# PerlUnit was originally written as a port of Kent Beck and Erich # Gamma's xUnit testing framework by Christian Lemburg and Brian # Ewins, and is now maintained by Adam Spiers and the rest of the # PerlUnit team. # # The following is an alphabetical list of all the people who've # contributed code and effort to making PerlUnit what it is today. # Where possible we have included their Sourceforge usernames and # preferred email addresses. # # The use of this database for anything other than PerlUnit # development is strictly forbidden. (Passive distribution with the # PerlUnit source code package is naturally allowed) Adam Spiers adamspiers <perlunit@adamspiers.org> Brian Ewins ba22a Cayte Linder cayte Christian Lemburg clemburg <clemburg@acm.org> David Esposito davide J.E. Fritz jefritz Kevin Connor wallisalviar <kconnor@interwoven.com> Matthew Astley mca1001 (was mca-gdl) Michael Schwern/Test::More project for the deep structure comparison routines Piers Cawley pdcawley <pdcawley@iterative-software.com> Zhon Johansen zhon As far as copyright years go (as if anyone cares), this may serve as a vague starting guide for who put together the bulk of the project: 2000 ba22a, clemburg 2001 clemburg, pdcawley 2002 adamspiers, pdcawley Where specific files in the project have been contributed by one person and that person has claimed the copyright, I have left their authorship. The rest of the files have moved over to a more boilerplate style crediting the PerlUnit Development Team and referring to the Test::Unit docs and this file. This is simply for maintenance sanity. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Perl copyright: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Copyright 1989-2001, Larry Wall All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or b) the "Artistic License" which comes with Perl. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The GNU GPL version 2 is included here in the file COPYING.GPL-2 . You may use version 1 instead, but it has been superceded for good reasons... The Artistic License is included here in the file COPYING.Artistic