd.leases(5), dhclient.conf(5), dhcpd(8), dhclient(8), RFC2132, RFC2131. .SH AUTHOR The Internet Software Consortium DHCP Distribution was written by Ted Lemon under a contract with Vixie Labs. Funding for this project was provided through the Internet Software Consortium. Information about the Internet Software Consortium can be found at .B http://www.isc.org/isc.